Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 4 Jan 1940, p. 8

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ODD JOBS WANTED AFTER SCHOOL OR EXPERIENCED MOTHER WILL TAKE NICELY FURNISHED ROOM SUITABLE for two girls. Twin beds, near bath, in private home. Near transportation. Call moon bour or after 5 p.m. Tel. HAP.PI% 48 ROOM: REASONABLE, OIL HEAT, : bloeks from business section ; quiet ctreet; mo other roomers; gentlemen preferred. Tel. H. P. 612. P38tf 2 FURNISHED LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING rooms with private bath, Suitable for couple. Also surage. Close to transporâ€" tation. _ 721 Glencoe Ave. D44â€"46 FOR RENT: 1 ROOM KITCHENETTE FOR RENT: LARGE WARM ROOM FOR 2 to 4 men, with private <itchen, if desired. Mre. Charles G. Pettis, 655 Osterman Ave., Deerfleld. . Phone Deerfleld 157. P45â€"47 29 Years‘ Experience 13 Years in Highland Park Tel. H. P. 2048 Oharges Reasonable Estimates Free Labor Temple 37 North Ave., H.P. Tuesday, January 16 Benefit H.P.â€"Highwood Drum & Bugle Corps Admission 25¢ Door Prizes â€" refreshments FOR SALE: NORTHERN SEAL COAT IN good condtion $35.00. Phone 2798. . U4S #616 W. Park Ave. Tel. HP. 49 SHADE TREES AND EVERGREENS J. Ostrowsky, Nursery FOR SALE: 1 ELECTRIC SWITCH, 11 FT. Flexâ€"iâ€"Track, used very little, can be used on any "O" Gauge track; also some other tracks and curves. Reasonable. Tele. H. P. 3990. Usiif FOR SALE: 1 PR GIRL‘S JOHNSON Hockey Skates, size 1; good condition, §$2.00. Tele. Deerflcld 124. Usatf 4 GRAVE CEMETERY LOT Shore Garden of Memories. Baturdays by High School boy. Deerfleld 124. apartment ; completely furnished including heat, gas, light, water and electric refrigâ€" erator. $7 per week. Available Jan. 8 Mrs. Robert Pettis, 746 Chestnut St. Deerâ€" feld. D44â€"46pd care of children day or evenings. Tel HP. 156. Es9t for an Adtaker 5 5 7 PIANO TUNING H. F. PAHNKE EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY, A REDUCTION IN INSURANCE RATES, APPLICABLE TO PLEASURE CARS, OF TWENTY TO TWENTYâ€"FIVE PERCENT. REAL ESTATE LOANS 2 North Sheridan Road Highland Park, Minots Telephone: Highland Park 93 Situations Wanted Business Directory BROILERS _ Automobile Insurance Rates Reduced The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company hothaenan ce ie mt td You are cordially invited to visit the Reading anthorized Christian Science literature may be * Maintained by Rooms For Rent Misc. For Sale Apartments The assureds are also covered in "driving other cars." CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM BNGO PARTY V. William Briddle First Church of Chfist,, Scientist Highland Park ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE Open: WEEK DAYS 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. SATURDAYS 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. i ISUN[)&YS z,.i"?. p. m. to 2:80 p. m. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION NOTICE â€" Advertisements received after 5:00 e‘cleck Woednssdag, piaced in another section it canle i man taid tf Heraciey fainoly poiiicanicn io maae it te if not u:uamfl"uo for { nu:fin woeks. ::nn-‘ Park and Lake Forest Combination Rate, T5¢; $1.00 if not by Saturâ€" day following publication. BLIND ADS: 75 cents for five lines of lu.flpddlor_hlminurflon;ll.flfl-lflnm following publication. 10 cents each additional 43 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD Classified Wantâ€"Ads IN NORTH Splendid loâ€" visit the Reading Room, where the Bible and U45â€"46 Uisif Announces also 366 Central Ave. ‘35 Packard, touring sedan ...._.__..__$296 ‘34 BUICK. 2 door sedan, radio _____ $225 ‘33 CHEVROLET station wagon $145 SAFE PLACE TO SEND YOUR FRIENDS LOST: REWARD FPOR INFORMATION dead or alive of champlon Irish setter. Male, Gray sround mussle. Lost Dee. 21 from 476 N. Ridge Rd. Highland Park. Tel. H.P. 4273. M45â€"47 NORTH SHORE BUICK COMPANY OFFICEâ€"UPâ€"TOâ€"DATE IN OUR BANK building. on reasonable terms, _ FIRST NATIONAL BANK â€" OF â€" HIGHLAND PARK. JiG 36 GRAHAM sedan, radio, heater 36 BUICK sedan, 6 W, heator 45 CHRYSLER, 4 door sedan . WANTED TO LEASE: MODERN s TO 10 room house in desirable location; unâ€" furnished; 3 to 5 year lease. Occupaney any time before March 1, 1940. Write Box 12, Chicago, lJ. Authorized Sales and Service 110 South First Street homes. _ From $.000.00 to $10,000.00 These are much below repiacement costs: Ressonable terms. One has large H.0.L.C 4%% Loan. F. B. Williams, §41 Ct. Ave. BSeveral listings in modern §â€"room brick Automobiles For Sale Free Pickâ€"up and Delivery Inga Durment Employment Service Domestic HelF With Good Refs. LOWER PRICES read, borrewed or purchased. Office For Rent Lost and Found Wanted to Lease Houses For Sale Help Wanted HONEST VALUES T72 $235 C45 At the first meeting, Lake Forest representatives are asked to meet at the Highland Park High School with representatives from the whole didstrict. . Anyone interested is inâ€" vited to come. Already considerable interest is manifesting itself on the part of alumni and others. It is hoped to make this one of the outstanding events of 1940. The graduates far and near will be advised in ample time so as to make arrangements to attend. Local citizens also will be invited to come and participate in the festivities. _ There will be reunions of recent graduates at the Lake Forest High School as well as of the graduates through all the years at Highland Park. The comâ€" munities sending students to one or the other are: Highland â€" Park, Highwood, Fort Sheridan, Lake Forest, Lake Bluff, Great Lakes, West Lake Forest, Deerficld, and Bannockburn. Formerly Wheeling, Northbrook (once known as Sherâ€" merville), _ Libertyville, Diamond Lake, and Half Day sent students to the Highland Park school. There will be a public meeting of persons interested in the proposed semiâ€"centennial celebration of the founding of the Highland Park high school on Sunday afternoon, Januâ€" ary 7, at 4 o‘clock, in the English Club Room of the Highland Park High School. Highland Park H. S. Alumni Meet Sunday To Plan Celebration 364 North Av. Highland Pk. JUNK Phone H. P. 410 J. SMITH The First National Bank DEALER IN THE HIGHLAND PARKE PRES3 For 1940 Health, Prosperity, Happiness for an Adtaker 5 5 8 wished" That our patrons may share in it abundantly is our sincere hope. "A consummation devoutly to be Washington reports, since the beâ€" ginning of the controversy between Senator Taft and the President, inâ€" dicate that the new budget will show a smaller deficit than that for the current fiscal year. It has been anticipated that cuts in various buâ€" reaus will more than offset the inâ€" crease to be recommended for naâ€" tional defense. With pubic sentiment overwhelmâ€" ingly behind Senator Taft in his beâ€" lief that deficits can be stopped, New Deal spokesmen have been silent as to their former claims that a steadâ€" ily increasing public debt is the route to prosperity. A year ago, Senator Taft‘s answer will come at a time when interest in Federal spending plans will be keen, since the official budget estimate for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1940, will just be going to Congress. The Senator‘s recent statements and the President‘s reply have brought the issue of government spending more forcefully before the public than at any time since the New Deal took office. After Senâ€" ator Taft, during his recent trip through New England, declared that deficit spending can and must be stopped, President K:)ouvelv. told news men on December 12 that he woul1 like to be shown a way to balance the budget. He added that he would offer a "very handsome prize" if the Senator would tell him how. Taft‘s Budget Answer To Be Aired Friday Under the title "Mr. President, Here‘s How to Balance the Budget," the Ohio Senator will speak before the Chicago Bar Association in Chiâ€" cago tomorrow, Friday, January 5. His speech will be heard over the Blue Network of the National Broadâ€" casting Company, 8:30 to 9:00 p.m. Central Standari Time. Cleveland, Ohio, Jan. 3.â€"Senator Robert A. Taft on Friday will anâ€" swer the President‘s budget chalâ€" lenge with a plan to stop Federal deficits, it was announced here this week. SENATOR ROBERT A. TAFT Member of THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION of Highland Park "Winterset" is written in blank verse, and contains many beautiâ€" fully poetic lines as well as the base utterances of the criminalâ€"type eleâ€" ment in our population. The play is a "takeâ€"off" on the spectacular Sacâ€" coâ€"Vanzetti murder case of a number of years ago, and in it Anderson pulls few punches. Mrs. Oliver Weed, of the troop committee by members of her serving refreshments a mony. Candlelight investiture ceremonies were held at Elm Place and Ravinia schools. Mrs. Kenneth Anderson and Mrs. Gordon Buchanan, Jr., inâ€" vested twentyâ€"four girls at Elm Place school. The following girls reâ€" ceived pins: Claire Anderson, Marian Benson, Mary Buchanan, Marilyn Erikson, Sheila Fitzgerald, Nancy Harin, Rosalie Johnson, Eleanor Josefson, Louise Kirby, Margaret Lacy, Barâ€" bara LeClerq, Mary Jane Lovgren, Mary MacPherson, Joyce Norkett, Susan Ostrander, Lucy Pasquesi, Laurel Rosenthal, Nell Taussig, Mary Tullis, Eleanor Wampler, Dorâ€" othy Weber, Elvira Nichele, Barâ€" bara Wells, Geraldine Wieder. "Winterset," one of Maxwell Andâ€" erson‘s most popular plays, will be presented next Wednesday and Thursday nights, Jan. 10 and 11, by the Garrick players of Lake Forest college. The troop commitee chairman, Mrs. Eugene Hardin, assisted by mothers, served tea and chocolate after the ceremony. At Ravinia school, the leaders Mrs, Irving Meyerhoff, Mrs. Leslie Huettman and Mrs. Sydney received the following girls: Betty Lou Benson, Carol Grimes, Christie Huettman, Helen Louise Kee, Rosemary Kropke, Marian Manasse, Lois Anne McSweeney, Jean â€" Meyerhoff, Patricia â€" Miller, Dawn Osborne, Ruth Pirie, Ruth Rossiter, Louise Ann Sanborn, Florâ€" ence Schwenecker, Mary Lee Seidâ€" ner, Phyllis Weed, Nettie Jane Wiener, Marvyn Wittelle. Mrs. Oliver Weed, the chairman Garrick Players To Present "Winterset" Two New Girl Scout Troops Invested â€" The difficult character roles and the problem of successfully interâ€" preting the free verse style used by for the present fiscal year. Now, with an election year ahead, it is evident that fiscal sails are being trimmed. But a substantial deficit is still exâ€" pected in the budget estimate next week. Usually the actual exâ€" penditures for a given year are much in excess of the January figâ€" ure. The cut in the deficit, it is inâ€" dicated, will be due in a large part to better prospects for Federal revâ€" enue because of the wartime upâ€" turn in business; also to a tapering off of public works and other proâ€" grams from past high levels. this doctrine being proclaimed as a buiH-np'::! thc‘ilx budget «ut l\j\: o am 6 KENTUCKY f Ni aS W [ N R_\fij« 660 RUSH Old Southern Mansion. Candlelight Dinâ€" ners before open fireplaces. Dinners from $1, including our famous speon bread. On Sunday me advance in prices. Catering to Parties and Special Events CHICAGO WHITEHALL 5425 THURSDAY, JANUAREY 4 1940 His first drama was "What Price Glory," written in 1929, and he has since written such outstanding plays as "Elizabeth the Queen," "Mary of Scotland" produced by the Garrick players last year), "Saturday‘s Chilâ€" dren, "The Starwagon," and many others. A great Broadway success of a few years ago, "Winterset" was later reproduced in the movies, and enâ€" joyed many long runs. inent of contemporary dramatists, is a newspaper man by profession. He was a son of a Baptist minister, and after graduation from the Uniâ€" versity of North Dakota, taught at Stanford university and Whittier college in California. He later beâ€" came a journalist, which he has reâ€" mained until the present, although he has won fame as a playwright. the playwright makes the play a u-hdttt-dn-ht ment of the college, is confident the play will be numbered among the Garrick club‘s most successful productions. Anderson, who has for some time been rated among the most promâ€" QVUALITY COOKIN® FOR QUALITY FOLKS! The same pictures shown at Orchestra Hall to capacity bouses. pletely civilized country in the world "Motor with Burton Holmes through the ideal kingdom â€" the most comâ€" New Trier High School SUNDAY, JANUARY 7â€"8 P.M. Reserved Seats ONLY 40c BURTON HOLMES Travelogue on Under auspices of the New Trier Sunday Evening Club SWEDEN WHITEHALL 5835

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