Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 16 Aug 1928, p. 2

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be no services here. Many of our memâ€" bers are originally from the Northâ€" brook church and since this Sunday is to be Homecoming and Confirmaâ€" tionâ€"Reunion Sunday at Northbrook we will dismiss both Sunday school and morning worship and join in the celebration of the day with our Northâ€" brook friends. There will be regular services on the following Sunday, Aug. N. Green Bay Rd. and Homewood ave. * Rev. K. A. Roth, pastor The members and friends of St. Johns church are invited to worship with St. Peters Evangelical church at Northbrook this Sunday. There will _ Churceh Announcement nue, a branch of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass., holds services every Sunday morning at 10:45 and on Wednesday evening at 8 o‘clock, when testimonies of Christian Science healâ€" ing are given. Sunday School meets at 9:30 a.m., and is open to pupils under the age of twenty. The pastor will preach on the folâ€" lowing subjects: 10:45 a.m. "The Security of the True Church." "Upâ€" on this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." Matt. 16:18. 7:45 p.m. "God‘s Purpose in this Age." Acts 15:13, 14. The message of the mornâ€" ing will portray the future of the true church and the‘destiny of the false church. The sermon in the eveâ€" ning will show that God is accomplishâ€" ing His purpose in our age. "Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering; for He is faithful that promised; and let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works: not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhortâ€" ing one another; and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching." Heb. 10:23â€"25. You are cordially invited to make use of the reading room, 361 Central avenue, which is open every week day from mine in the morning until six in the evening and on Wednesdays unâ€" til 7:30. The reading room is also open on Sunday afternoon from 2:30 First Church of Christ, Scientist, Highland Park, IIL, 381 Hazel Aveâ€" sermon "Mind." Christian endeavor meeting at 7:00 p.m. Topic, "How Magazines and Newspapers Help or Hinder Christian Liying." 2 Tim. 3:1â€"17. Dorsey Husâ€" enetter, leader. Prayer meeting on Wednesday eveâ€" ning at eight o‘clock. Greenbay Road and Laurel avenue Rev. C. G. Unangst, pastor The interior of the church has been newly decorated and new lights have been installed. All regular services will be held on Sunday. ‘The Bible School meets at 9:30 a. m. Lesson subject, "Paul Carries the Gosâ€" pel into Europe." Acts 15:36â€"15:15. _ First United Evangelical Highland Park Lodge No. 738 KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Selvi Carls0‘e ADIO St. Johns Evangelical Subject for next Sunday‘s lesson 546 CENTRAI Regular Meeting, Auguat 21 28 Christian Science COLUMN % Promcse to love, honor, cherish and buy my radio supplies fFrom â€" CENTRAL A H. g 30%6 E. R. THOMAS, MUSIC SHOP "I should like very much to see my father‘s record. He was in the class of "7B," amnounced the new student. ']..Ihddukda:uo-‘ ® reason for consulting it ?" -z'-l."-â€"u the youth, "dad has warned me again not to disgrace him, and 1 wish to see just how far eleven and cight o‘clock. . Messages by the pastor. We invite our friends to worship with us and strangers are any of our services and worship with Finding His Limit A freshman at Harvard applied at the dean‘s office of the university for Rev. C. F. Schriver, minister. _ ° ~ *Workhiy strvices mext Sunday at E.LC.E. meeting for young folk at 7:15. You will get some good from the service and make a contriâ€" bution too. Prayer meeting Wednesday eveâ€" ning at 8:00 o‘clock. Barrington Park camp meeting dates are Aug. 24 to Sept. 3. Servâ€" ices morning, afternoon and evening of each day save the first. You are invited to attend any and al} of the services. If interested in any special features of the camp call 756â€"M for always welcome.‘ Just drfop in for further information. morning. There is a class for you. Bring your family and friends with Oakridge and High street. G. A. 0. Engstrom, pastor. Sunday, August 19â€" 10:45 a.m., Sunday school. 11 a.m., morning worship; 8 p.m., the union choir song service, Rev. Wm. Nelson will speak. Tuesday, August 21, 8 p.m., Rev. Julius Lorimer, former pastor of the congregation, will speak. 0 Sundayâ€" 9:45 Church school. 11:00 Morning worship. Rev. J. M. Duerr, First Presbyterian church, of Clinton, lowa. North ave and Laurette Place Rev. Wm. B. Doble, minister Friday, August 17â€" The Ladies‘ Aid Society will meet with Mrs. Trout. «& Sunday, August 19â€" 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10:45 a.m Morning worship. In his acceptance of the invitation to be the guest of bonor at the fourth annual Summer Festival of the Amerâ€" ican Legion at Waukegan, he stated that he was very anxious to renew acquaintance with men from the 23rd who live in and near Waukegan. It is expected that most of the men who served with the old Second division will be on hand to give him a rousing welcome when he arrives. The general will attend a dinner given in his honor just before the paâ€" rade following which he will take his position among the honored guests leading the parade. General Malone is one of the outâ€" standing officers of the World war. In the early days of the war he comâ€" manded the 23rd infantry of the 2nd division at Belleau Wood, Chateau Thierry, Soissons, and St. Mihiel. Shortly after the St. Mihial offensive he was made Brigadier General and took command of the First Replaceâ€" ment depot at St. Aignan. A short time ago he was promoted to a major general and is now in command f the 6th Corps Area. General Malone received several citations from our own and foreign governments for his services in the war. 'l"hu;sday.'August_ 23, 8 p.m., The Luther League will meet. Rev. F. G. Piepenbrok, pastor Church school, 9:15 a. m. Services, 10:15. a. m. The "LLL. Club" will hold its monthly meeting Tuesdasy, August 21, and the Young People‘s society will meet Thursday, August 23. Both orâ€" ganizations are planning to hold an outâ€"door meeting. Announcements to this effect will be sent to all members of both organizations. Annual festival of the Evangelical Home for Children and the Aged at Bensenville, Illinois, Sunday, August 26th, 1928. Rev. D. Irion of Elmhurst college will deliver‘the address at 11:00 a. m. in the German language and Rev. H. J. Schick at 2:30 p.m. in English. There will be no service at the St. Paul‘s church that Sunday and the members and friends of the church are invited to spend the day at the new Children‘s Home at Bensenville. Linden, Laurel and Porspect avenues Rev. Frank Fitt, pastor GENERAL MALONE TO BE GUEST AT FETE Waukegan Legion Festival Aug. Major General Paul B. Malone will be the guest of honor of the Amerâ€" ican Legion of Waukegan at their fourth annual Summer Festival paâ€" rade on August 31. Presbyterian Church Sunday school at 9:45 each Sunday Bethany Evangelical 31 to Be Marked by His Presence; Features Grace M. E. Church St. Pauls Lutheran Highwood Lutheran to the steam roller, when they get chance to operate it themselven: A novel use for automobiles has been discovered in Thompsonville, Connecticut, where it is said that automobiles with an original value of nearly a quarter of a million dolâ€" lars will be tumbled into an abyss duin(thenmfcvhn.inn“‘ to fill a hole in the roadway which apâ€" peared when a stretch of macadam 100 feet long and 50 feet wide dropped through, says a builetin issued by the Chieago Motor elub. Tons upon tons of sand had been put into the gap to no avail, so selectman hit upon the scheme of buyâ€"| ing up all the old cars he could get to fill up the chasm. Over 250 cars have been purchased to date. IN GLIDING AIRCRAFT German Experts in This Art in U. S. to Teach It; Novel Three German aviatorsâ€"Capt. Paul Roehre, Dr. Paul Lubenthal and Peter Hesselbachâ€"arrived in this country the other day and announced they had come to teach America to fly without gasoline, They came under the ausâ€" pices of the American Motoriess Aviaâ€" tion club of New York City, newly formed to foster gliding in the Uniâ€" ted States. They will demonstrate their gliders, in which they have reâ€" mained in the air as long as 14 hours and covered as much as three hundred miles by motorless soaring. k takeâ€"off of a gliding flight, wr Alffiden P. Armagnac in the August issue of Popular Science Monthly, is always a stirring affair. A wind day is chosen. The glider a streamâ€"lined featherweight craft of thinâ€"ply wood framework and light woven linen wings, is poised on a hillâ€" top. To a hook at the bottom of its nose, several men attach a double towâ€" rope of rubber as thick as a man‘s finger. A gust of wind sweeps the hill. Already the pilot has climbed into the cockpit, strapped himself in. "Let ‘er go!" Half a dozen men race down the slope dragging the machine at increasâ€" ing speed as if it were a kite being launched. Others run beside it, holdâ€" ing up the fragile wings from conâ€" tact with the ground until they seize the air and lift the craft. "Rocky Mountain Park has the edge slightly on Glacier, for its cars can carry a total of 804 visitors, as against 788 in the Glacier cars. Yosemix:J 57 cars have a total capacity of people, while Zion‘s 54 carry 582 peo-J ple. In gusy weather a pilot may have to exercise all his skill at the‘controls to keep his craft headed straight and on a level keel. Hanging suspended. motionless, in a powerful upward air current is an odd experience occasionâ€" ally met with by pilots, among them the German flyer Botsch, who took off halfway up Mt. Wasserkuppe and landed a few seconds later at the sumâ€" mit. "In Mount Rainier 31 passengerâ€" carrying machines are operated with a capacity for 368 guests, and Grand Canyon has 25 cars with a total carryâ€" ing capacity of 240 visitors." DEEP HOLE IN HIGHWAY New Use for Discarded Autos Is "Free!" shouts the pilot. They let go. The towrope falls off and the loosed glider soars over. their ‘heads A German named Kegel added a 14 horseâ€"power motor to his glider, flew under power to a height of two and a half miles, shut off the engine and soared entirely around the Bavarian Alps. His gasoline cost him one dolâ€" lar for the trip. Many experts believe that such motorâ€"gliders may be the "flivver planes" of tomorrow. There is no noise, no smellâ€"only the beating of the air against the wings. The pilot can lean over the side of his craft and talk to those over whose heads he is flying. Like some giant crane, the great soaring bird wheels and glides on motionless pinions. Novel Ceremony A novel ceremony, based upon this fancied resemblance, is in vogue at a Rossiteen, Germany, training school for glider pilots, where "the call of the crane" is a salute accorded pilots returning from a successful flight. Spectators on the) ground vent their applauge by standing on the right leg. stretching forth the left hand and imitating the bird‘s note. There are 663 motor vehicles with a total passengerâ€"carrying capacity of 6,806 operating in national parks, mcâ€" cording to information received by the touring bureau of the Chicago Motor club. * USE OLD CARS TO FILL A statement issued by the National Park Service, Department of the Inâ€" terior, says: "The greatest number is inâ€" the Yellowstone, with 323 cars capable of transporting 3.105 passenâ€" gers. Glacier and Rocky Mountain National Park, each have 76 passenâ€" gersâ€"carrying machines. MANY MOTOR VEHICLES IN NATIONAL PARKS & in Daily Practice THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILiJNoI® Features Exemplified mb 4 He on Tod Houk buid Worr m . of highways has “-Mm-‘- 124 of Route 130, in Richland county, to Charies W. Clark, Terre Haute, on a bid of $155,186.29. A contract for bid of $21,626.59, and Harry C. Holâ€" mes, Macomb, was awarded the conâ€" tract for the construction of a bridge on section 118B of Route 95, in Hanâ€" 104B of Route 132, in Mouitrie counâ€" For the construction of a bridge on section 105B of Route 114, in Kankaâ€" kee county, the Dunca» Construction The firm bid $18,737.90 for the job. cheese.â€"Farm & Fireside could have on his way to heaven if the moon really was made of green Farms furnish 40.7 per cent of our exports.â€"Farm and Fireside. August is our biggest clearance month of the year. We are clearing the decks for merchandise that is scheduled for September shipment. The price reduction that prevail are the greatest in our history, because we are determined to dispose of a great many articles on every one of our five floors. With this end in view, many articles have been priced at less than the cost of replacement for clearance. Schwarts Furniture Company, 11â€"13 So. Genesee St., just south of Washington, Waukegan, Illinois. RAVINIA OPERA and _ CONCERTS WAREKHKOUSES Foremost along the North Shore MOVING ho._c!:!:n.:-._-fln“ BEVENTEENTH Szason JUNE 23 to SEPTEMBER 3 HOUSEHOLD GOODS PHONE H. P. 181â€"182 STORAGE __ Daily and Sunday _ Telephone Highland Park 2727 Evanston Shop Open Saturday Evenings Only During July and August CHICAGOâ€"State and Jackson EVANSTONâ€"Orrington and Church Henry C.Lljfimim;nfi Sons PACKING WEhveyethoseeanyotherClofl\in'Cleamw whereâ€" in which reductions are made with so little reâ€" gard for cost or former selling prices as in this great semi: annual FINAL CUT, But our stocks must be absolutely cleared for Fallâ€"so we take this drastic loss to insure their Spring $40, $45 and $50 All Remaihing Broken vL‘ines of SUITS SHIPPING Now Marked Down Sulivan, for a for Immediate Clearance to Final Cut‘ sz7 Press Want Ads Bring Results In Our Evanston Shop Half Block West of Deerfleld State Bank Deerfield, Tlinois Phones 178â€"179 Highland Perk, Ilinois Beginning This Morning UPTOWN BARBER SHOP The LAUNDRY does it best! Reliable Laundry and Dry Cleaning Company _ We operate our own dry cleaning plant. 25 years of service. Children‘s Haircutting THE best way to launder wash able rugs is to send them to our laundry. We return them to ou freshly clean, with colors zrightly_new. And the cost is way to launder L4 ) THURSDAY, AUGUSYT 9, 1988 of

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