Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 26 Oct 1944, p. 7

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hilkakhtacints n «xn Wigndiniiw aw mae cce oi ht 2 o5 5. 9: Ts this es "' ’:M"“:“" [ us 1 443‘ \;.“'*:‘. f (',';4 f g i aces.., Radio Program Features f Braeside Playground Project rokp of the dads,â€"realizing the need of a warming house for the ice skatâ€" ing , discovered a sizeable and ted log cabin in South Deere i Through their . combined labor, they removed, transâ€" and reset the cabin to a.conâ€" h t location on the school Highland Park radio listeners who tuned in on the WLS broadcast last Friday morning were treated to an unusual program in which five of theit residents participated. _ Mrs. Raymond Caris, well known to radio fans as Martha Crane, inâ€" troduced several residents of the Braeside community who told how the parents of Braeside were buildâ€" ing a playground for their school children., *# ;. Winton, PTA president, * how further necessary imâ€" ts had. been made this year n the area behind the school had en cleared, graded, seeded, and a surface top installed. Mr. m:id that the ultimate aims of the parents were to inâ€" ae a football field, baseball diaâ€" d and badminton and tennis courts, with adequate flood lighting for night games. hokA The ‘housing committee of the MHighland Park USO . urgently reâ€" quests that anyone who has a room or an apartment list it with the USO. The need for rooms, rooms with cooking privileges, and apartments for couples and for people with chilâ€" dren is greater than it has ever been. Every day there are calls for apartâ€" ments where babies and children are accepted and many service men must be turned down. The housing comâ€" mittee is very anxious to have any new apartments listed at the club as well as apartments and rooms which are vacant when service families move away. f ‘ Darrell Beam, Braeside school principal, . described how improveâ€" ments started a year ago when a ‘The program was corfcluded when Mrs. Caris questioned, three Braeâ€" | school chitdren â€" Nora Rand, gradér; Jimmy Goldsmith, grader, and Lenore Jewett, 4 th grader; who in turn told _much they will enjoy and apâ€" preciate having adequate playâ€" ground spaceâ€"for all their games. Local USO.Urges Listing Of Housing Facilities Thursday, October 26, 1944 BUT THE DOLE Adv: : Philadeiphia, Sept. 7, 194 On Tuesday, Oct. 31, at the USO k w Right in the final crisis of the war, the most critical of all war agencies â€" the War Production Board â€" fell apart. ctorigte. o This is also the board in charge of â€"* reconversion: AND _ JOBS . .. When the w.P.B. féll apart,. â€" . so did your chance under this adminisâ€" > tration for jobs after the war. For now _ the New Dealers _ have moved in and > their proughe for .. America is not jobs â€" but the dole." FK1eutIng LIBERALS ARE NEEDED!)® omm Curtis D. MacDougall Democratic Candidate, 10th Illinois District TAXES AMERICAN FASCISTS SERIOUSLY AND HAS THE COURAGE TO FIGHT THEM VICGOROUSLY the present congressman of the 10th S@ooolo dn Ndm‘denbn‘.“flem 1 minority. of one on House i ‘ Campaign Expenditures committee Curtis D. ll.ep' ouga‘ io refuse to sign a contergpt citation ‘ * tor Edward Rumely, who served time in Atlanta penitentiar) as a German agent, and for Joseph Kamp, mentioned 24 time: in John Roy Carlson‘s "Under Cover," an expose of Americar Thomas E. Dewey 2 ooo n 3+ bhie P s io diuPai s e ""‘:5“:’:4?:',, 2 W e on mc on c :;«‘?%‘v »‘V‘,"»"'._‘?,\'}, : o gaAs 18. 9y taog 234/¢ 4 n..-;.is'_'v,-:u it es SW Yos . ols + !: *4;‘«,'! sds q \-,‘v,,a;.‘:. xn 3 $y mss s cA e t * 4W Every Saturday night overnight sleeping is available for men at the USO and for service women at the YWCA. The charge is 35¢ and inâ€" eludes a hearty breakfast with the IJ:)“ club on Sunday marning at 10. % club, the American Jegion under the direction of Mr. Harry Freberg, will sponsor the dancing party and serve refreshments, There will be music by the $44th: Army band and at 9 there will be a variety show. Fuel Oil â€"â€" Period 4 and 5 couâ€" pons and new period 1 coupons, good throughout present heating year. An organ recital\ at Redeenmer Evangelical Lutheran church, 587 W. Central Ave., will take place on Sunday, Nov. 5, at 4 p.m. The orâ€" ganist is Mr. John Meyer, Lutheran educator, who has studied at the Chicago conservatory of music for several years. The concert is sponâ€" soréd by the junior Young People‘s society, Those atténding are invited to enjoy an hour of fellowship and lunch in the ‘assembly hall. The proâ€" gram scheduled is:; . : $ Organ Recital at Redeemer Evangelical Sugar â€" Sugar stamps <30, 31, 32 and 33, each good for 5 lbs., inâ€" definitely. Sugar stamp 40 good for 5 lbs. canning sugar thru Feb. next year. * CGasoline â€" Aâ€"13 coupons in new "A" book good for 4 gallons each thru Dec. 21. < f s Processed Foods â€" Blue stamps A8 thru Z8 and AS thru RS‘good inâ€" definitely. S5 thru WS become good Nov. 1 and remain good indefiniteâ€" ly. No new stamps until Dec. 1. _ _ _ ‘Prelude (J. H. Meyer) ;. Choral: Glory be to God the Father (by the congregation). Toceata and Fugue in D Minor (J. 8. Bach). Adagio from the Third Sonata (Alâ€" exander Guilmant). > t Vocal Selection by the Choir. Passacaglia (J. H. Meyer). Andante Cantabile from Fourth Organ Symphony (C. M. Widor). Vocal selection by the choir. Salvation Now is Come to Earth Chorale (J. P. Kernberger). Festival Prelude on ‘A Mighty Fortress is Our God‘ (W. Faulkes). Choral "A Mighty Fortress is Our God (the congregation). â€" X Two chorales (a) Blessed Jesus at Thy Word (J. 8. Bach); (b) Hark a Voice Saith All Are Mortal (J. 8. Bach). f ; Meats and Fats â€" Red stamps AS8 thru Z8 and AS thru KS good indefinitely. _ LS thru PS become good Oct. 29 and remain good indefâ€" initely. No new stamps until Dec. 3. Shoes â€"â€" Airplane stamps 1 and 2 good indefinitely. Airplane stamp 3 becomes good Nov. 1 and remains good indefinitely. : & Dec. 1 Gift Mail Deadline December 1 is the deadline reâ€" quested by the post office departâ€" ment for‘mailing Christmas gifts inâ€" side the United States. Every citiâ€" zen who is playing Santa Claus for loved ones â€" and friends in other towns is urged to get that present in the mails by that date to assure proper delivery. The reason, say postal. officials, is that â€"Americans are expected to mail domestically 25 per cent more gifts than a year ago â€"and at a time when the post office has fewer employes and less wellâ€" trained holiday help than ever beâ€" fore. In addition, the fact that more people have moved to different adâ€" dresses to do war work is expected to mean that the average distance traveled by each gift will be greater than before the war. % Mrs. Olivia Diannasi, 125 Maple, Highwood, is enjoying a visit from her son, Ens. Primo Giannasi, who received his wings and commission last week at Corpus Christi, Tex. A graduate of the local high school, he has been in the service for over a year and a half. . At the expiration of his leave he will report to Jackâ€" sonville, Fla., for further training. RATION REMINDERS§ A Mr. Roosevelt‘s a bench run strictly to, pattern. There are the benches of: the Su the Cireuit Court ~of the District Courts. Roosevelt has appoin total. _Only 2 of them cans. A large numbe New Dealers. . . .: New Deal C Judiciary Governor John W, Bricker, Reâ€" publican viceâ€"presidential: nominée, carried his campaign|tour to the West Coast last weel aking. five addresses in Washington, seyen in Oregon and one in arnia. > ; In all his speechek,| Governor Bricker continued his shing ‘atâ€" tacks and detailed anklysis of the New Deal misgovernment and the effort of the Fourth Tetm candidate to impose Oneâ€"Man Goveérnment on the nation. . ~ } f . Highlights from s speeches follow: f At San Francisco, Oct , The New Deal. now control of the Federal the country . .. . _ Since becoming president on March 4th, 1933, ‘Mr. Roosevelt has appointed 61% of the entire life ten« ure federal judiciary in the United States. In a word, three of every five fedéral judges owe their appointâ€" ments to one man. He has appointed $8% of the judicial personnel of the United States Supreme|Cpurt; 100% of the, judicial personnél jof the Cirâ€" a.‘,mu onniel of the Claims urt; 66% of| the judicial personnel of the Custormms| Court and 55% of the judicial personnel of the District Courts. Mr. Roosevelt has named eight men to| the United States Supreme Court, ‘and elevated one of them to the Chief Justiceship. Seven of the el#t never served on a high court prior to appointment. hree of the eight never| tried a ca. before the court to which they were appointed. . :. <., â€" Governor John W publican viceâ€"presiden carried his cam West Coast last 1 addresses in Was Oregon and one in~C u has> walled out courts the ideals and millions of Americans l’i oppose the New pIG. ~ «. :4 :/‘ P ‘ "am Dewey is th ?n'fo: that job. A vote for hi a vote for an orderly and judicial administraâ€" tion in the best traditi of Constiâ€" tutional government. .|.! . * At Tacoma, W 4 Octsber11th: Ee‘ *_The truth is that (fio nited States never recovered her national inâ€" come or employment until war came. That is why Gove Dewey was everlastingly right he said that it took a war to put (to work unâ€" der the New Deal . | . * At Bremerton, W » October 11th: â€" Nes k Time after: time ‘administraâ€" tion at Washington t to esâ€" cape responsibility tragedy at: Pearl mrbor and by blaming Resublic tor its own _ The one . significant New Deal record that and women of this eo er forget is this: Fro to this very momen administration has fal the‘ basic economic prg country. It was ne dustry. â€"It was neve! 2:!; normal prosperit - was im M This means th $ 1 a. Qfi‘ P aFojay ®uyYas at the 2) rts; ©80% of . the | the judicial o Court and scrip f 1 of the |;, velt has | _ *SY + United | expit elevated | v usticeship. a r served on t tment. a led a ca‘. ich they were lM As Vod to the e| New Deal 5 |judges on reme Court, als, and bined, Mr. 165 of the ate Republiâ€" fitre Active r.| Roosevelt r ~federal ‘qpinions : of w cereâ€" I onw\i:tinel- fact in the worklnu;] men try will nevâ€" 1933 down e ‘Roosevelt ed <to solve fole to pror Able to proâ€" ‘ gflnto inâ€" $ay me A. deâ€"work and * ofio men epublican in chised judiâ€" r states now i puisuon a| Jation a single Reâ€" inted by Mr. al ‘district states. . . . fon of this. r-irols Bricker r‘ ident . on sevelt has itire life ten« n the United of every five eir appointâ€" as appointed I of the ican ticket is ica to a govâ€" ruthority. "It man governâ€" i aninty af judiciary of | fion; since an be made e of his x ie Doubt It! HE PRESS Tok ‘Eo not say "They expired my subâ€" scription to the magazine." Say "My subscription to the magazine expired." Efih‘&h an intransitive verb and takes no object. . )o not say "I expect the weather t week was very hot, wasn‘t it?" "I suppose." <3 9 not say "He writes consideraâ€" bl¢." Say "He writes considerably (or, voluminously)." . | o not say "Your price is very copservative." Say* "Your price is very loW (or, reasonable)." > irect, directly, direction, direcâ€" tory. Pronounce i as in. did, not as in die. §1 }9% erfidjdus. Pronounce both i‘s as in it, and ‘accent second syHable. > i Pronounce maâ€"niâ€"aâ€" , first and second a‘s as in ask u , i as in lie, third a as in at| unstressed, accent second syllaâ€" ble.. ; 3 | brought to final completion next waek." ~Omit final. Flodut. «â€"Pronounce modâ€"est, e as in \best, not modâ€"ust. Fancy. Pronounce the a as in fan, not as in ah. h Words Often Misspellied Disappoint; one s and two p‘s. Carburetor;. observe the e, ‘and proâ€" nounce as in bet. Protege (mascuâ€" line); protegee (feminine).â€" : Conâ€" fectionery; ery, not ary. Manila; one 1. Straight (not curved); strait (a passageway cortmecting two large bodies of water). / ; "Use a word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our voâ€" cabulary by mastering â€" one. word each day. Words for this lesson: Soliloquy; act of talking to one‘s self. "Loversare.always allowed the comfort of solfloquy."â€"Spectator. Multitudinous; great in number or extent. "We were confronted by multitudinous details." | Speculative; given to meditation ; contemplative. "The mind of man being by . nature . speculative." .â€" Mooker. â€" . ® o 4 * PHlegmatic; not easily excited to action or passion. "He is a phlegâ€" matic person."" s > ~:â€"> 4 .. ~ ; Surreptitious; done or made by steaith.. "He went about it in ‘a secret and surreptitions manner." Provocative; serving to proveke; exciting. . "It was provocative of bitter ‘hostility." (Pronounce secâ€" ond o asâ€"in on). 4 } Highwood, after a 20â€"day visit with his wife, has left to report to his base, in antitipation of overseas duty. Crew chief of a Câ€"46 gir carâ€" go ship, he has seen over two years of service, seven months of which were spent in Alaska.. Gauge. Pronounce °_ By W. L Gonpo® Words “gftfi Misysed o not say "Tire and engine trouâ€" were usual factors of his auto " Say "were usual occurrencâ€" fortity Gu 6 fan‘% +2 The adrmministration‘s Guam (proâ€" sal was primarily to provide a mmercial . Airport.â€" Such "would ave only given Japan more to capâ€" Fortifying Guam was ‘not. in the sident‘s program. ... . He did ask Con s to, fortify Guam. uam : was» mot, fortified â€" Japan truck. â€"The|° responsibility tests uarely upon the President. °;. â€" ilure in Pacific preparedness. As ite as Aug 12th, the it id here at Bremerton, Washington, pon his returh from a political tour f the Pacific: ‘‘We were not alâ€" wed to fortify Guam,: nor\did we rtify . Wake, or Midway or Saâ€" 04‘"*. . NSSAI f * I call yourLinmmwn to: the "fact hat neither the Navy, the adminisâ€" ration, nor the President has asked ‘ongress to !p:d.i. Guam. < It was ot the policy of the administration Cpl, Ralph Pierantoni, 809 North, 2 o. e Ae oi NesP io 1 en ctle Te ce 5. . ap" t is ":yglfif 3*»":«" M;" ,fl‘&"‘fw ow Cait so tho hok P eX Oc Te ty Sog LESSON IN ENGLISH ;{U!' v Word Study in â€" by Van Wyck Brooks, â€" ~â€" _ ‘‘This volume preeedes chronologiâ€" cally the survey of New England literature begun in "Flowering of New England." Washington Irving‘s time encompasses the bitth of the American literary tradition, about 1800, arfd its rapid growth into the tumultuous â€"years of the. early 1840‘s. This volume and those to follow deal with/the literary historâ€" ies of New York, the Middle States, the South, and the West. Timeless Mexico, by Hudson Strode, Hudson Strode has presented the full drama of Mexican history from Montezuma to our own day, with all | its color, its lent contracts, and its special n‘l:man ce to the people of the United States. We have great need . for understanding â€" Mexico, sinte our dealings with our next\ door neighbor to the south are the touchstone of our whole policy of hemisphere solidarity, . _ We Stood Alone, by Dorothy Adâ€" Dorothy Adams was for fourteen years the wife of Jan Kostanecki, son of the Rector of Cracow universâ€" ity, and one of Poland‘s leading economists and diplomats. As a first hand observer of ‘the signifieant leading up to the start of the war, she throws interesting new light on Poland‘s efforts to ward off the conâ€" flict, in which efforts her husband played an important part. Citizen Toussaint, by Ralph Kornâ€" gold. Two of the great champions of the : people who arose during the French Revolution were Maximulien Robespierre and Toussaint Louverâ€" tur was a slave in Haiti‘at the beâ€" ginning of. the Fremch Revolution. Rising quickly to the top of a slave revolt he put into effect the princiâ€" ples of Liberty, Equality, Fraterniâ€" ty. . He began as ‘a guerrillia but soon commanded an army of free men who drove out first the Engâ€" Frenchâ€" authorities. . _ i &53 lv::,!_icl with _“.4 by Syd Skolâ€" through developments in radio and "*-h! s is ‘ ] s y .“ * fln k ies ‘-'a;,;- R « o s %Q’»fin:fl:w; on r,g‘ ‘ i ie ut lat %dfl) C omomnpat than ann think ' oyon sre : M}f{'t ® “rfitt",w-f'" *quropetnise :;‘-‘ .u.-"’it‘:!»«&fi&i«f l nooae uks gpagrsc® it 2%, LOEEY sE . PS O) G6 . CEsRentstnntt HIGHLAND PARK PUBLIC The World:â€"of Washington Irving The Highland Park Public Library offers a few of its new, outstanding books, fiction and nonâ€"fiction. Unlike: Mata Hari, whose sole claim to a place in the annals of esplonage was that‘ she looked like a spy, blonde, Polish Maria Sorrel definitely.. did not look like one. Which qtality made her as deadly as Mata Hari was ineffectual. _ of ‘war |work, remember that the best spigs don‘t look like spies. That is one of the things thit makes them so dang .! Distrust, above all else, the sympathetic soul who. is "so interested" in your problems,. Even though they remind you of dad, mother or the girl back home, look out, and don‘t talk. Back in 1915, one of Germany‘s most danâ€" gerous spies looked just like someâ€" one‘s sister, and used that quality. An agent of Germany even beâ€" fore World War No. 1, she °fi“,“‘ from Warsaw, then part of Russia, against the Russians. Her .unwitting sources of in!o[mation were. the young officers of the czar‘s army. Her method of. operation was disâ€" armingly simplé. f : " Kither because she hersel! was egried ofâ€" war and: its intrigues, ::ilonxed for the simple pleasures of family and home, or else because she was an astute student of psyâ€" chology, Maria Sorrel ~created a technique then new in espionage. To these warâ€"sick young Russian officers, Maria Fecame the symbol of those family tics which they i8 t Young Girl‘s Sisterly Kindness Made Russians Tell All / ~â€"At‘s Taps for Reveille | . Somewhere in the South Pacific | (Delayed) â€" Marines in this heavy artillery unit probably are the only men in the service who are fond of reveille. In fact, they are worried that the clear call of reveille »will sound no more above the roaring |\ surf by which their camp is pitched. No poultrymen, the Marines first named the bird "Gladys" and held h}gh hopes for an occasional egg, of the fresh sort they dimly rememâ€" \bered. Before long, however, Glaâ€" ‘o‘}n:ioeoaoerflngly:tookh crowing. i when a beautiful pink comb ‘appeared atop "her" black. head, head, "she" WIPI sorrowfully renamâ€" ed "Reveille." . . * . Of late, however, certain predaâ€" tory creatures with prodiglous apâ€" petites and â€"~â€"no â€" soul#* have been strolling by the camp and observâ€" ing audibly that: Reveille would look uncommonly| beautiful ‘on a g;i:wrfl:.wdniyhh'nu open Reveille, in this outfit, is a handâ€" some black rooster which has the run of the camp, including tents. He was purchased from a nat{ve â€"â€" the meh firmly swear â€"â€" for a dollar when‘~ . he was a scrawney chick. 4 F "Gladys" Misnomer e â€" Similar in style to the author‘s "Lust for Life," "Immortal Wife" is andther; biographical novel.. This time it is the story of an ambitious American woman married to one of Ca. John CR ur men 1 h out his lifé Fremont was soldiet, exâ€" plorer, politician. â€" He was twice courtâ€"martialed, was nominated for president, and nmiade and lost a forâ€" tune. i . Soon forgiven, Reveille: became the camp‘s official and beloved bugler. ‘True, he was an unreliable bird and required an assistant, a Marine who ‘blew the familiar call every ~morhing whether Reveille was up or not. But the men remained Iofl&o their proud chanticleer and his assistint only as a neeâ€" essary evil. / Agrerl * Immortal Wife, by Irving Stope! or Until ; recently, Reveille‘s only menace has been falling coconuts that plummet nesar him and send him, scuttling and squawking, to safety, Ifinh‘lld“:‘m” rufâ€" fled in Fe:‘ It was whem these young officers were about to rejoin their regiments at the front that Maria played her master stroke. Until after the war was ended ‘she would be as a deat sister to these youngsters. After‘that â€"who could tell? But, in the inâ€" teritm, she would not rest unless# she Yall that they did, and thought. tht:y would write often, and at | They and did, some of the léetters mea as an official young sources of information, there was litlldé © guessing at German G. H. Q. regarding the disposition or strength of the Russian forces, Unquestionably, by the time this story gets into print, Rzil: will no longer be * the is dn Aptepating that the will become a casualty of war at any early date, his admirers here Jhave written his epitaph: ; ‘For Maria, the arrangement was ideal. ‘Had she not reformed more than one profligate youhg officer, and turned him to better ways? Wasn‘t she the essence of morality and patriotism? ~ ut y S§p 3 J â€" v' .'-“‘ "h'::" L Tsd '»'*.W stt It was only after she branched out into other felds that she was suspected.. Her capture execuâ€" tion, after a long career |in espiâ€" onage, was the result of a of accidents. _ _An appéal to sentiment is one of the spies‘ deadliest weapons. . 5t Page 7 Vb 498

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