Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 12 Mar 1942, p. 6

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ty meeting on Monday evenings and open to all. There is a small club fee. Fred Selig will observe his cightyâ€" seventh birthday, Tuesday. He is the father of Mrs. Peter J. Juhrend, and Mrs. Clifford Hammer, Deerfield; Virgil Selig, Highwood and William Selig, Chicago. (2) Community Dark Room. This is available for photograph fans for a 25â€"cent service charge. (3) Squash or handball court, open to all for a 25â€"cent service charge. (4) Table Tennis Club is an activiâ€" (5) Chess Club. A group of interâ€" ested chess players who invite any Highland Parker to come and play with them. Beginners are welcome. (1) Craft Shop with all tools, powâ€" er machines, etc. A twoâ€"dollar. memâ€" bership gives adults an opportunity to use these facilities Now members may use it for a 25â€"cent service fee. Your Community Center has a numâ€" ber of features that any Highland Parker can use and enjoy? Did You Know That c-nn-my in the mirrored form, which is but a reflection, so man, like all things real, reflects God, his divine Prind?lo. not in a mortal body" (p. 305). QM&M. "Seiâ€" -u-‘l!ulfi-'uh Key to the Scriptures, ary Baker Eddy: “Inn.hfln%“-olhhl-hr. reflects the central light of being, the invisible God. As there is no him; male and female created he them" (Genesis 1: 26 to :, 27). Anifimvhhhu- m-‘ Lessonâ€"Sermon was the from the Bible: "And God | Let us make man in our after our likeness: . . . So God created man in his own image, The Golden Text was, "Have not all one father? h‘u: God created us?" (Mal. 2:10) You can‘t blame Mr. Burton for bragging. His Electric Water Heater means a lot to him, and to his family. They all save time and energy for more important things, while their water heater continues to supply plenty of hot water for all uses, at a very small cost. _ home a better place to live, with a new Electric Water Heater! PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY of Northern lllinois . Hot water always on tap... "‘Right out of bed and under a warm shower! No monkeying with any oldâ€" Believe me, this is the way to start the day right . ; . I can keep my mind on important things !" O’hordocloncndoom.ood'volnmh Automatic Electric Water Heaters Cooks and bakers living in the vicinâ€" ity of the naval training station at Great Lakes who are interested in enâ€" listing in the Navy or Naval Reserve should come to the commissary deâ€" partment on the station for interviews with Lieut. Cmdr. Dole. For others, full details are available at any Navy recruiting station. "One thing for qualified men of military age to consider," Lieut. Cmdr. Dole said, "is that they will remain in their chosen field throughout the war and will be given an opportunity to increase â€" their ~skill by working with the most modern equipment." Cooks with five years or more of restaurant or hotel experience will be given ratings ranging from third class, which pays $60 a month and subsisâ€" tence. Bakers with allâ€"round exper ience are wanted, the Navy officer said, and will be given ratings similar to those offered cooks. Lieutenant Commander O. A. Dole, commissary officer of the U. S. Naval Training Station at Great Lakes said today that about 600 experienced cooks and bakers would be needed here by the time the training program reaches its peak within the next few months. Bowden, a graduate of St. George high school, is viceâ€"president of the sophomore class, a columnist on the college newspaper, "The Rambier," and Cooksâ€"Bakers Needed At Naval Training Station The Navy needs men who feed the men who feeds the guns. a member of the class basketball team Jim Bowden, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Bowden, 625 Central Ave., will play the role of Abbot Jonquil in the all male cast of Leo Brady‘s Brother Orchid, the forthcoming production of the St. Benedict‘s college dramatic club, Atchison, Kan. The play will be under the direction of the Rev. Bede Bradiey, O.S. B., head of. the speech department of the college, and will take place in the college‘s "little theatre." March 9. Jim Bowden In School Play *‘By evening, my wife has done rlenqofmvotkthued-ys...nthe least I can do is get modern equipment for her. Our electric water heater gives her hot water whenever she needs it â€" just by turning the tap," at low cost The amounts of proteins, sugars, the valuable mineral constituents of the plant, and the content of vitamins can be increased in plants by applyâ€" ing the proper plant foods to the soil. All of these have a bearing upon the real value of plants as food. Apply a complete balanced plant food for best results. If application is made while the grass is still dorâ€" mant, it is not necessary to water the plant food in. An application of 4 Ibs. of complete balanced plant food per 100 square feet of lawn area will conâ€" stitute a square meal for your grass. Nutritional Value of Vegetables Inâ€" creased thru Proper Feeding of the Vegetable Garden These figures also explain why lawns should be fed carly in the spring. Get the plant food into the soil so that it will be available to the grass at the time when both roots and top make their best growth. Not only temperature but also moisture conditions are most favorable to the growth of grass in the early spring. Through carly feeding you can deâ€" velop a dense weedâ€"free turf with a deep extensive root system that will carry the grass right thru the growâ€" ing season in excellent condition. The above data explains the sumâ€" mer "dormancy" of Blue Grass. Extended experiments by the United States Department of Agriâ€" culture, in cooperation with the Misâ€" souri Experiment Station, have shown that Kentucky Blue Grass makes its best growth above ground at an air temperature of 40 degrees F., but top growth will continue up to 90 degrees The roots present still a different story. They grow best at a soil temâ€" perature of 60 degrees and stop growâ€" ing at 80 degrees F. When Does Blue Grass Make Its Best Growth and How Does This Influence Time of Feeding? THE MASTER GARDENER *‘Look at that 1 A whole month of hot water convenience, and our electric service bill shows it cost only a few cents a day on the 1 cent rate! Why in the world didn‘t we install an electric water heater long ago? " For vegetables grown in hills or transplanted, mix a level tablespoonâ€" ful of plant food thoroughly with soil in bottom of hill and cover with one inch of soil before seeding or setting out plants. A general rule to follow in applying plant food to the vegetable garden is to scatter four pounds per 100 square feet evenly over the newly prepared seed bed and work it into the top few inches of soil, before the seed is planted or plants are set out. Or, if vegetables are grown in rows, use two pounds of plant food for each 50 feet of row. When the soil is preâ€" pared, apply the plant food in a strip approximately 6 inches wide, then rake it into the top soil before plantâ€" ing the seed. : _ Increased palatability or qnfi.in another excellent reason why t food should be used liberally on vegeâ€" tables. It is well known that slow growth in any of the greems or root plants results in poor quality. The plants grown for their leafy parts become tough, bitter, and wilted when starved, while the root plants beâ€" come woody and strong in flavor when poor growth is made due to lack of plant food. Furnishing an abundâ€" ance of the right plant food in the soil gives vegetables increased tenâ€" derness, color and flavor. ‘ In order to be sure that every ele ment that a plant requires is supplied to vegetables, something more thas the usual threeâ€"clement plant foo« should be supplied to the vegetabl« garden. Most plant food products wil provide nitrogen, phosphorus a n potassium, but only a complete scien tifically prepared plant food will proâ€" vide all of the eleven elements se cured from the soil which are sc ‘very important in the proper feeding of all plants, particularly vegetables phor including these amounts carric other crops. called to the needs of calcium m In connection with the National Nu magne troge by ga being phos Raymond Rectenwald, Private Wilâ€" liam‘s brother, enlisted in December in the Naval Reserve for the duration, and is now at the U. S. Naval Trainâ€" ing Station, Great Lakes, IHlinois. Raymond is now in Service School at Great Lakes for the month of March, and then expects to go to school again for two or three months in Dearborn, Michigan. Raymond had seen his brother Wilâ€" liam in his Army uniform, but Wilâ€" liam had not seen Raymond in his Navy uniform, This past Wednesday, the brothers met again when Private William visited Raymond at Great Lakes .This time both of them being in uniform and each giving the other "the once over." Private William Rectenwald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Rectenwald, 810 South Ridge Road, spent two days at home last week, with his parents and his sister Ruth. Private William joined the Army forces in November and is now at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri in the Engineering Corps. He expects to be transferred soon. Rectenwald Brothers Meet In Uniform '::vu. the prelude to spring. June, month of roses, will be m flen, h-hh:hc four great l:o.;'o'”u; brilliantly colored roses. Show, conferred with the governor on the gardens for victory and flowâ€" We dreritery padan i ie Amateur Section. Show ‘Week" proclaimed by * was Governor Dwight H. Green in recâ€" ognition of the importance of the Twentyâ€"third National Flower and Garden Show to be held at the Inâ€" flm Amphitheatre March 15 James Sykora and Alec Henderâ€" Left to right, James Sykors and Alec Henderson, coâ€"chairmen ‘of the National Flower and Garden Show, waich Governor Dwight H. Greep sign the "National Flower Show" prociamation. C .OR GREEX PROCLAIMS NA11UJNAI FLOWER SHOW WEEK Herb gardens, outdoor fireplaces, Some of the Services available to our Customers: (1) Defense Bonds and Stamps (2) 2% on Time Deposits (3) Checking Accts.â€"no minimum ember Federal Insurance Corporation es â€"Dm,lnm_ Deerfield State Bank (8) (9) (5) (6) (7) (4) Xmas Savings Club Accts. Accumulative Savings Accounts â€"â€" Deerfield, IHlincis â€" Money Ordesâ€"at Post office Traveler Checks Safety Boxes $2.00 per year greatest car loons and other Entries should be mailed immediaâ€" tely as the contest will close March 15. Tenm cents should be enclosed to defray clerical and postage costs. Poems should be mailed to H. M. Hudson, â€" Secretary, Poetâ€"Laureate Committee, Broadway Building, San Diego, California. _ First, second and third place will be named in each of these divisions, and all entries will be considered in the general division. ateur Section." The show opensâ€" its doors at 2 p. m. Sunday, March 15, and runs for eight days, opening daily at 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. Ample parking space is provided for those who drive cars to the show. ‘The show, largest indoor flower show in Amerâ€" Mhmfidb attract visitors from a of five hundred miles. on expected approx» lm:&hu’mmludnmn. Unknown poets will have the same chance as professionals to win in Amâ€" crica‘s Poetâ€"Lauzeate contest, as names will be removed from all entries before being judged, Claude B. Coldren, comâ€" mittee chairman, announced this week. New awardsâ€"in response to many requests from schools and collegesâ€" include a college division, junior colâ€" lege, high school and junior high school division. dens, shadow boxes, table decoraâ€" tions and other exhibits of the Amâ€" Many thousands of school children 'mlwhehum. Garâ€" den and high school Te as well as junior garden clubs, have taken keen interest in entries in the speâ€" cial Junior Section. *‘The whole purpose of the show is educational. ‘The plan for the show,"" Mr. Roland explained, "folâ€" lows that of the famous shows of Great Britain, wherein the finest of plants and flowers by growers comâ€" pete in the major classes. The inâ€" genuity of the flower lover and the amateur horticulturist finds a hapâ€" py means of expression in the garâ€" Poet Laureate Contest Closes March Fifteenth naturalistic gardens, and formal ones will be created by leading landscape architects within the Chiâ€" cago area. Thousands of roses, carâ€" nations, snapdragons, stocks and ofiuhadlunu#fil:;'u-.h huge color masses, some twenty thousand dollars in cash prizes. Rare and special flowers and plants will be rushed to the show by fast express and plane. mmm«mu«: are represented Amateur Secâ€" tion, according to Mr. Roland. Edâ€" ucational displays will be featured by the University of Illincis and the Ohio State University. Six universiâ€" ties are sending students to take rt in the flower judging contests. E. Britishâ€"American Ambulance and the American Red Cross will have special booths at the show. Thursday, March 12. 1942

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