ed during the «. They could ns from him. » after sizing sid shot him bd $ b inter- Â¥ a car full eid wounded MVQ manâ€" ipanion while I8 unded S the C; & R. V. Rasâ€" field for a ments right aty jail, > _ al other rail. irea ~came to &diu istody of or his j ,â€â€˜ A So. was def ts that Reid _ county jail ectives have er they will eral authorâ€" plete a forâ€" whe escaped equipment ns are ofâ€" company. t) will nee, Reid was &fly after and â€" was ?ark hospital, 1d ;hu-en robâ€" , Nov ._v&' ‘.cyru $ n Farm tes won‘t y: have a ing 'deï¬nitJ; Mman wha roads, Sher. rt in Line iter clal 92 Delegates from eight middle. westâ€" ern states gathered in~Chicago, Thursâ€" day, November 14, at the Hotel Sherâ€" man forâ€"a â€"three â€"dayâ€"conference of ._Y. W. C. A. service workers. Mrs. 0. L. Olesen, president of our local board with Mrs. Benjamin Rieke, of â€"~the house committee of the Highland Park Y. W. C. A. attended the Friâ€" day sessions of the conference, while Mrs. Lydia Hutton, general secretary of the local association and her house assistant, Miss Gertrude Ames (it is hard to decide what title to give to Miss Ames because although she came to the "Y" as office clerk she does a littleâ€"ofâ€"everything from typing and mineographing to making chair cushâ€" ions and winning the love and respect of all the girls who‘ve come to know her), attended between them some session on all three days. The probâ€" lemsâ€"ofâ€"residences ofâ€"girls,â€"room regâ€" Thursday, Novâ€" heading " y°° NUR# an account of the routine work acâ€" complished at such a meeting be ofl any vital intérest. So we shall not bore our readers with a lengthy u-| count of the program of procedure at that time.: We will merely give you the outstanding features of that morning of Tuesday, November 12 board of directors assembled in the sssociation living room for the reguâ€" lar monthly mesting. â€" Mrs. Raymond Stevens, the new treasurer, made her debut as a new member of the board by giving a most concise and compreâ€" hendable report upon the association financial standing. Mrs. Myron C. Rybolt made her appearance at her first regular board meeting and, unâ€" less we are mistaken, likewise did Miss __Alvina _Schneider. _ Through Mrs. Burdick‘s house report we learned that again the Y. W. C. A. building is filled to capacity with one of those screenedâ€"off cornersâ€" in the assembly hall again pressed into serâ€" vice as a bedroom. Mrs. 0. L. Olesen, president of the board conducted the actness ‘that the business of the day was completed and the meeting adâ€" journed at 11:00 o‘clock. Mrs, E. T. R. Murfey, general chairman of the maintenance comâ€" paign was unable to give her report on the drive at this meeting as the workers have still not all made their final reports to her. ne en ie itih:t afternoon, Miss Emma Pl;hmey. eld secretary, lead a discussion on the girls who are in €ities or towns without relatives or friends. Our Highland Park representatives feel that they have brought back much from this conference that is worthâ€" while and will help them in solving he PB "In Thig town" c tep esting to learn that other associaâ€" tions are mecting daily the same exâ€" Isry, and case work was discussed. Miss Leslie Blanchard, head of the Foster hall, at the University of Chicago, â€"spoke the first morning on Thereâ€" 18 Board Meeting A nothing particularly â€"apâ€" 21, 1929 mss C.SLD% t sidnid td uis t 4ds £ + Eintraetedgstauh i iivgr: ipcwai i ete in db in aicgh A yiip o i4 bninlanty u040000 dnc 9 o SR Een EcE eR ~«â€"~â€"â€"«@â€"~â€"~â€"Freshman G. R. it ‘The Emmmï¬"’eqr- ‘tainly got right down to business at their meeting on Monday, November | 11. First of all they proudly report one hundred per cent attendance of|â€" which fact they may well be proud in these busy days at school. All of ‘the clubs had such good times during that gala week of Hallowe‘en. parties that they feel the social side of their programs have been well enough taken care of for a few weeks to alâ€" Iow them to put some effort upon that part of the program which means serâ€" vice to others. As their service work project up to January 1 the Freshman girls are planning a Thanksgiving basket for some needy family in Highâ€" land Park and the gifts for some of |â€"the Hittle childrenâ€"whoâ€"attendâ€"theâ€"Erie Chapel mission in Chicago. Each c the girls will dress a doll which will be bought with money from the clubâ€" treasury for a little girl and each _one will fill a stocking with goodies and toys for a little boy.=â€"Just before Christmas the girls will take their gifts down to the mission themselves. At this same meeting the girls also pledged from the Freshman Girl_Reâ€" serve club $5.00 toward the: maintenâ€" ance fund for which our recent drive was held. The club is planning a Thanksgiving supper for November 25, which will be prepared and served by those girls in the group taking domestic science at school. At this time each girl will bring her gift for the Thanksgiving basket. The |Freshman club meets every Monday t afternoon at 4:00 p. m.â€"in the living room at the "Y."" The president, Elsie Carlisle, has been confined to | her home with a fractured knee due |to an injury. while playing hockey. | She says she is spending some of her | time cutting out pictures for the G.R. scrap books. We hope she will be | with us for the Thanksgiving supper. f Cubs Senior | . The spirit â€"of play seemed to have | descended upon the Cubs Senior at â€"| their meetingâ€"onâ€"November 11. _Perâ€" periences that come to our Y.W.C.A., and that we are. handling the works of the Highland Park association as unteer aid allows. There is always a need in our "Y" for interested and earnest service and when more women in our town realize this fact the "Y" will be able to take advantage of the vast opportunities ahead of it for helping the womanhood of the comâ€" munity. " M‘W'WEï¬mM’il:iï¬] hard day at set “1 and felt that they must relax. But whatever the causeof theâ€"mood, the edvisors wisely thought up some inâ€" 30â€"0dd girls in the play frame of mind the best thing to do seemed to be to play. However, on the 18th the "play" was of a different nature. The girls were tried out for parts in the play they have decided to give. The Cubs Senior are between 11 and 13 years of age and meets every Monâ€" day in the playroom at the "YÂ¥" at Y. W. C. A. Notes s Cubs Junior On November 12 the Cubs Junior w c t 30 PC Ceee C mnicasomntinie s udsmm whnaneentinn â€"oommirei P R F had a regular Girl Reserve service salutes and pledges to the Christian United States, and Girl Reserves flag Each cub brought five cents to p for the oil cloth cover for her scrap book. The scrap books were finished at . the meeting on the eighteenth when after their work was done the girls had a weenie roast supper over the fire placte in the playroom.: The Cubs Junior are between 9 and 11 years of age and meet every Thursday at the “Y_""'afflfdur‘bliï¬.Ԡt es "o oo ‘ ; ~â€"_ Makio G. R.â€"> ie ~~The Makio Girl~Reservesâ€"are as quiet these days about what they are doing as the Deerfleld group is but although they do not "toot their own hornes loudly" we have been able to spy uponâ€"them and learn one or two things about them. ‘On Friday, Noâ€" vember 15 the Makio Girls had their meeting at the Oak Terrace school Two of the girls in this group have moved ~out â€"of ~town but it still has a membership of 17 very enthusiastic Reserves. Last Friday the girls made their Girl Reserves ties of blue sateen so that on the twentyâ€"second each one will have the regular tie to wear with of the Girl Reserve Corps when the Makio gtoup has its Recognition Service at the Y. W. C. A. This Recognition Service is the one at which new girls will be recognized as Girl Reserves and it will be a beautiful and impressive one. If you are interested you are invited to atâ€" tend at four p. m. November 22. : Friendship Club The Friendship club is stPiving this year to have a well balanced program not k&ï¬uï¬!!e social side of it too far out balance the educational and "service to others" sides, which is so easily done in many clubs. â€" The club‘s Hallowe‘en party was a huge success for the social side of the fall program but no less a success was the educaâ€" tional treat the girls enjoyed at their _ 3 nurso ~@ n NOvembDe s Mc eiee dn f Sewss era ;x«;!;,;_-;-, m o O peile o o e es y3 x e 94 CA . cr34 .e es e 4 3 i~Scum1i, â€"presiden C ~ the Friendship club, is working now at the A. S. Burdick‘s residence in Ravinia and it was thoqg her that the club was able to get Dr. Burdick to show the moving pictures he took of their trip abroad last summer. Dr. Burdick brought up several> of his reels and ‘talked to the girls about the pictures as they were shown. In this way the girls and their guests were taken upon‘ ‘a picture trip through Switzerland and over ‘the Alps to the beautiful country of Lake Camo in Italy, Here they saw lovely views of the gorgous old villas that surround the lake set high on the bluffs with extensive gardens and wooded grounds about them. We could not help but wonder just what intrigues in the history of <Italy took place within those walls of these grim old ~castles. â€"â€"Pr. â€"Burdick ~then ~took ~his tour back through Switzerland into the Saxony country where he showed views of the countryside and the city of Dresden.. There followed an inâ€" teresting boat ride down the Danube to Vienna and after becoming ‘ acâ€" where we saw the traditional windâ€" mills, canal boats, and Dutch cosâ€" tumes. In Amsterdam the Dutch people seemed to be dressed quite modernly but on the out shirts of the city and in the country many of the folks still cling to the picturesque wooden shoes, full skirts, and stiff white caps. The ~Friendship club Teels greatly indebted to Dr. Burdick for coming to the "Y" and giving the club such an interesting evening. The Friendship club is having a special meetingâ€"on Thursday, â€"November 21 at 8:30 p.m. and urges all members to be present as there will be much important business upon. which the club must decide. 2.