Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 15 Jul 1943, p. 5

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Elaine Siegele, 2207 Half Day road; Dorothy Schadewitz, 631 Vine aveâ€" nue; Julene Krokum, 1630 Dean aveâ€" nue;..Sylvia K. Putter, third time donor, 268. Woodland road; Everett Wickham, 515 Laurel avenue; Florâ€" ence Hirschfeld, 268 Woodland, secâ€" ond time donor; Joseph Michaels, 280 Marshman avenue, sixth time donor; Charles A. Pollak, 601 S. Sheridan road ; Mildred Studeny, 326 North aveâ€" nue, Highwood; Howard F. Kahn. 615 S. Sheridan; Robert C. Hepple, List Of Persons Donating Blood At Chicago Center The ifollowing persons from Highâ€" land Park gave their blood at the Red Cross Blood Donor service, 5 N. Wabash avenue, Chicago, du;ini the__p_eriotlfrom June 14 to July 1: Open: House with informal enterâ€" tainment . . ; Craft and dark rooms open . . . Photobooth Service at 3:30 and 8 p. m. . ... Hymn Sing from 4 to S p.m. Vespers with Grace Methodist Church at 7 p.m. . . . Coffee at 10. Keeno and Prizes with Mrs. B. J. Rosenthal . . : Craft and dark rooms open . .. Coffee. Sunday, July 25â€" Musicval programâ€"Mrs. S. N. Nelâ€" son of Winnetka . ... Photobooth serâ€" vice . . . Gold stamping service . . . Sewing serviceâ€"Mrs. Cora St. Johns . . . Craft and dark rooms open . .. Coffee at 10. Friday, July 23â€" Wives‘ Craft Club . . . movie featureâ€"Green Hell and dark rooms open . . . C Saturday, July 24â€" Program and refreshments furnishâ€" ed by the J. W. B. in charge of Mrs. Hugh Wyle of Highland Park. . . . Jewelry instructionâ€"Mr. Lester Matâ€" thewson . . . Craft room instructionâ€" Mr. Mike Maurine.. . . Dark rooms open . ... Coffee. ‘ Thursday, July 22â€" Colored Movies on Alaskaâ€"Miss Ruth Larson, given at the Club proâ€" per. Gold stamping service. . . . Photobooth service . . . Dark room inâ€" structionâ€"Mrs. ~Chas. Keller. . . . Coffee. Wednesday, July 21â€" Party at the Summer club. The Winnetka Woman‘s Club will again take charge, bring Mr. Nick Sanâ€" tucei with his accordian, and furnishâ€" ing refreshments. An added attracâ€" tion will be the sketching of serviceâ€" men by Mrs. Grace Cantrell of Winâ€" netka. . .. At the Club properâ€"Sewâ€" ing serviceâ€"Mrs. Albert Gail . . . Craft Shop instructionâ€"Mr. Jack Davis . . . Dark rooms open . . . Coffee at 10. Tuesday, July 20â€" ‘ near future. . ... A special treat is being featured at the unit on Tuesâ€" day, July 20, when Miss Ruth Larson will show her interesting collection of Alaskan pictures done in technicolor. Jeft our ranks for aâ€"more active part in war work. Miss Lillian Olson is at Hunter‘s College, New York City, training to become a WAVE. Program for the Woek: Monday, July 19â€" The many friends of Mrs. Ira Fitzâ€" patrick who is at present a patient ut the Highland Park hospital, are wlad to hear that she is recoverâ€" ing satisfactorily from a minor operaâ€" tron ‘and are looking forward to seeing her back at the unit in the Thursdoy, July 15, 1943 STEAK â€"CHICKENâ€"CHOPS SALVATION ARMY U.S.0. LAKE COUNTY‘S$ MOST EXCLUSIVE RESTAURANT UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Air Conditioned Society â€":â€" Coffee at 10. â€"Free Craft 366 Ravine drive; Harold Gifford, 19 North ~Linden, fourth time donor; John F. Morrissy, 919 Lincoln avenue; Laura Brown, 859 Glencoe avenue; Arthur Brin, 740 South Ridge road, Staff Sergeant Gordon Engels, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Engels of 324 Railway avenue, Highwood, feturned home last Wednesday after spending 16% months in Iceland with the U. S. army. * . â€" ; ‘ S/SGT. ENGELS HOME FROM ICELAND Members of the Legion committee are Joseph Wertheimer, Arthur E. Johnson, Millet W. Schreiner, Harry E. Eichler, Arthur H. Swanson, Henry C. Eitner, William C. Heinrichs, Philâ€" lip E. Cole, Bert S. Leech, Edward C. Benson, Oscar L. Lundgren, Battista Carani, Louis Rubenstein, Sam Crimo, Mait Maiman, Thomas J. Peters, Harry Richman, William Ruehl, Dulto Biagetti, Rocco Stella, Donald S. Berâ€" nardi, and Silvio Pasquesi. Legion members will pick up records when rotified. The old records will be turned in as scarp to be made into new records which are sent wherever Americans are serving in the armed forces. Civilian Defense Coordinator Donald S. Trumbull has offered the active assistance of his office and will give information. Records may be left with Commerce rooms, and at stores where Harry E. Eichler, at the Chamber of receptacles are provided. "Our fighting men love music." said Commander William J. Acker, "and in many cases phonograph records conâ€" stitute the only source of music availâ€" able to them." * Legion Conducts Record Campaign For Service Men The American Legion is conductâ€" ing its second "Records For Our Fighting Men" campaign to collect all available old phonograph records. Ensign Clark and his bride are honeymooning at More Lake, Vt. ‘They will make their home in New London, Conn., where he is an inâ€" structor at the Coast Guard academy. Both Ensign Clark and his bride are graduates of the University of Michiâ€" gan, where he won his master‘s deâ€" gree in accounting. He also is a graduate of Loyola university. Following the ceremony, the bridal party and immediate families had breakfast at the Detroit Yacht club, where a reception ‘was given later in the afternoon. ‘The marriage of Miss Mary Ellen Spurgeon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Spurgeon of Detroit, Mich., ‘and Ensign George Edward Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Clark of 643 }Vi.e avenue, took place Monday morning, July 5, in Detroit. George Emmett of Decrfield, uncle of the bridegroom, was the best man, and ushers were Ensign Donald ‘Treadwell, who is stationed in New London, Conn., Fred Day and W. E. McNaught. The ceremony took place in Gesu church, with ‘four priests officiating. Mrs. John P. O‘Hara, sister of the bride, was matron of honor, and two other sisters, Patricia and Joan Spurâ€" geon, and Olga Manakoff were the bridesmaids. Ens. George Clark Weds Mary Ellen Spurgeon In Detroit Interesting accounts of traditional musicians, their boyhoods, their work Intimate accounts, full of life and anecdotes. Story lives of master musiciansâ€" Brower. "Descriptions of the text and music of some of the most famous masterâ€" pieces." America still sings and listens! Musâ€" ic under the stars now ;b‘mm great _ symphoni¢s o Brahms, ‘Tschaikowski, operas from Wagner, Verdi and other great mastâ€" <rs, the whole, deep world of musical enjoyment. For the younger ones Beethoven Edward MacDowell Franz Schubert Joseph Haydn Mozart Sebastian Bach Stephen Foster â€" Wheeler Simple, appealing stories of great personalities in the musical world. Bacon écho of shepherds songs around the open fires in the old worlds. The Inâ€" dians sang in the New World, the settlers and the pieneers sang .whether they were building a home in the wildâ€" erness or digging gold in the west. The voyageurs sang, paddling their. furâ€" laden canoes down the rivers. Music under the stars! How many gests ;and how many hours filled with beauty and joy. *\* SERVING AMERICA IN WAR AND PEACE FOR ALMOST A CENTUVRAY S_h_ry-lim of _ great ‘composersâ€" H. P. Public Library The Ch“u‘cuw rens News â€":â€" Locals Descriptions of all the instruments by families, the strings, the wood winds, the brass winds and the perâ€" cussion instruments. Aida Carmen Authorized editions of the Metroâ€" politan Opera Guild, Inc. Gay, vivid text, bright pictures and bits of muâ€" sic. "Legends, myths and fairy stories which have been the inspiration for musical composition." 3 Making an orchestraâ€"Commins and achievements. Music stories for _ The marriage of Miss Nancyâ€"Leigh Bowes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome P. Bowes Jr.. and Ensign Philip R. Dering, son of Mrs. Chrysâ€" tal M. Knutson of Chicago and Chas. Maxwell Dering of Miami Beach, Fia., took place Wednesday afternoon in Trinity Episcopal church. Rev. Chrisâ€" toph Keller officiated. A reception followed in the Bowes home at 176 Laure! avenue. Maid of honor was the bride‘s sisâ€" ter, Barbara, and Mrs. Bowes served as matron of honor. Flower girl was the bride‘s young sister, Courtney. Lt. Hamil Reidy served as best man. Ensign Dering and his bride will not have a wedding trip, but will go immediately to his new post in Jackâ€" sonville, Fla. _ Bowesâ€"Dering Wedding Wednesday Fifteen wellâ€"known operas. ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF DAUGHTER TO FORMER RESIDENT Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Pearson of North Haven, Conn., have anâ€" nounced the birth of a daughter, Karen Jean, born at New Haven on June 15. Mrs. Remy Hudson, program chairâ€" man of the Ravinia Garden club, is in charge of the arrangements and Mrs. William F. Einbecker is sponâ€" soring the tour for the Service Mens‘ Wives club. Mrs. Pearson is the former Esther Jeanne Bail of Highland Park. She is the daughter of the late Esther Ward Ball and Benjamin H. Ball, former Dean of Boys at Highland Park high school who made his home on N. St. Johns avenue when residing here. Aiter the tour, which will last until 4 o‘clock, the members of the Serâ€" vice Mens‘ Wives club and the Raâ€" vinia Garden club will meet in the Ravinia Rose Garden for punch and cookies and aâ€"social hour. .. The Ravinia Garden club. will be hostess‘ to the U.S.0. Service Men‘s Wives club on Friday, July 16, at 2:30 o‘clock.. They plan to take thirty or forty soldiers‘ wives on a garden tour of local beauty spots. ‘The garâ€" dens to be\visited will be chosen from members‘ gardens for their profusion of bloom or for their natural settings and native planting. Ravinia Garden Club To Entertain Servicemen‘s Wives Interested persons may call at 616 S. Michigan avenue, Room 918 for a personal interview or phone Harrison 5910. The home service office is open from 9 to 5 on week days and from 9 to 12 on Saturdays. Last month more than thirty thousâ€" and people turned to the home serâ€" vice Chicago chapter for help. Anxâ€" ious fathers, mothers, wives trying to get in touch with sons and husbands captured, wounded or ill Worried people with rio idea of where to turn or what to do when confronted by emergency. Contrast theses 30,000 reâ€" quests with the preâ€"war average of about 200 a yearâ€"chiefly. concerned with claims of exâ€"servicemen from World war I and their dependents for Government compensation. Due to this increase in the number of calls for service the Red Cross, for the first time, is offering volunteers an opportunity to join the home serâ€" vice corps. Requirements are fewâ€" United States citizens between . the ages of 22 and 60, in good health, with good, average education, are eliâ€" gible. Every hour out of the twentyâ€"four, the Red Cross stands alert, ready to assist the families of servicemen in any emergency. This branch of Red Cross activity is called home service. It has been named by Congress as the official medium of communication beâ€" tween members of the armed forces and their families. Volunteers Needed For Home Service of Red Cross

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