Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 29 Nov 1928, p. 5

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ofclock in the lobby of the anditerâ€" standing. of the social life of Sense on the Boy and Gir! Question." This will be a practical taik giving a fellow on the Mayoâ€" Foundation at Rochester, Minn., and at present is an associate in medicine at the Billâ€" ings Memorial hospital where she is sharing in research problems in the department of surgery. | She will present the physiological "Comtmon Sense on DR. RLOISE PARSONS AT HIGH SCHOOL P. T. A. _ _â€". TRURSDAY, NoVEMBER 2o, 19as umon Sense on the Boy N orth_ Shore Trust Company * $1.25 COLLEGE INN FANCY LAMEB CHOPS x. x. CENTURY CLUB FILET MIGNONX, CHAMPIGNON ROAST WAPATO TURKEY WITH GIBLET DRESSING OLD FASHIONED CRANBERRY SAUCE ROAST TAME DUCK wITH HOOD RIVER BAKED APPLE VEGETABLES MERRY wipow or SHRIMP COCKTAIL i0LDEN CELERY HEART â€" DILL PICKLE â€" QUEEXN OLIVE CAULIPLOWER CANDIED SWEET or WI CORNER CENTRAL Thanksgiving Dinner ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING WITH HARD SAUCE KNICKERBOCKER CHICKEN BRAZILLIANAISE CONSOMME A La PRINTANIERE ' FISH SMOKE SARDINE IN oL on TOAST CHOICE OF MINCE â€" PUMPKIN â€" APPLE PIE COPFEE â€" TEA â€" MILK Their efforts will be directâ€" ed to merit a continuance of this confidence and coâ€"operâ€" ation during the coming yearâ€" WER A LA POULETTE or WHIPPED CREAM POTATOES SALAD of this bank welcome ‘this seasonable opportunity to express their appreciation and thanks for the splendid coâ€"operation of its many friends during the past KER SALAD EN SURPRISE â€" DESSERT AVENUE AND FIRST STRERT Te OrricErs AaAnp Dirrctors L. Tayh ‘bvhâ€";-.-v-â€";‘ Mdk‘.!fi.““ s cXg ue 2C 7. SNIn, who starts his third term of office Decemâ€" ‘h ";&Wy '-“.*, m L C hh term, Coroner J. is not required to schedels a hund" Four oflhfiv.m,‘fil- who were ‘reâ€"elected Nov. & have Al-h.ltv.l-num_ J NEWLY ELECTED coUNTY OFFICERS PILE BONDS souP The Highland Park Music club met -Wn‘l.laylfhr-u-ottihâ€"‘ at the home of Mrs. R. J. Beatty, 260 Ravine drive. An exceptionally fine and interestâ€" ing program was given by the follow_ FINE PROGRAM GIVEN f BEFORE MUSIC CLUB $1.25 The Lincoin sthool P.T.A. will meet ‘ Wednesday afternoon at three o‘clock in the school. Miss Hendee, librarâ€" ; -.'..‘dz-eflfi.'lh::; pupils second grade a few songs under the direction of | mlr-h_.‘ § suitable for children this Christmas m s All will be welcome. S es e e es â€"I new flag has taken the place of the old one in the church. LINCOLN P. T. a. To HEAR MISS HENDER *"/mty church was reverenth l' No ed .l:hy morning in the parish longer serviceable and there being mo WmV Vomiah t marahin is hi B 11. Lo land Park Woman‘s club will hold i‘s second meeting on Tuesday mornâ€" iag, Dec. 4 at 10:30 sharp in the club house. The brilliant speaker Mrs. Vera Brady Shipman, of the Davis store, will give an illuminating | talk on | "Quilts of Yesterday and Today." | She will have with her a brilliant ; atray of manufactured printed quilts | with ancient patterns and will tell | the history of quilts of various naâ€" | trons. Members of the class are also asked to bring with them any heirâ€" }Jooms in the way of quilts, and tell | their history. REVERENCE MONDAY Trinity Church Replaces Flag in Church; Hoid Ceremony PPROAe uhnsl .. 22 ings are held the first Tuesday ing of each month. is dfi ncfi d d 0 00 i s lightful morning, as was the last meeting, when Miss Harriet Montâ€" gomery charmed her audience with her lecture and exhibit of engravings. The art committee extends an inâ€" vitation to all who are interested. whether they are members of thi club of not, to jJoin this class. Meetâ€" BURN OLD FLAG IN MRS. VERA B. SHIPMAN TO SPEAK HERE DEC. a man, Mrs, lnringfll"‘...- South Linden avenue CNGpbnaiinlasn‘ "A letter telling of y to either of these funds at once by the ('hlirfllln. N aniapionich : being ton'fi:i:nti.l, "Any sum is ac with the hames a ‘ccording to tradition and custom authorized by the United States | gert, Cecile Hvale, Barbara Jll!!‘d,’ ‘c. Siffert, Joan Soukup, Jessie Page, Shirley Sticken, Gwendolyn Killelea, | â€" Myrtle Lee, Naney Knaak, Gertrude | | Denyer, Verna Taylor, Louiise Ann | l Hutchinson, Barbara Ashman, Marâ€"| | tha Ashman, June Johnson, Lavergne | Krase, Margaret Shilkus, and Gelda | Duc c tay if sent to the serve a double ing a tribute _ great deal of for flowers at funer "Your uuxlu;y has and Happy Day Fund,‘ of which are used for â€" Highland Park . mailed the follow dents of this city. L 1 ud e o Me EC PCY interest among the little girls of the community and their ardent suportâ€" ers. Fifteen of them will be made wyhfl"}tcmti-g iThere are at present thirtyâ€"cight enâ€" | trants in the contest. | Amtdtfiemhu'l‘u-h" !dmw:hlh.â€"npuu LETTER SENT OUT TO LOCAL RESIDENTS othy Fraser ley Krogstad, Sylvia Johnson, Dorâ€" othy Anderson, Charlotte Baum, Dorâ€" Club to Hear Talk on ‘3 Sum is acceptable and checks, the names of those you wish to . should be sent to the chair. U.. <x_ 20 CT2C 0. dn e cd h i Sellar Bullard, 215 THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, expected to be another deâ€" Department of the High e e Sss 7 , June of Woman‘s Stieglitz, 529 coâ€"chairman, your donation s will be sent , the amounts and at the needy per. speech when he said: n"y of competing for the printing of eunlquhcuhe--ity.Wer:- sent propaganda of government burâ€" eaucrats in the Post Office departâ€" spreads the spirit of submission inâ€" to our daily life and penetrates the temiper of our people not with the habit of powerful resistance to '-cu:ua-hucdu-u acceptance of irresistible might. Competition is closed by burâ€" t > is over desirous of its influence and power." ment circulated among citizens paâ€" litical consequences of its errors | !2"%> Who will also be a member of :;d wrongs is driven irresistibly | the party. The official name of the without peace to greater and great. | ©*Pedition is the Harold Whiteâ€"John er control of the nation‘s press and | Coats Abyssinian Expedition of Field platform. Every step of bureauâ€" | M4@@m. The third principal memâ€" cratizing of the business or our ; P°" Of the party will be C. J. Alâ€" co L the roots of | brecht, a mgmher of Field Museum‘: Ti l,' ® that is, pol'l" i Iâ€" lsun of taxidermists. | ity, free speech, free assembly, | To Secure Specimens free press and equality of opportuâ€" | The expedition will not be a "big| nity." | game hunt" in the usual sense, Diâ€"| Equality of opportunity is all that| rector Simms declares. That is, no | the press is asking for in the enactâ€"| killing will be done unnecessarily or ment of ‘legislationâ€"that is, we beâ€"| for mere sportsmanship; killing will lieve we should have equal opportuâ€"| be strictly limited to a few animals w‘mh&mof;desinbleummnm specimens or for | e oo T 2 uL % . business is subject. business does not tolerate amongst its customers the freedom of comâ€" Presidentâ€"elect Hoover recognized | the gravity of the situation and stressed the importance . of keeping the government out of business in at ; least three of his four principal adâ€" dresses before election. The printers and publishers want the government to stop selling a commodityâ€"comâ€"| mercial printingâ€"which is a\'nilahle“ n the local print shop without placâ€" ing orders with the Government Post | Office. That Mr. Hoover recognized the peril of these bureaucratic tenâ€"‘ dencies in relation to the press is unâ€" | mistakably shown in excerpts from | his platform. Every step of bureauâ€" | cratizing of the business or our ; country poisons the very roots of | !M is, political equalâ€" | ity, free speech, free assembly, | free press and equality of opportuâ€" | wite ® "ustakably shown in excerpts from his speech in New York. October 22. What Hoover Says "Every expansion of _government in business means that government in order to protect itself from the political consequences of its errors and wrongs is driven irresistibly without peace to greater and greatâ€" er control of the nation‘s press and platform. Every step of bureauâ€" it se un ts principle that the government has no right to compete unfairly with private enterprise in the printing of special request addresses on stamped envelopes. Regarding this matter the National Editorial association has is sued the following: Never before in the history of Amerâ€" ican politic« have the people been brought face to face with a problem for which newspapers publishers and printers have sought recognition for nearly forty years. The press of the country has from time to time called on Congress to recognize the principle that the government has ne right to compete unfairly with Hoover Quoted as Against Comâ€" petition with Business by Federal Bureaus; Prinâ€" ciple is Unfair OPPOSE GOVERNMENT /.. PRINTING FOR SALE == HURTS PRIVATE CONCERNS: HIGHLAND PARK STATE BANK After I was through college the me. They helped me learn to man: "My parents died when I was 10 year: father arranged in his Will for the bank t Executor. f The officers of the h‘nk were like a fa 1 was well provided for‘ I talked with th my clothes. When I wanted to go to college, those and plan my life work. A young man who is rapidly making business man tells this story about himself ih commercial a/2°CT i was through college the bank gradually turned things _ They helped me learn to manage my property. Your family deserves this service. Arrangements have been made for several men now on the ground, who will be assistants in the expedition‘s aration of such a group is one of the miost difficult tasks a taxidermist can reticulated giraffes, including adult males and females, and young. This is the largest, finest and handsomest of all giraffes, acgording to Dr. Wilâ€" fred Osgood, curator of zoology, who led the previous Abyssinian expediâ€" tion, and it is found only in southern Abyssinia and vicinity. It is colored a rich sienna brown, with its white _ The expedition is to round out the | results of the museum‘s previous Ab: | yssinian expedition in 1926â€"27 (the Chicago Daily Newsâ€"Field Museum { Abyssinian Expédition), and the | combined collections of the two exâ€" | peditions are expected to make the | finest collection in existence of aniâ€" | mals from that part of Africa. | _ The present expedition is financed | jointly by Mr. White, and by his friend, John Coats of Ayrshire, Scotâ€" cause t‘lle members of t?.l;e'exped]”‘ "vti;;‘ other scientific purposes. This limiâ€" tation "will be strictly adhered to beâ€" Led by Harold White of New York City, wellâ€"known hunter and explorer, a zoological expedition to Abyssinia on behalf of Field Museum of Natural History sailed from New York on the steamship "Ile de France" on Saturday, Oct. 20, it was announced by Stepfien €. Sin;.;S, director of the museum. | M CC a FIELD MUSEUM SPONSOR | Scotiand â€"â€"â€" | ter‘s pla Started Oct. 20 From New York brecht to Collect Rare Sansimantc barts a ABYSSINIA OBJECT OF NEW EXPEDITION |_ It should be borne in mind that in ‘ instances where citizens of this comâ€" munity patronize the government and place their orders for printing with “the Post Office department they,;are encouraging government competition, ~which a majority of American voters have unreservedly condemned. â€" The principle of unfair government comâ€" petition with private enterprise is not an abstract proposition, but a real problem which is brought to; your own door step if you continue to . buy printing from the Federal Govâ€" ernment or protest the restriction of this bureaucratic practice. hen I was 10 years old. I had no near relatives so Will for the bank to act as my Guardian as well as Qualified as a Trust Company DO0 0 CCOmEE TD INC ISL â€"â€"___. | ter‘s plane, there joining Mr. Al ted Oct. 20 From New York brecht a}':SihOth'Tlr l;lember‘f of Dthe ; 4 barty, which will then sai to Djiâ€" Colltt-' Rare 'Sp.c?ll!lellts bouti, principal port of Abyssinia. of Animals Native to | Thence they will follow the came! That Country | caravan inland. A stop will be made e . & | at Addis Ababa, the capital, where i by Harold White of New )"’kY Ras Tafari, ruler of Abyssinia, will wellâ€"known hunter and explo'l‘e.l',“ be visited. Ras Tafari gave special logical expedition to Abyssinia courtesies and assistantse i2 an. _.__ half of Kink® MrscmmsccaF N6L 204 k were like a father to me I talked with them about oung Man men helped me pick my studies a name for himself as a wise buskiels on an sere. Record Potate Crop ‘l\e"ld'-n-dyhfld”- toes, so far as is known, was raised He was ?puin of the Syracuse uniâ€" versity football team in 1916, and was chosen "Allâ€"American" guard. Mr. Goates is a member of the old Seotch family of J. P. Coats, makers Mr. White, in addition to his preâ€" vious â€" Abyssinian expeditions, has hunted in India, Indoâ€"China, Yunnan and Szechuan, and China, has given many valuable specimens both to Field Museum and other institutions. t o uhi n it uinstms diiaistichiiecii 13708 his departure from Chicago. The reâ€" turn date of the other division, which will then be in the elephant and bufâ€" falo country, is uncertain. After finishing work near Lake Rudolf, one division of the expediâ€" tion led by Messrs. White and Codts, will go to the Sobat River, region for further hunting, while a second diâ€" vision headed by "Mr. Albrecht will go south into the nearby British, terâ€" ritory of Keenya, and continue south until the railroad is reached, which will take them to Nairoci, whence Mr. Albrecht will return to the Uniâ€" ted States, about nine~months after Paeast C w ol cnd eon mt mt Air Force during the war, and an . intimate friend and flying comarde of | the Late Vernon Castle who was | killed while battling in the air. <Mr. | White and Mr. Coats will fly from | Scotland to Marseilles in the latâ€" ]ter’s plane, there joining Mr. Al puna d aed se «NC the fourth largest African lake. Among the more important animals to be sought, besides giraffes, are rhinocerosos, blackâ€"mained lions, and various antelopes including the Eland, a very large species. Notes furnishâ€" ed by Dr. Osgood will aid the expediâ€" tion in its search for additional speâ€" cies desired for the general collecâ€" tion. . They saw to it that my plansâ€"even about From Addis Ababa the expedition will have three to four weeks‘ steady travel by horse and mule caravan into the province of Haji. The party will hunt there, and around Lake Stephanie, then in the province of Boran, and on the shores of Lake Rudolf, which is about 100 miles long and the fourth largest African lake. Among the more important animal [0 Cva% miand. A stop will be made at Addis Ababa, the capital, where Ras Tafari, ruler of Abyssinia, will be visited. â€" Ras Tafari gave special courtesies and assistantce to the preâ€" vious expedition of the museum, and is extremely friendly to Mr. White as a result of two previous expediâ€" tions the latter has led in his counâ€" try. + Aonaiansthnees MB ht Athicaveh c BR is 2t3 linen thread used throughout the 10 NCR OEC CVUURY 1n¢ time it reaches the section of the country where operations are to beâ€" gin. This will include regions of Abyssinia which the prévious expediâ€" tion did not reach, After crossing the Atlantic, Mr. White will go to Mr. Coats‘ estate in Scotland, while Mr. Albrecht Will proâ€" ceed directly to Marseilles. Mr. Coats Wwas a major in the British Royal AiF Forps anstuloue 00 c CC o work, to go ahead of Abyssinia with of camels carrying.s ment, before the n in Abyssinia. . Tr; and horses, the mai take the eamel o go ahead into o ahead into the interior nia with a large caravan arrying: supplies and equipâ€" re the main party arrives nia. Traveling on mules , the main party will overâ€" camel caravan about the over to hg the Atlantic, Mr. o Mr. Coats‘ estate in Mr. Albrecht Will proâ€" Marseilles. Mr. Coats in the British Royal ar, and an comarde of PAGE FIVE to Djiâ€"

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