Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 28 Jan 1943, p. 2

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Taking part in the talent show given Wednesday evening at the U.S.0. was Mrs. Ramona Spencer, who presented a hula dance. Mrs. Spencer was in Haâ€" waii during the attack on Dec. 7, 1941. She has danced with the Marx broâ€" thers, in "The Great Waltz," with Guy Robertson and Marion Clare, and with the Murie!l Abbott dancers. Saturday night there will be a keno party, informal dancing with Highland Park G.S.0. hostesses, overnigh t sleeping for service men including »reakfast and Java club Sunday mornâ€" ing. Sunday afternoon will feature games and the new arts instruction. A buffet supper will be served at 6, followed by a singâ€"song and men‘s quartette. Later there will be inforâ€" mal dancing, a navy dance band furnâ€" ishing music. "AND 5O WE RESOLVED.......1" With 1943 well under way, every American housewife has the same deterâ€" mined resolution in mind . . . to streich a little here, share a little there, save a mm...nmunmhn...m-um.mwu MyinlWlAndaolginywthh'eekmeidmtohelpmmh your resolutions good ones . . . and they will be good to eat, too, if you do your meat sharing this way. y mmos se \ es P C s * y Clz J an C k 4A ie * No on n / m Jo 3% c\ > & C P t S ) ».,‘\*:,,’ * f ol * "botf < _' ho ,,:_: #‘ ‘ai \"., L td Th U 2 ,5% J â€" e t > s ‘.."v“r-:, ‘ lt =1.. > =s 2 " ys neventine o2 5 ""* / Menu Wimmmanone, 4 oo ..( in n At 2 o‘clock Friday afternoon, Mrs. Ruth Weir will entertain wives of service men with a talk "Recipe for Humor." At 8 p.m, Friday, the Ruth Zook dancers will present a variety program. There will be informal dancâ€" ing with Andy Jacobs‘ orchestra and Evanston G.S.0. hostesses. Thursday evening, Jan. 28, there will also be craft shop instruction unâ€" der the guidance of J. Lies and at 7:45 a colored travel movie with speâ€" cial music by Victor Sickinger will be shown. There will be informal dancâ€" ing at 8:45, Highland Park G.S.0. hostesses for dancing partners and coffee hour at 9:30. ‘ with one restricted, inf‘n single dish, io a wise way to keep meals within your meat quota. With this in mind . . . here‘s exhibit A. Wileon‘s Certiked Baconâ€"Liver Pattios Serves 6 Combine 1 pound liver -m:-uuwmo.- fheed caruske‘ 14 top emptrated mile. is ks 4 temspcon 14 teaspoon pepper. into 6 patties. Wrap slicee of Wileon‘s Certified RBacon around each patty, securing the ands on top with a toothpick. Place in Bightly greased pan in hot oven (425° F.). ONE PLUS ONE EQUALs Two Regular instruction in the various crafts and dancing will not be changed by the addition of this new program but will continue as usual on Monday nights. s SPIAKIN® OP sTAMDBYS is on #=» esnerations bacon has been a standâ€" .. Yours /6 beeping RESOLUTIONS, Beginning Sunday, Jan. 31, Highâ€" land Park US.0. will add another wdm-.bm-‘ guests. At 4 p.m. H. L. Beach of Raâ€" vinia, Mrs. M. McDonald and Miss Rasmussen will give assistance in art work, Mr. Beach will instruct in clay modeling. Miss Rasmussen crayon drawing and sketching and Mrs. Mcâ€" Donald, oil painting. M r. Beach, whose proficiency in chess and checkâ€" ers is well known, will also be on hand during the later afternoon and eveâ€" ning to give pointers to those wishing to improve their games. until well browned. Turn for even Menu (For Resolution Makers) Highland Park U.S.0. wilson‘s CERTIFIED BACONâ€"LIVER PATTIES BAKED POTATOES BUTTERED CARROTS ENRICHED BREAD ORANGEâ€"NUT SALAD quP CustaRDâ€"COOKIES an meals . . . not only as & WILSON®‘S WEEKLY MOVIES ~AND AMUSEMENTS Food and Nutrition Consultant to Wilion & Co. dish in itself, but in supplying an inâ€" FATS... FROM FRYING PAN TO FIRING LINE Kitchen fats are mighty precious posâ€" sessions these days . . . since they‘ve taken over a full time war job right in the front line . . . in the ammunition our boys are using. Either save and sell to your butcher, who will get them to the proper sources for utilization in ammunition, or save them for your own further use. throw away any waste kitchen fats. A new Red Cross first aid class meets at the Community center on Monday nights from 7:30 to 10 o‘~ clock. Mrs, Walter M. Heymann is the first aid instructor. Phone H. P. 2442 to register for class. Looking for a place to aevelop, print and erlarge negatives? Community Center is the place! Here for a small use fee one can do all these things. Community centers squashâ€"handball court is open for play to all who care to come. A small use fee is the only charge. Community center shop crafts club is now enrolling new members for a new 12â€"week term. The club meets on Saturday mornings from 9 to 12. The club features‘ making things out of wood, plastics, and leather as well as repairing broken articles. Saturday mornings from 9 to 12, under the leadership of Miss Ella Rasmussen will be Art club time. Clay modeling, drawing, painting and other forms of art will be taught. Register and start club work on February 6. ‘They‘re handy for sautéing meats, Tuesday, Feb. 2 7:30 p.m., Advanced first aid class 8 p.m., H. P. Men‘s Garden club. Wednesday, Fob. 3 8 p.m., First aid station leaders 7 p.m., Center‘s Boys‘ club 8 pm., Chamber orchestra. 9 a.m., Crafts club for children. 10 a.m., Game rooms open for play 2 p.m., Game rooms open for play.. 7:30 p.m., Chess club. 7 :30 p.m., Civilian Defense first aid. 8 p.m., Table tennis club. Community chorus. 1:15 p.m., League of Women Voters Cou-m‘.&-m Squashâ€"Handball Court Open Shop Club‘s New Term New First Aid Class Darkroom Facilities New Art Club boy or girl is center (6) I (6) I realize the value of the C munity center as the headquarters the many civic, cultural, hobby, yo etc., organizations, which meet t} for lack of other facilities. (7) 1 am positive t recreational program community from th making our city a m cation for new indust establishments. (4) I know that statistics show that juvenile delinquency is lower in urbâ€" an areas which have made ample pubâ€" lic recreational activity available. (2) I know that the give and take incidental to group recreational activâ€" ities does something worthwhile for boys and girlsâ€"yea, even for men and women. (3) I realize that mental and physiâ€" cal health is improved for .many through participation in these activâ€" itles. i (1) I believe that the children of America have a right to enjoy themâ€" selves in creative leisure activity, and that public funds should be made available for this purpose, so that all will have equal opportunity. Because of the present interest in Highland Parkers in a planned comâ€" munity recreation program, the folâ€" lowing words of a citizen of Sycamore, IIL, are significant. â€" Sycamore is a city which operates a community reâ€" creation program under a recreation commission. Some of his "guiding principles" are as follows : Guiding Principles of A Recreation Program Stated FRI & SAT. GLENCOE There‘s no laugh rationing here. Rosalind Russell, Brian Aberne and Milton Berle, Brenda Joyce in SAT. MATINEE New Serial ‘Gâ€"Men vs. The Black Dragon‘ ‘MY SISTER EILEEN®‘ "»@ WHO DONE IT ?" Jami 31, Fob. 1, 2, 3 wE‘VE GOT PRIORITY on (5) "BUGLE SOUNDS" OFFICIAL 18SSUING AGENT Bonds While You Wait! "IN WHISPERING GHOSTS" AKADAUVL nsm ip KÂ¥ _ enmmagemnntt"" 1ow a m HEADHUNTING was almost mpfl:a SCrarmW isiaANGE THE MAP byavaeani | . _4# "**"* "N°** eruntion in 1937 ... | ABookâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"Month Chib Selection ABBOTT & COSTELLO [ appreciate â€"girl or my safer while than on the realize the center as th "Here We Wallace Beery in HILARITY the at the street. the fact t neighbor‘s that t an organized an asset to the standpoint of c desirable loâ€" s and business Jan. 29, 30 Community that youth, there for N. S. Sunday Club To Hear Noted Photographer Jan. Julian Gromer, photographer, world traveler and adventurer, will speak at the North Shore Sunday Evening club on Sunday, Jan. 31, at the New Trier high school auditorium at 8 o‘clock. Mr. Gromer will show color films of "Hawaiian Paradise" before Pearl Harbor. Mrs. Gromer is in charge of the special musical background. CAMPBELL CHAPTER PLANS INITIATION Newly installed officers of Campâ€" bell chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold an initiation of new members Wednesday evening, Feb. 3, in the Maâ€" sonic temple at 7:30 o‘clock. _ The so will serve chocolate Featured on the program will be a costume parade, with three awards for the best costumes, speed and douâ€" bles races, one skate and obstacle race and fancy skating and specialâ€" ty acts by the children. The social committee of the P.T.A. will serve hot dogs, chocolate bars and chocolate milk. s Ravinia PTA Will Sponsor Ice Carnival An ice carnival will be sponsorad by the Ravinia P.T.A. Friday afterâ€" noofl, Jan. 29, at 2 o‘clock. One . of the outstanding coming events at the USOâ€"Salvation Army Club, 346 Waukegan Ave., Highwood, will be an exhibition of checker playâ€" ing by Mr. Millard Hopper, the Checkâ€" er King, on February 13. His method is to take on 20 to 30 opponents ,simulâ€" tancously. _ Servicemen who take pride Th tehir prowess at checkers shoul dbrush up on their game, preâ€" paratory to "taking the champ," and civilian sharps interested in attending the event may contact Maj. Ira Fitzâ€" patrick, club director. Meet the Champ USOâ€"SALVATION ARMY By William Sharp 346 Waukegan Rd., Highwood, I11. Maj. Ira R. Fitzpatrick, Club Manager Mein lee 10 times foster then rock soit. CGoes 3 me: on for. Mare effective at uw ts Nveme, enc thay d TAMMS S1L11CA CO. 190 M. io Seite Imeat, Chicage Gromer, photographer, world and adventurer, will speak at h Shore Sunday Evening club TAMCO for home we on » 3' Show Presented At Local U.S.0. "Students still migrate in large numâ€" bers and need financial help. An evâ€" en larger student staff‘is required to administer relief and to initiate and supervise summer work projects. Equally acute, though not immediately obvious, is the need for the kind of leadership that will develop the ideals and character in schools and colleges that will insure the victory of the spirit. "All these and other tasks challenge us to hard work. "We cherish our oneness â€"with you as we continue to strive to carry our responsibility for women and girls in the hope that China too may fulfill her part as one of the United Naâ€" tions." "The strain of war and the high cost of living are affecting the health of our people. Young people and moâ€" thers are wanting to learn about what foods are necessary and how health can be maintained at low cost. Nutriâ€" tion centers that promote the use of bean milk, how it can be made and what its values are and at the same time dispense enough at low prices to create the habit of using it is one way of helping. Demonstration of balâ€" anced diets that stress cheaper and better food are helping women to unâ€" derstand. Recreation centers provide an outlet in wholesome games and exâ€" ercise at a time when commercial enâ€" tertainment is too expensive, and imâ€" prove both health and morale. Means of Livelihood "Refugees uprooted secking new means of livelihood, wives of soldiers needing to support families, young women separated from their families, all need training in skills and mist-i ance in getting started in some indusâ€" try. Already industrial cooperatives in our Y. W. C. A. have produced umâ€" brellas, cloth, shoes, uniforms, toys. More cooperatives are contemplated making similar goods, and new liveliâ€" hood projects in rural and city areas plan woolâ€"weaving and making paim leaf bats, bags. C Colonel J. A. Le Bouthillier, forâ€" merly of the French inteligence deâ€" partment, presided as the master of ceremonies and a large audience of Fort Sheridan were in the audience, tertainment, at the U.S0O, club, 21 Green Bay road, Saturday evening, Jan. 23 through the courtesy of Walâ€" ter E. Olson, president of the Olson Rug company. Doris Vizck, prominent toe tap dancer and baton twirler featured the instrumental trio. Others on the bill included Frank A. Molicere, tenor, who rendered several current as well as war time selections. "With the outbreak of the Pacific war there has been a flood of refugees g:llht Coming Arough i region. up through the Southeast they have met with warfare, dangers and destitution. Most of them have needed food, lodging and aid on their way. City associations with established hostels have minisâ€" tered to their need but at some of the junction cities our hostel resources }rhave not been adequate. At other staâ€" tions where no city association exists it is necessary to establish emergency transient centers where women and children can find an accommodation in overcrowded cities, a place to sleep, to get advice and help if they have used all their money or met with misâ€" fortune on the way. In Chungking the association was bombed repeatedâ€" ly. Girls employed in business offices literally walked the streets looking for lodging, so with funds raised by the members, a grant from the relief comâ€" mittee and a contribution from the architects the Association erected a new hostel, Other centers have overâ€" flowing hostels. Steps should be takâ€" en toward opening additional ones. But withâ€"the scarcity of available buildings this can be done only by erecting new structures, perhaps of a temporary nature. On Sunday afternoon, Jan. 31, at 3 o‘clock, the Y. W. C. A. is sponsoring ‘r(nkp-t cb'.“w m ‘are :vdco-: to meet at the association house. w "We hear with the deepest interest of the service given by the association in America and Great Britain to the women who are helping to win the war, who are taking part as workers on the land, in offices, in munitions factories or in hospitals In China too, the Y, W, C. A. continues to face the needs of women affected by the war. Y.W.C.A. Notes The following is part of a message broadcast from Chungking, China, pickâ€" edup by Listening Post at Ventura, California, and sent out by the Y.W. C.A. National Committee of China, Chengtu, China. The Friendship club will have a busâ€" iness meeting Thursday, Feb. 4, at 7:30 at the Â¥. W. C. A. Amateur talent from Chicago preâ€" to Arthur Ridemour, Flood of Refugees Woodiea! appeared recently. Larry‘s a handsome lad who joined ap beâ€" fore Pearl Harbor, after doing pubâ€" Hcity fer the program; he‘d spent <ight months in the Far East. If the actors on your favorite radie program sound pretty ‘exhilirated, #‘s practically certain to be due to just one thingâ€"the return of & forâ€" mer member of the group in uniâ€" form. *"Pepper Young‘s Family" Eddie Cantor‘s explanation for substituting for Phil Baker on ‘‘Take It or Leave It"â€"‘"Last April, Phil Baker took my place when 1 was in the hospital. So I took his place when he was in the hospital Next time we‘ll both be on the programâ€" the audience will go to the hospital!" talks at service camps throughout the country in the near future. He has already given numerous talks at camps in the eastern area. Ed Murâ€" row, the London newscaster, reports that he‘s expecting to soive the noâ€" gas problem soon; he has his eye on un eiderly horse, but is still dickerâ€" ing over the price. . They could hardly believe it at Metro when they got two new lads at once. Tommy Dix and Gil Stratâ€" ton were brought from the New York stage for ‘"‘Best Foot Forward"â€"and at once Stratton was assigned to "Girl Crazy" and Dix will win Luâ€" gille Ball in "Best Foot Forward." Alan Ladd‘s date with Uncle Sam upset the apple cart so far as Paraâ€" mount‘s â€" "Incendiary Rlonds" / was concerned. He was in have starred in this screen version of Texas Guiâ€" nan‘s life with Betty Hutton but his prospective induction into the army wrecked that plan. At present the film has been shelved; Miss Hutton gets the feminine lead in "Let‘s Face It," and Betty Rhodes gets a supâ€" Office of War Information. Bob‘s got his fingers crossed, hoping that this scene, too, will come true Maybe Bob Hope‘s a prophet; he hopes so. His ‘The Road to Morcoâ€" co" was filmed six months before the Allied invasion of that territory, and released right on the dot. Reâ€" cently he interrupted his tour of the army camps for 48 hours to do a scene for ‘‘They Got Me Covered" which depicts a defliated Mussolini escaping from the nation he led into story of an American pilot who‘s shot down in Germany. Do you wonder that Hollywood‘s wondering what to use for leading men? N4 will be the vehicle throughâ€" which Bert Lytell, once a movie idol, will return to films. The movie version, produced for United Artists by Sol Lesser, will bring us a host of celebrities, including shunned the films so far, and Lunt and Fontanne, Tallulazh Bankâ€" Katharine Cornell, who‘s has been so busy with stage and radio engagements of recent years that he‘s had no time for pictures. Orson Welles isn‘t trying to set a new fad with that shock of long hair that he‘s wearing at "Celling Unâ€" limited" rehearsals. He‘s letting his hair grow at the request of 20th Centuryâ€"Fox for his role of ‘Rochesâ€" George Montgomery will do one more picture before he goes into the service; it‘s in ‘"Bomber‘s Moon," opposite Annabella â€"â€" the William L. Shirer, the news comâ€" ODDS AND ENDSâ€"Radio‘s Tim and Released by Western Newspaper Union. Thursdoy, January 28, 1943 GEORGE MONTGOMERY By VIRGINIA VALE

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