Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 2 May 1929, p. 40

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36 LES STANGER â€" GUS KLEMP 133 North Second Street . Phone Highland Park 612 List your Furnished Houses > ‘"ith :: Murray & Terry ~Demand now for Summer . .* _ " Rentals. 4" _1<~". : also * Attractive Houses and Lots ~â€"~~For Sale. Call MURRAY AND TERRY Windes & Marsh GoOOoOD â€" FOR RENT | Phones Highland Park 650 There are hundreds of different brands of tires. But Goodyears outsell them all. The public hasâ€" learned, after costly experâ€" ience, that Goodyears are best. Why experiment? Automotive Repair Service JUMBO SQUABS HIGHMOOR SQUAB FARM . Illinois Competent Surveyors | â€" Municipal â€" Engineers Highland Park, IHlinois 291 Phone H. P. 2872 We deliver Winnetka 222 Phone H. P. 69 | _ Decision of the Unitedâ€"State treasâ€" ‘ury'departmeht to condemn the land on the North east corner at the interâ€" section of Madison and Utica streets, Waukegan, as the site for the pro-l osed $335,000 postoffice building and | grant the city continued possession of ’the Highley site which is to be deâ€" veloped for city hall purposes was ’stated in a telegram received last. week by Steve Rynksel, chairman of | \the Chamber of Commerce postoffice | | committee, from Congressman > Carll | R. Chindblom. â€" these numbers would be greatly apâ€" preciated if in the spring house cleanâ€" ing such files are being destroyed. _ Aero Digest, October 1928. _ Antiques, January 1928. â€"~ â€"~~â€" ~ Colliers, November 17, 1928. Forum, August ah_d' September 1928. _ e Literary Digest, December 1, 1928. Saturday Evening Post, January 26, 1928. s ~*.* Decide on New Post Office Site, Waukegan The following magazines are missâ€" ing from the files at the Highland Park Public Librarvy and ennies nf Everyday Problems for the Everyâ€" day Child by D. A. Thom. ; Building ~Character by the Midâ€" West Conference on Parent Educaâ€" tion. C § . Out of a meeting, some 40 years ago, of five mothers who realized their need/Kf‘ counsel in guiding their own childrén, has grown the Child Study Association of America. Doubtless a similar group are responsible for the Infant Welfare association which is this week sponsoring the observâ€" ance of Baby Week, April 28 to May 4th. & & 1 % The titles listed below are among those .which have been greatest in demandâ€".during the last few months. A splendid beginning in this subject is offered in the reading course enâ€" titledâ€"Ourâ€"Childrenâ€" which chas â€"reâ€" cently been compiled by Mr. Bird Baldwin and published by the Amerâ€" ican Library association. This readâ€" ing course includes but six titles some of which are chosen for the father as well as the mother. Ask to see it at the Public Library. o Other new titles of interest are: Psychological Care of Infant and Child by .J. B. Watson. . Children in the Nursery School by H. M. Johnson. es ‘Parenthood and the Newer Psyâ€" chology by F. H. Richardson. The Infant and Young Child by J. L.'v-Mors.gé.r l f C . The Happy Baby by L. E. Holt. . _Practical Psychology of Babyhood by Mrs. Jessie M. C. â€" Fenton. For the mere asking every mother in" Highland Park may borrow the works of the best minds on the subâ€" ject of infant and child welfare, from the Highland Park Public library. The Inner World of Childhood by Mrs. F. G. Wicks. Poetry, January 1928. Permanent Play Materials for Public Library Magazines Missing T H E P RES S On from Ronda to Algeciras from where now we are skipping out in our little boat past the great imâ€" pressive rock of Gibraltar, on our way to Morocco. Spain is fading ~fast. Spain country of surprises. Let me list for unwary some of â€"these surprises so that he may not be caught, as I was, unaware. _ We are nearing the African side. Tangiers straggling up her shore is putting on her most welcomiing sunlit smile. I turn myself over now, tm;o;;rfly-.;fm;n the capable hands of Raymond and Whitâ€" to all these things. But I suppose the basic and really overwhelming surprise was to find myself in Spain at all! * not wholly a surprise.) _ _ _ That there are so many churches. That the Spaniards seem to be used tourists. ~ wos 9 That they stay ‘up all night. That there are so many dogs but none ofâ€"them bit me. â€". _ That the cigarette lighters light. That the coffee is so poor (this was part of That the _ ed, arrive. e J That you manage to get off at the â€" right station. That the people, even the peasants, have very fine hands. That the donkeys‘ backs don‘t break. That the women don‘t smoke. That the men smoke so incessantly. That the soil is so red and a great part of the country so barren. _ lish. : E C That there are so many policemen. That the trains seemingly unassistâ€" I was surprised: 3A That even the children speak Engâ€" Andâ€"I amâ€"notâ€"suréeâ€"that the race that lives here now is not as forâ€" eign to us as any. These black clad; sadâ€"eyed women, struggling up the steep streets, their ‘great, water jars held against their hips, look at us free globeâ€"trotting Americans as if we were beings from another How sad to leave the beautiful Alhambra! To know that tomorrow "Mister Flores" will beâ€" murmuring his blandishment in A&nother éar, that the little shoe shine boy will be calling impudently after another traveller his "No, tank you." "The "thing to see" at Ronda is a tremendous Roman bridge built across the gorge, still used to conâ€" néct the two towns. Below it is the Moorish bridge, and up the gorge a short way‘the new Spanish one. Three civilizations, laid so loosely upon one another that much that each left outcrops through the crust of the others. : Really the guides and various tourist hangersâ€"on are funny. <I have often laughed at the moment when I should. have been most stern! They pick up the jargo?fp’o‘f refusalsâ€"they have so many of themâ€"and parrotâ€"like call them after you, "No tank youâ€"go ‘way â€"tomorrow mornink." Yet it was not so sad to be leavyâ€" ing the Alhambra as if I had not been going to Ronda, famed among travellers for its beauty.. The tourâ€" ist‘s philosophy of "Carry on." I was not disappointed. A hotel surâ€" rounded by beautiful â€" gardens, perched on the edge of a cliff and commanding a marvellous view of_ valley and mountains. . . c# 3 FAREWELL TO SPAIN Spanish never get used to P, ESTHER GOULDS _ hTRAVE T; =â€" L CORNLCLR . An Englishman and I have been laughing at the efforts of one ofâ€"the Spanish crew, who is washing the smoke stacks, not to overwork and have justâ€"discovered that he speaks English.*, This is one of the travelâ€" ler‘s awkward situations ! . comb Co. to those of the Compagnie Transâ€" atlantique. for a motor tour of Morocco and Algeria. wX Lc d s. RAYMONDâ€"WHITCOMB brmotit _ RAYMOND & WHITCOMB COMPANY Chicago â€" Tel. State 8615 176 No. Michigan Avenue been the most popular ~Summer Cruises to sail from America. This year there will be TWO Rayâ€" mond â€" Whitcomb Sumâ€" mer Cruises to the Land: of‘ the â€"Midnight Sun. ‘The cruiseâ€"ships will be sisterâ€"shipsâ€"the newest Cunardersâ€"specially deâ€" signed for cruising. Sailâ€" ing just after the close of schools and colleges, these cruises have conâ€" sistently attracted younger people and famâ€" ilies bound for a vacaâ€" be taken as a complete holiday in ~ themselves (generous shore excurâ€" sions characterize the programs) or as a deâ€" lightful new way toParis. The routes include Iceâ€" land, the North Cape and Hammerfest, Trondâ€" hjem, the most beautiful of the Norwegian Fjords and the cities of Scanâ€" dinavia and the Baiticâ€" Bergen, Oslo, Stockhalm, Visby, Tallinn (Esthoâ€" nian capital), Helsingâ€" fors (capital of Finâ€" land) and Copenhagen. The ratesâ€"$800 upâ€" include assured homeâ€" ward accommodations by such noted Cunard liners as the "Aquiâ€" tania", ‘"Berengaria‘" and "Mauretania" as well as the "Carinâ€" thia‘"‘ and "Franconia". NORTH CAPEâ€"BALTIC SUMMER CRUISES S$.S. "Carinthia‘"‘â€"â€" June 26 S.§. o '_l:'gncggk’f-â€"]unc 29 Raymondâ€"Whitcomb North Cape Cruises for almost ten years have Thursday, May 2, 1929 Showing vie plaining the v est will be. M on May 6 at t torium at 8 p. Since there . before school sftudents â€" of chosen‘ their . play. The class i blue and silver play is to be and they have crizing lines. The girls ~ trailing, fireâ€" cooking. â€" The; o‘clock in the Miss Swan, theâ€" girls on 1 the nature of a course leadit and roads, lai group who we for the girls 1 Lecture on Practice is | the boys of tro are getting pr first aid conte some time in Many. intere enjoyed . by t} of the Oak Te last Sunday i avenue <to Dee Miss Swan, Ravinia E Nears â€" This team h utation. . They first aid cont tween the troc land Park an Episcopal chun Thursday, Ma The girls t refreshments ous sandwich The boys w team _ represe Frank Beling Baracani; Vin Wicklander,. Oak Terr Take A communit were given by of their prog presented a ur resenting goo« girls represen! "Girl Reserve Highwood Entertair Teachers of were the gue Reserves of t tainment: at : Friday aftern First Aid/ â€" Pr

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