Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 1 Apr 1926, p. 13

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«./. Coats with . . /high standing éxtreme gimpliâ€" trel or:mole . . . finest of the seaâ€" the most desired mixtures and ‘ont of the Easter inctive smartness ing circular cape ‘s Small Wonder @ Such an Enviâ€" )0 | Aa 06 tioma 9.75 HURSDAY), APRIL 1, 1926 n &# ESS MAY ACT | IN COAL SITUATION oi e! neods To ffles of de ‘r:‘"',...:.&“ - for Eastet. repes, oile, gost h shades. Xxxers may atvies | Fiem at Need Is Clear , $2.59 +me nath cial Selling prinky y hy anieidns n $22.50 $y the operators in carâ€" coat ptoperties du&c d the) total money lpss :ie ~&tors iuwl wages 3 a| distressing w mt %l;.tbe ingconvenâ€" ell the m‘ f the e calls for acâ€" # take, but alâ€" nd-zfidy is worthy t of .the ‘gion beaded |by ‘ +1 mr.h‘n;one itinuguration of acâ€" T%Om $15,000,000 \.OQ ixpert Is anything that makes a perâ€" som more like starting boyhood play again than a ship model? Who has not onee in his childhood dreamt of being a sailor, and sailed away to far countries? But the small ship models that are preserved from reâ€" mote time are not toys, not even constructed for study purposes. They were votive ships given to churches as thank offerings, after well endâ€" ed cruises or placed as a memorial in the city halls or harbor: towns. When it later, in the seventeenth cenâ€" tury, betc eustomary to build models of the best known ships, and these models were executed as #lose to scale as possible by trained ‘ship builders, the method of building up the hull, hfi:‘ of carving it from one block, adopted. . From this early time we have a number of ?:u. tiful examples preserved in the différâ€" ent|naval museums and in private colâ€" lections. We also meet with models made by oldiu‘llofl who have left the sea, and now pass their time renderâ€" ing the features of their beloved "Virâ€" gin? or "Lady Joselyn," or by prigonâ€" ers during periods of war, especially in the lnghphg of the nineteenth pentury. But whatever type the model belongs to it is the cunning of the craftsman we love and admire, put to | a hard test both in the hull and the rig. In the exhibition of ship models toâ€" be‘ opened in the Art Institute March 19th there will be shown a| proup of figure heads, some nther1 trude, but with a strong sense® of hrmor, ag for instance, the one from the |pirate ship "The !-?[irt”;‘ others beautifully lu-nd jand painted, are! true pigces of art| _ }" /.. . : ;n..3 FAMOUS SHIP MODELS ARE ON EXHIBITION Display at Art Institute One of Finest of Kind Ever Offered Duties of Patrol "You should know something about the duties of these boys on patrol duty. It is the duty of an officer of the patrol to warn children who delibâ€" erately place themselves in danger. The patrol officers are obliged to warn children who cross streets at any point other than at the regular crossâ€" ing, chi who play in the street, or ch who hitch on wagons or autom s. â€" Do not resent any warning that the patrol officers may give you. Remember that they are merely. carrying ‘out their instrucâ€" tions. â€" Remember that the patrol exists only for your safety." "We must learn to read and to write, but it is lly important that ‘we learn ne. No one can be truly educated who‘is undisciplined. No one would ever be in a position direct others who has not lum:z how: to ‘control himself. It is said that order is heaven‘s first law. If there were no rules in class rooms, no one would ever iearn anything. Anyâ€" one who wished to get up and speak might do so and everyone in our class rooms might be talking at once. Disgâ€" cipline teaches us how to obey the rules. â€" The boy or girl who enters a game and will not obey the. rules spoils the game for all. The grown person who has never learned disciâ€" pline is never truly happy. Must Learn Discipline _ "So it is that we must start out early in life to learn discipline. In the safety poster this month one phase of discipline 4s illustrated. The school boy patrol officer is shown holding a group of ‘children back on the curb until traffic stops. Children who |disobey the instructions of the boys on patrol duty may pay heavily for their disobedience. They may pay with their limbs or possibly with their lTives. Remember that the boy on the crossing has full authority to direct your movements on the street. This ‘authority is given him so that you will be safe. The school boy paâ€" trol : officers ~should be your, best friends; if you obey them it is very unlikely that you will ever be hurt by an automobile. eause others have found that these ntpdhs,}ive,m a knowledge of the things we shall need most when we have finished school. 5f o *4 . Why Study Is Necessary "Our school studies are necessary only: because they fit us to live our lives with more enjoyment. If we did not ‘know how to read or write we should be out of place in the world; we should be misfits, Our studies are what we find them today, simply beâ€" Learning discipline is as important as learning to read and write, acâ€" cording to a bulletin issued by the accident prevention department of the Chicago. Motor club, . This bulletin accompanies the safety poster shown in the schools in northern Illinois and northern Indiana this month, The poster shows a member :z the school boys* patrol directing , and the caption reads: "Boys‘ ‘ are saving lives, Law-nqpmmm ists and children will obey them." Here is the talk that the teachers will re::‘h to their classes© during the m f 4 ‘THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1926 CHICAGO MOTOR CLUB AIDS) FOR THE COMING sUMMER Provides Safety Poster for| List of 'to"Bkat Head Schools This Month to Teach |â€" Of ififi% Trainâ€" Children to Control Themâ€" ng AME“&_“ Big seives and to be Amenable nroliment, RN DISCIPLINE, ___ |NAMES COMMANDERS S ADVICETOYOU’I‘HI OF TRAINING CAMPS Applications for the camps can be sent direct to General Graves‘ headâ€" quarters at 1819 West Pershing road, Chi , III., where they will receive atteizion. €@li * Each of these officers has . exâ€" perience in training young men gvhich will assure that the young, men) placed under. their care for 30 ktyn ,t‘the Citizen‘s Military Training camps will be properly cared for. : * s f Enrollment General Graves, in anfibuncing the camp commanders, also ingdlicated that the enrollment for the camps, which do not open until July 8th, has alâ€" ready reached 1100, and tlfis is not to be wondered at when it iq' considered that the government provides 30 days of wholesome, outdoor lifé and trainâ€" ing for young men between the ages of 17 and 24, paying the expenses of transportation to and #rom camp, food while at camp, uniforms, lodging and medical attention, with no obliâ€" gation on the part of the |student exâ€" cept to attend the camp, k attentive to the instruction and ‘to leave there with a resolution to be a better citi-l zen. B t Lieutenant â€" Colonel swell / E. Deitsch, the present commanding ofâ€" ficer at Ft. Brady, Michigan, will comâ€" mahd the C, M. T. camp At that staâ€" tion. â€"~ 14. Cplonel David L. Stone of the 6th Infantry will command tlg C, M. T. camp at Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Colonel Raymond Sheldpn, chief of staff ©85th Division nized Reâ€" serves at Detroit, lfid?ii:n, has been selected to command the camp for Michiganâ€"boys at Camp Custer, Michiâ€" gan. â€" | e Colonel Hoatrd R. 'Bei:y, chief of staff of the 86th Division Organized Reserves, has been selected to comâ€" mand the Artillery*eunpg; which will ineclude 200 C. M. T. C. boyu. at: "Camp Sparta,: Wisconsin. 8 m Brigadier General 1 J. Leniâ€" han, who is the commanding officer at Fort Sheridan, E!l., will command the C. M. T. camp at Ft. Sheridan where 1450 young men from Illinois and Wisconsin will be in |training. Major General Williany 8. Graves, the commanding general of the Sixth Corps Area with headquatrters at 1819 West Pershing road‘, ] . Illl'i; nois, atnounced t oll as the camp conunndqrrfor, ie /C. M. T. camps to be held in the Bixth Corps Area for the training of| 4500 ‘~young men during the coming sn&nmer: BLACK CAT SHOPPE prove a food revelation to you if you will come here for jit, The choicest foods that the:market affords prerared by a thef that wants to please you â€" and beâ€" Li:vé this one thing, he knows w ioA 81 YOUR EASTER DINNER will Get acquainted with our ‘"Bill O‘Fare"\| ST,. JOHNS AVENUE Phone H. P. u}f‘ M is of relatively recent °M'f‘” 'Now;. adays a good many persons designate institutions, rather than individuals, as trustees and executors of their esâ€" Not. in that prince‘s time did the maker of a will have complete assurâ€" ance thgt his ‘bequests would be faithfully and efficiently observed, for ‘"the administration â€"of individualesâ€" tates by banking and trust companies Each of those formal declarations signifies a desire to transmit property by choosing the inheritorsâ€"a tesire that was active and expressive 2,â€" 845 years before Christ, if the date of Neâ€"kauâ€"Re‘s will is correct. That inscription was copied from the text of therrrince'- will made 2845 years before hCrist, archaeologists say. In our own time, a . man: enâ€" gaged in making his will would not deviate greatly from the prince‘s asâ€" gertion of capacity, for he would write in some such form asâ€"I, John Doe, being in good health and sound and disposing mind, do hereby , . . On. the walls of a prince‘s tomb in Egypt ‘are carvings, telling that ‘‘King‘s son, Neâ€"kauâ€"Re, he makes the following command (while living on his two feet without ailing in any respect." ‘ % ts HOWâ€" WILL WAS MADE __. * BY ReTPRaR Prunce Walls of Ancient Tomb Bear On: of Eue'l?elt Testaâ€" PLUMBING & HEATING 158. St. Johns‘ Aye. Phone Highland Park 201 Choose your Heating Contractor by his ability rather than price alone and you will be comâ€" fortable. T. H. DECKER&CO. Bill are looking for ha One way to make cem you‘re going to en{:y this seaâ€" of the X“r to install ::;e sood, ependable plumbâ€" ing ,If you‘re going to build this sprin{ it would pay you to talk over the specifications with us. l ! IN THE springtime everybody. gng!hisbr:thorandhheomlu JOHN E. BARRETT Phone Libertyville 647â€"Mâ€"1 BLACK DIRT Purer Becauge Carbonated Full Quart Brick 50¢ HIGHLAND ~PARK : PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS ments Known $3.00 Per Yard Mval DELIVERED _ SPECIAL Dairy Products Corporation STRAWBERRY Between two layers of This Week Three Layer Brick VANILLA _ ICE, CREAM ‘"Auto intoxication is what someâ€" times develops when a driver absent mindedly drinks the stuff he m tended to put in the radiator.â€" / delphia Inquirer, t=t f tates, and even when no will is mat fi'h "a growing ene of’m ts to appoint such instit as adm{nistrators for the estates." But not until 1885 did the device of cofâ€" porate trusteeship : have | any ‘ large measure of application, ng¢ to the Bank of the mmofipaw. which has traced the den!g;mt of this method in "The Biography of an Ideal." | The published regults of the bank‘s research invite conclusion that the will of the dead best. serves the living when it makes provigion for the administration of estates through corâ€" porate trusteeship. â€" . ;;> | Do away with your old fashioned Sink ang inatail this Double Draim board oneâ€"piece Sink, 22%x60% in. long, with swinging spout faucet. â€"" CIlllll-ll "‘u .'M hn "hon "-T 8 t faucet, as shown wineing Spou a8 8 Special for Two Weeks $82.00 VIC J. KILLIAN, Inc. PLUMBING CONTRACT 917 Wankle!'[n AV'E‘)” Phone H. P. 1248 |~ ; On display at our showroom. Prairie View, Ill. DECKER PUTTING RECORD GOLFERS of the NORTH SHO â€"â€"~ I Have obtained as capable mechanies‘as can be together with the best of material on every job. shoul ,justify your consideration and patronage, : we will appreciate. : A. A. ROBERTS I am installing tools and machinery to a General Sheetmetal and Warm Air Heat in what ;fi:mown as the Schumacher Candy Factory ab t rear of the Nash Sales Office, which faces Park a betwebd Sheridan roud and St. Jolhns avenie â€" ~â€" Garbage Departmen Now is the Time for Cleaning Catch years, BOX ||24 NATIONAL GOLF SHOW _‘ Apgil 6th to 10th ml?fll in the business and Have served you for the ars, | We stand behind our work. fA VICTOR C. CARLSO Gréeenleaf 500 An investment of $100 or more makes possible for you to participate in the ownt sléii of the Orrington Hotel property and obtain yourâ€"rightful share of the profi 4 HE ROAD to financial independe li¢s open for anyone who will save syst« atféaflx and invest intelligently. infented by T. H. DECKER of Highland f $66 CENTRAL AVE. {.~ HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS . _ |\ ... Residence Phone 2164 _‘ $opPhonéNtmb&wfllbeamuneedm 14 'Myfummz’ "YOUR RIGHTFUL SHARE OF THE PROFITS" N INVITATIO visit Booth 133 on the main foor . of the rniture Mart, 666 Lake Shore Drive, at the To the Public: Telephone 619 . TAYLOR, Manager to try out the new CARLSON BUILDING ORGANIZATION Orrington Avenue and Church St EVANSTON _ to the Buy from manufactu «++ 2930\ 7+ m on ceb HIGH GR.ADE G HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. Sheldrake Ave. 18 E FIVE nd comâ€" NOS IH

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