Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 21 Sep 1939, p. 5

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North Shore line and Chicago and North Western train schedules will be revised to comply with the winâ€" ter schedules. All railroads have operated on Central Standard time during daylight saving timé, so they will simply carry on their regular schedules. ° , â€" to note that services will begin an hour earlier according to the change in time. _ Highland Park churches will beâ€" gin the new schedule Sunday, and all church members are requested Clocks will be set back one hour next Sunday in compliance with an ordinance established last spring, bringing to an end the summer time schedule. â€" Daylight Savings to End Next Sunday Daylight Saving time will end in Highland Park next Sunday mornâ€" ing at 2 a.m. as well as in Chicago and all other nearby communities. ing, 1531 S. St., Johns, George J. Kirkgasser, 1030 S. Sheridan rd., Sidney McAllister, 2134 8. Deere Park dr., all of Highland Park. Herbert Leonard, 641 Carroll ct., Milton Hardacre Jr., 221 Park ave., John Miller, 236 Beach st., Conrad Swan, 917 S, St. Johns, Henry Duâ€" court for the first part of October is composed of all men. These names were drawn out of the box for 1988â€"1939. Cards for the mixed iuronqillbp)hedhthbox!or Ernest Bergdahl, 323 Grove, Highwood. The allâ€"male petit jury will reâ€" port to cireuit court on Oct. 3, the day after the October grand jury is impanelled by Judge Dady. This last allâ€"male venire includes the folâ€" lowing from Highwood and Highâ€" the office of Circuit Clerk L. J. Wilâ€" mot. They will be included in the panels to be drawn from the jury list in County Clerk Jay B. Morse‘s office from now on. There are 413 women‘s names in the list of 1,000 petit jurars approvâ€" ed by the board of supervisors for jury service in the circuit, county and probate courts for 1989 and 1940. ‘The 1,000 names are being typed on individual cards today and will be placed in the special box. From time to time, when Judge Ralph J. Dady or Judge Perry L. Persons or Judge Martin C. Decker orders a venire for his respective court, one of the court clerks will be blindfolded and with at least one judge present will draw the names. The box contains the cards with Larson‘s Stationery Store REPAIRS â€" RENTALS â€" SALBS Higniand Park 567 327â€"29 N. Green Bay Road Teol, H. P. 3900 Your Typewriter Man Jury Service in County After Oct. 23 Lake county women will be on the local circuit court jury panels after Call Women for THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1989 â€" DILL‘S HOME BARBER SHOP First house north of Central avenue on‘ Cast side of Street costs no more. All rags inâ€" A jury venire of 36 being sumâ€" Our staff of native weavers HAIRCUTTING 15 Years in Highland Park Telephone H. P. 5435 21 North Second Street Vogue Cleaners RVGS CLEANED for and Mrs, Sheriff‘s with her striped uniform and ball and chain was a true convict. Mrs. MeEwen wore a chet‘s white outfit, and Mrs. Floyd Hunt portrayed a Mexican gentleâ€" | man. The Yokums of the funnies | were also present in the persons of : Mrs. Singleton, Mrs. Waliters, Janet | Hall and Mrs. Allen. plete football outft, all added their shore of funm to the day‘s event. Mrs. Ployd Hunt is chatrman of the women‘s events, and to her much credit is due for the success of the event gown and coat of the early days A very unique foursome which also was awarded a prize consisted of Naney Bowes, Janet McDonald, Miss Tennant and Miss Haskins. All four girls wore night shirts, and they had their hair in eurlers. Mrs. Nock wore a very beautifol hand crocheted evening dress which had been made by her grandmother many years ago. Fourth went to Mrs. Barrows as sailor gob, and Mrs, Richard Gamâ€" brill with her accentuated sport outâ€" fit of "Plus 4‘s" was also a winner. as a gypey and Mrs. Cleary wore a black tulle old fashioned evening yesteryear, and Mrs. Vose in a comâ€" First prize was awarded to Mrs. Farrar, who represented the paintâ€" ing, "Lady in the Bird Cage," while the second prize went to Mrs. Mcâ€" Kay, a Scotch lagsie. Mrs. John Bligh won third place for her repâ€" sole judge of the costume 'p-rty. which was the women‘s event Tuesâ€" day at Exmoor club. Beautiful gowns, sports outfits, humorous apparel, all added to the day‘s festivities. Saflors, Acotch lassies, conviets, a chief, foreigners, athletes and other classes were listâ€" ed among the participants. Grotesqueâ€"to Sublime Feature Costumes at Exmoor Event Theâ€" work will consist of installâ€" ating curb and gutters on both sides of the roadway, covering about 300 feet, according to estiâ€" mates made by.Andrew Klarkowski, assistant city engineer in charge of the project. s The property owners pay the cost of matetrials, WPA labor puts in the work and the city supervises the project. â€" Ten Waukegan property owners recently deposited $205.24 to imâ€" prove their street under the city» wide WPA sidewalk improvement _ They are. residents of Runyard place from Elmwood avenue east to the deaderd of the street. August Schwerman, fvroprlefi:r of the general store at Gilmer, reports that thieves removed all four wheels from his truck some time Saturday night. Discovery of the theft was made when he went out in the yard Sunday morning, Mr. Schwerman inâ€" formed the sheriff‘s office. R The nnnuaL invitational _ tourâ€" ment of the in O‘Lakes Country club at Antioch will be held Sept. 23, William E. Brandt, chairman of arangements committee, announced Mixed foursomes will play in the morning, while the afternoon will be devoted to tournament play. Atâ€" tractive prizes ‘will be awarded. broke out. Members of the high school faculty were advised by Mr. Brown‘s family that he had embarkâ€" ed on the Athenia. His name has not yet appeared in any list of resâ€" cued passengers. Mr. Brown made his home at the Pembridge hotel in Evanston. Assets of the Libertyville Federal Savings and Loan association now exceed $300,000 with an increase of $16,000 in investment funds within a month a report made to members of the association last Tuesday by William S. Brown, instructor in industrial arts at New Triee High school since 1921, was one of the passengers aboard the illâ€"fated Britâ€" ish passenger steamer, the Athenia, it was learned this week. He is listed as "not accounted for" by the state department. Mr. Brown was in Great Britain visiting relatives when the war station. work shirt and trousers stuffed with paper formed the body of a dummy whose head was a painted cloth sack. SBo that there would be no mistaking the identity of the dumâ€" my it was labeled "Hitler." Lieut. !n._g.d'_y_v_n_'.mflnql_ Mrs. Robert S. Dutton, was ereen of the s snkls‘... H(hmhju;t south of road, is perhaps more T ematiarly Enown ‘as the Skyrocket. $7,000 Fire Destroys Skylon Club Early Wednesday Morning The regular monthly business meeting of the Highland Parkâ€"Raâ€" vinia Center of the Infant Welfare Society of Chicago will be held at the home of Mrs. Paul Grady, 181 Haze! avenue, on Monday, Sept, 25. The Highland Park fire departâ€" ment responded to the alarm at 1 p. m. Wednesday, and assisted the Glencoe department in extinguishing the blaze which had gained considâ€" erable headway before the firemen Damage to the exterior was estiâ€" mated at about $3,000, while $4,000 damage was placed on the contents. How much insurance was carried on the building is not known. Fire believed to haveé been causâ€" ed from the grease chute at the The Skylon club which is located MONEY SAVING SPECIALS ie is SPmaca _ NONEâ€"SUCH KETCHUP For Thursgdy, Friday and Saturday, Sept. 21â€"22â€"23 SUNBRITE CLEANSER Johanthan or Delicious 3@" 10c 3 APPLES Butter 6.204¢ SCOTT TOWELS â€" 25 10¢ CREAM CITY HEINZ SOUPS Sâ€"W PRUNES 2â€"pound JA a 8Sâ€"W OLIVES for for T BE PR EB8 21¢ 31¢ . . . If you delve into the pages beâ€" tween the covers, you find that disâ€" temper isn‘t only a canine malady . .. it‘s also the olmlom of paintâ€" ing. . . . In deseril the Egyptian temple symboli¢ services, Van Loon says, "As for the congregation, it .. . seems he spent a lot of time in gay Parce . . . likes to box . . . as an extraâ€"curricular activity . . . folâ€" lowing a day of carrying 200â€"lb. stones on a masonry job. . . . Hendrik Willem Van Loon‘s "The Arts," volume of near 700 pages, is down to $1.98 at a certain bookstall laying hockey and tennis 2:':“(: .L{lle“SuM Heart academy and Barat college shrubbery. . . . id you know that Dr. Karl Meyer, medical superintendent of Cook County hospital, is a resident of Highland Park . . . that Corinto Limari speaks French like a native sizgns differ . . . one says "Westâ€" leigh" road . . . the other "Weseâ€" M"IM....quhlfl‘- have fallen, one can see uniformed Cigarets ©Wnder when Lake Forest will deâ€" de on the spelling of one of its LUCKY STRIKES CHESTERFIELD ‘OLD GOLDS BE CAMELS carton CALIFORNIA ORANGES 470 $1 Monarch Whole Peeled or Raggedy Ann LAND o‘LAKES Best Green XEZRCETE JPVE COOKING APPLES l LEG o‘LAMB CIDER VINEGAR uU TTE LAMB ROAST 19’7 TER l Ib. 25¢ UNomE pEars . | Frying Chickens APRICOTS No. 214 size Extra Fancy cans for No. 214 for for lbs. for Savoy $1 In the present world crisis, we who have been fortunate enough to escape the tragedies that these forâ€" mer war heroes have met, should Legion Auxiliary Card Party Oct. 2 at Trinity Church The Auxiliary of Dumaresq Spenâ€" cer Post of the American Legion will hold their annual benefit éard party Tuesday, October 10, at 2 o‘clock, in Trinity Episcopal church Parish House. The proceeds of this party are used to finance their work among the disabled veterans at Great Lakes hospital. churches today you might say the ing so obviously. . . . Marie Lawther is secretary to a Waukegan lawyer . . . and maintains her apartment home in that city her brother at the University of lllinois . . . where he is a member of Triangle, engineering frat. . . . Not many people, seeing "Second Fiddle," liked Rudy Vallee‘s cookyâ€" duster . . . and they say the music in "The Wizard of Oz" is cute. . . . did not count. It made no difference whether 10,000 people were present Crisco $1 Spry »â€"»40¢ AT Or M EAT $ Baby Beef Liver lb 29¢ Hormel‘s $Spam can 27¢ POT ROAST lb 22¢ FRANKS lb 25¢ Genuine Spring lb. 27 ¢ Coffee b25¢ lb. 25c (3 Ib. average) CHASE & SANBORN forth our every effort :h“lmalvn:g sible, and should not any stacle stand in the way of a a repetition of these horrifying re» sults of war. The committee in charge is headâ€" ed by Mrs. Catherine Gilroy as chairman assisted by Mrs. Janet Johnson and Mrs. Marjorie Fiala. Mrs. Marion Salyards is president of the local auxiliary. E. T. Skidmore E. T. Skidmore & Son 332 N. St. Johns Ave. BEEF YOUR REAL ESTATE INSURANCE NEEDS SEE US FOR > oll Pace rIvE

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