Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 6 Aug 1925, p. 23

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410 SH For.Old Gold, Plati+ num, Silver,; Dia , magneto, points, false teeth y, any valuables. Mail today. by return mail. >* S. & R. Co. Otsego, Mich. th Soap, 10 bars m Soap, 12 bar /81 Soap, 10 bar..â€"_59¢ : Soap, 10 bars $1.09 ces, pkg. .. Wheat,, pkg. tint, Tki..... .;......_._ Kik@ the TD. ... â€"...............â€" GYRK Tart Bacon, 3 lbe. 31,}9 rm Maal, 1 pkg. ....â€"__1 e brands, 4 bbl. $1.19 ned Beef, Ib. ....._.___.9¢ i Flour, 5â€"lb. sack. Lamb Chops, Ib... Beef Stew, Ib......... . 8. SCHWALBACEH . J. WEIDLING CO. CRADE GRAND PLANOS om manufacturér at factory Substantial saving and comâ€" atisfaction. arpenter and _ Builder â€"‘ eneral Contracting . \ gent and Installer of,‘ . Western Ave. Chicago, L Metal Weather Strips $00 Central Avenue HICHLAND PARK | a, 3 pkgs. ..â€"â€"~29¢ + Chips, 10 for.......88¢ Boap Chips, 4 for O8¢ th, 10 .pkgs. â€"...._983¢ ; Seap Chips.....83.95 ces on soup by the case First At. Highland Park <~] â€" DAY SPECIALS AUGo}ll h % Cine Sugar, 10 Ibs. 59¢ icaroni, 3 pkgs. ... 25¢ aghetti, 3 pkgs. ... 25¢ pples, the 1b...........10¢ wing Machines | mnh.hnun.-ua-"-} airs and up. f â€" SOLD AND REPAIRED RSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1993 heing the opening of our PHOLSTERING AND TURE REPAIRING SHOP ted at 394 Central Ave. rilari Tel. H. P. 582 192â€" W AY SPECIALS AUG. 10 = u. DAY SPECIALS DENTIST 47 St. Johns Avenue ND PARK I A. H. MUHLKE ty 6 SCME ..« Catsup, bot. , Ige. can .. ) PARK, ILLINOIS E EERFIELD L SMIT H TELEPHONE 367 J. W. SHEDD AUG. 13 2 lbs. for Soap, 12 bar.....98¢ 3 lbs. for | fipmart U N KE B Dealer in Ib. Phone #15J 11¢ 87¢ Lal? w da THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1925 Automatic Oil Burning Systems sold last any other two makes together. There are sons why {}m’_ should invest%atfi Telegiu LAKE COUNTY ENGINEERING COMI] a list of Kleenâ€"Heet users in this territory : Local Offices Phones Highland Park 2139 â€" Lake P MODERN PLUMBING AND HEATIN Estimates Cheerfully Given. f Jobbing a WITTEN BLDG. .~ . 360 CENTR Telephones : Shop, |H. P. 1404 © Res,, H. P. JOHN ZENGEL â€"RAINBOW GARDE _ DANCE Musiec by Percy Rowell‘ There Were More SsATURDAY AND SUNDAY NI Cleaner and Dyer _ 25 North Sheridan Road | wE OPERATE OUR OWN PLANT IN ~â€" HIGHLAND PARK | Here‘s Happiness! MORAN BROTHERS GIBBON‘S PARK EVERETT, ILLINOIS . located at » You, too, can know the haj of health. BOWMAN‘S I will help you. â€" It is rich in â€"elements; every drop fc Telephone H. P. 169 & 12 N. Second St., Featuring in conj All Branch Beauty C Insist on L. S EISCHEN Soudbyonrg ‘~to her Expert ling and Les of Iture atronage ::tlou with year than any reaâ€" ne to the ANY for AL AVE. ER orest 1136 NS piness UIL K nergy. rtifies. core .A wholesale demonstration of the effectiveness of American homaw- ing is the last . thing one would exâ€" NEAR EAST WOMEN _ KEEP HOUSE WELL pect to find inâ€"the Near East, but Mrs. Louis~E. White of ‘Ptyfl-lnd. Me., who has just returned from a gix months‘" study: of conditipns: in Mediterranean: gountries, discovered that New England neatness and ‘disâ€" patch have penetrated even to these far places. â€"_ + 4 a ‘She made her discoveries in Palâ€" estine, Syria and Greece, and the particular places where she found American housewifely virtues being taught and practiced> were the orâ€" phanages of the Near East Relief in those countries. "American ideals are being so firmly implanted in the minds of these thousands of orphah ‘children of a sunnier and more slothâ€" LEARN AMERICAN SYSTEM Taught Domestic Customs Like â€"Those in Effect in Homes | ___ in U. S. and Rapidly . Grasp Ideas _ #ul clime ‘that they have the same distaste for disorder as do my own New England neighbors," said Mrs. White, who is prominent throughout New England as a social leader and club woman. s | . Visits Many Orphanages ‘Visits to a dozen of the American orphanages ~were included in Mrs. White‘s itinerary, Among them was an orphanage in Jerusalem. which she describes as the "cleanest place of its kind I have ever seen." The chilâ€" dren‘s dormitories, she says, are filled with long rows of small cots, each bed made up by its occupant with all the scrupulous exactitude which a Dutch housewife lavishes on her "best room" for company. w# "The rooms are plain and bare,‘ comments Mrs. White, "but they are swept and dusted: and burnished to a point .where they fairly shine. It is difficult to believe that many of these are boys‘ dormitories, because boys are often believed to be devoid of {natural housekeeping instinct and entirely irresponsible <when it comes to maintaining scrupulous order." Mrs, White thinks that a visit to the Near East is the equivalent of at least a year‘s college education. "It" is also ‘an ,inspiration. to any American, because. it shows â€" very graphically the great humanitarian service which our country is :renderâ€" ing to these less fortunate peoples." _| "My first contact with American relief work was in Athens, where we visited a refugee camp, one of the largest in the world, The buildings resembled in appearance the barracks of our Amelrican cantonments of war days, a geries of wooden shacks and huts, more or less regular in arrangeâ€" ment. No Amerjean can visit this camp without feeling a great pride in what our country has <done for thousands of refugees who would have starved or died except for this great enterprise. . 7# ~"I had a pleasant impression of the refugees, they ‘looked so well cared for and were apparently in such good spirits, The children were happy and were unquestionably making the best of the sad conditions in which they were obliged to five. In: mauny of the homes the ‘children offered for sale various articles which might prove of interest to tourists. All the refugees seemed glad to be alive, and almost pathetically grateful to Amerâ€" ica for what it has done. _ 3. "In â€" Palestine we visited the orâ€" phanages at. Jerusalem and Nazareth. In the latter city, the American orâ€" phanage is an industrial school for the training of boy carpenters,. and it was not without significance that this work was being carried on close by the site of the primitive carpenter shop where Joseph taught Jedus to labor at the bench. $§.3¢" "The making of a new Near East is receiving its largest impetus and stimulus from the educational work which America is doing in these orâ€" phanage schools." â€", atd Mr. Baker says that it was the worst disaster that ever b,efesléothie country, and. the fu.m{‘ouz, 0,000 the largest ever contributed by| popâ€" ular subscription. Of this: Chicago gave $1,030,000, nearly oneâ€"half. This included â€"a < big contribution from Highland Park. A "Thank the people of Chicago and vicinity for their help, before you do anything else.",}l’his is â€"the mesâ€" sage H. "M;kfakel". director of Red Cross relief /brings to Chicago from €6,059 families in the 550 miles of tornado swept area in Illinois, Indiâ€" ana and Missouri. siat : Rehabilitation . expenditures thus far amount to $727,234.. Every ge;ht of this represents actual benefits to the Victims, as salaries and other overâ€" kead expenses are paid from the anâ€" nual membership funds. For building and repairs $322,060 has been spent; household gods, $133,000; food, $74,â€" 226; clothing, $45,418; live stock for EXPRESSES THANKS e U FOR TORNADO AID THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS,HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOTS Pleasant Impression YÂ¥A farmers, $19,638; farm . implements, $19,806; feed and seed, $5,870. It will be several months before the work is finished, ;21 & number of years before the Cross responâ€" sibility is ended in the case of phabs.. :: > /%;: /~s. p | [AE WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT., BUICK WILL BUILD THEM 29 S. Second St. a/â€" 1926 LATEST and MOST MANY OTHER _filter NORTH SHORE BUICK COMPANY LO 5E D Every Home Needs a Small Utility Motor PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY â€" Buick has built â€"a better _ Automobile the "handyâ€"man,‘"‘ but miâ€"lady, too, will find it saves time and work. hy § There‘s a job for this motor every day in every home. It is an indispensable part of the workâ€"bench equipment. In the home, a small electric motor for utility use is not only a constant help to We guarantee the motors we sell. It is said: now that by 1928 the calendar will have been changed to embrace thirteen months. Many peoâ€" ple, having in mind the first of the months, will agree that somehow the idea doesn‘t sound so good.â€"Detroit Free Press. +i se n eibaenen !®k Wm. Guyot, District Superintendent John T. Fitzgibbons CSee it today at the Buick showrcom OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS Install a small motor to run the sewing machine, polish silverware and do one hundred and one odd household tasks. Save Time and Energy The.automobile speeders should not drive so fast that when they stop, it will be necessary to make their exit through the windshield. * Claimed the modern students can‘t T:;l,htflaqlwknmh‘ that they are expected to get by. g Tel. H. P. 496 1926 MANY OTHER FEATURES PAGE SEVEN at 4+

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