Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 4 Apr 1929, p. 53

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one of the most inâ€" ands in the: world eat colonies of abâ€" ar birds, and terns naking this procedâ€"â€" passed at the meetâ€" board Thursday eveâ€" ointive members of ill be named within announced. matters now pendâ€" in which coâ€"operaâ€" sed new blan comâ€" lesired. ~ ° den club is sponsorâ€" e given this afterâ€" 2:50 o‘clock, in the litorium for 50 Arâ€" nd children of the he school. * Bailey, director of ciences in Chicago, ea Birds and Coral ig his lecture with Dr. Bailey gave this the winter for the t of the Woman‘s 1 was so enthusiâ€" that the Glencoe the lecture would ially would appeal ok ~ for ‘a" recordâ€" building activity in e announcement reâ€" lage has beev chosâ€" for the new $350,â€" ountry club project viation corporation, n of an unprecedâ€" ivity for that thrivâ€" which joins Glencoe lan â€" Commission, a â€"organizedâ€"several ich inâ€"the past has der specific regulaâ€" oth to its continuaâ€" e of Lake usiness College Pettengill, C.P.A., Lake County Busiâ€" ounces a change in the: schodot*finder the. has been apparent few months by the ‘nt of students and r of calls for: help Employment bureau ike county. hnance es Plan Group t institution to the ‘ommerce. At a reâ€" the board of. direcâ€" development, it is planks in the platâ€" parties which will Id for votes at the ction to be held in iy, April 16. Children ecture Guests d to change to this re indicative of the scope of the college Bailey‘s pictures ysan, a coral atoll rthwest. of Hawaii, â€" service,. but _not se of lack of proâ€" ks for ng Activity Navy Recruits Wanted s For Ships of Fleet The Navy Recruiting Station, Chiâ€" cago, Teports that vacancies wilk exâ€" ist on naval ships in â€"all bran_ch_e:_s,aof the Atlantic and Pacific coast fleets, these vacancies are caused by the completion and subsequent launching: of two new cruisers in July, the crews of which will consist of men taken from both the seaboard fleets. _ The Navy offers an opportunity for young men to learn a trade in one of the fourteen different trade schools teaching 55 different trades, it also offers an enviable opportunity for young men toâ€"see the world in all its glory and romanee,â€" underâ€" Uncle Sam‘s Jackâ€"Tar flag. After a training of eight weeks at the Naval <Training station, Great Lakes, IIl., the recruits will be sent to San Diego, Calif.. A recruit, to be admitted into the Navy, must be of good character and have an eighth grade education and pass a rigid phyâ€" sical examination. ° Any one interâ€" ested should write or see Theodore W. Dawis, 608 South Dearborn street, Garden Study Course â€" : Given During April éfiici'go, Navy representative. An April garden study course 0¢câ€" curring four Mondays in April, are beingâ€"given â€"byâ€"Mrs._John Lind . of Kenilworth at 11 o‘clock each week in a private room adjoining the colâ€" lege inn at the Hotel Sherman. Lunchâ€" eon is served. t{@ *# i "The subjects for the lectures, pust} and future, are: . | April 1â€""Garden Plans for Year; Seed Catalogue Time; Raising Your* Own Stock." ’ * x | April 8â€""Outlines of Work Planâ€" Among my young friends there is one who has put up to me a question that I think is of general interest to young people. He is a young man, about twenty, normal in every respect, and anxious to get married, but his parents feel that he is too young. â€", _ ©â€"_"Wait a while," they have urged â€"him, "until you have had a chance to play a bit and are making more money. Then you can seriously consider marriage." . â€" And so he has asked me for my â€"views on early marriage. I believe definitely and emphatically in early marriage. As soon as a youth has attained man‘s estate it is time for him to marry. Aside from the pleagureâ€"of sharing your joys and sorrows with the one you love, early marriage has enabled many a young man to avoid temptations that he might otherwise find impossible to overcome. Furthermore, early marriage establishes a high ideal at a period of life when habits are being formed. Every normal boy, when he attains manhood, has a distinct and emphatic desire for a home, a wife and children, along with the duties and responsibilities it inâ€" volves. â€" He craves the companionship of one upon whom he ‘can shower his affection. He wants to be loved in return, and it is only right that these yearnings should be satisfied early in life: _ â€"_ â€"It is true that we cannot overlook the financial burden of a home and children as an important factor of the probléem. Asâ€"aâ€"rule, the earning capacities of a man in his twenties are limited, but the responsibilities that come with marriage often act as a stimulus to a man who might otherwise be inclined to take things easy and watch for a "lucky break." The necessary and the desire to protect and provide for those who are dear to him, is character building, and often such a young â€"man arrives atâ€" a comparatively early success in life because of his economic burdens and not in spite of them. â€" Until some entirely different social and economic system is evolved, men must continue to bear the brunt of paying the bills. That is the game of life as we know it, and he who would play must abide by the rules. â€" Asiia" l iG : cI" & * 4 ~ The longer marriage is delayed, the less chance it has of ever being_ consummated. We already have an alarming percentage of unmarried men and women who are of a marriageable ageâ€"which means one of two things... They are either taking love where and when they find it, with all the dangers that implies; or else they are livli_ng the life of‘ celibates, which is both unhealthful and unâ€" natural. R § {# f: 2 â€"~Therefore, I say that marriage after the twentieth year should not be discouraged if ashighâ€"standard of health, happiness and morality are to be attained. j s â€"Bérnare MacFadden. EARLY MARRIAGES ned; Roadside Planting; Civic Plantâ€" ing; Altruistic Use of Gardens; Best Garden Books." t hk â€" â€" April 15â€""Planting Tables; Color Schemes; Design in the Garden; Garâ€" den Do‘s and Garden Don‘ts." ~April 22â€""The Technique of Makâ€" ing a Garden; Styles; Fertilizers; Sprays; Pruning; Transplanting." â€"~The course is offered at the request of district chairmen of gardening of the Illinois Federation of Women‘s clubs and is open to. anyone interâ€" ested in gardening. ___â€" â€" § Woman in Auto Races ~~Train to Safe Place Trapped in the center of the Chiâ€" cago & North Western tracks at Winâ€" netka last weelkcamith closed gates at the. front and ar. of.her autoâ€" mobile and <trair@@earing down from either direction,; Mrsy Oscar C, Helm elected to: race the slower of the two trains, a local, and won. io. oo For 200 yards she raced down the tracks, with the train behind always gaining. . Reachingâ€"the. station she drove on the platform safe by a matâ€" ter of seconds. She had her sister, Miss Bertha Steiner, as a passenger. Mrs. Helm lives at 1159 Chatfiekd road, Winnetka. Gateman or Device at Crossing Up in Court A railroad company may not replace human flagmen with electric signaling devices at dangerous grade crossings where a city ordinance requires the former method of safeguarding the traveling public, the Supreme Court of the United States has just ruled in an important decision, of interest to all autoists. + * The decision upholds the power of T Hâ€" E P R E 8 8 a city to determine in what manner dangerous grade crossings within its limits shall be protected, according to the legal department of the Ameriâ€" can Motorists association, in coâ€"operaâ€" tion with the Automobile club of Illiâ€" nols. The ordinance involved in the deâ€" cision was passed by the city of Memâ€" phis, Tenn., 40 years ago and reâ€" quired the presence of flagmen swingâ€" flags in daytime, and lighted lanterns in the night time at all railroad crossâ€" ings.. Without regard for the ordiâ€" nance, one railroad company removed its crossing watchmen and substituted in their places modern mechanical sigâ€" naling apparatus. An‘autoist was killed at one of the crossings and the carrier‘s violation of the ordinance was urged as the proximate cause of the . accident. ((AYEFMA)p An Insurance Policy omgoutfl- j Decorations _ . > % ~~Estimates Cheerfully Furnished American Metal Products Co. 605 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago Superior 7562 â€" Husband won‘t be grouchy if you don‘t serve the same dishes too _often. You can get pleasing variety in Chinese dishes at all hours â€"convenient to take home. 3 CHICKEN CHOW MEIN â€"â€"=â€"PORK CHOW MEIN _â€" . CHICKEN ‘CHOP SUEY â€"â€"PORK â€"CHOP SUEY s ~â€" ‘RGG FOUE JOUNG .. _ - » â€"Prepaired by our Chinese chef 4= 4 â€" Phone 547 LAKE FOREST SCHOOL of MUSIC d in THE COLLEGE CHAPEL Tickets $2.50, obtainable at the Music School, telephone 999, § â€" or at Krafft‘s Drug Store Theâ€" Barrere Little Symphony f * _ Orchestra *E s FOURTH SUBSCRIPTION CONCERT Season 1928â€"1929 > SsATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 13 wWill PROTECT YOUR WALLS and DRAPES INSTALL .. THEM now _ DURING SPRING _ HOUSE _ CLEANING CHINESE DISHES COLLEGE INN at 8:15 o‘clock . .. the fascinating new Arch Preserver ~Shoes, styled to harmonize with your smartâ€" est ensembles . .. and built with patented hidden comâ€" fort features that will put the buoyancy of Life‘s Springâ€" time into your every step! In Tune With Spring ~~Central New Models for Every _ Occasion . . . $10 up Thursday, April 4, 1929 Highland Park, Hi

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