11:00 a.m. Divine worship. Comâ€" munion meditation . by.. the Rev. Laubenstein. The Sacrament of the 9:30 a.m. Sunday school in all departments. Dr. E. D, Frit«ch, superintendent. Laure! at McGovern Lester H. Laubenstein, Minister Sunday, Jan. 7â€" wéek prayer service at the church. Thurs., Jan .11, 2:30 pm. â€" Women‘s Missionary society at a home of one of the members. (Anâ€" nounced later.) 8 p.m. Choir rebearsal. * Tuesday, Jan. 9, 8 pm. â€" Beâ€" rean 8. S. class meets at the home of Mrs. Arthur Tillman, 615 W. serving in homes or hospitals can be requested by those unable to attend the church services. 3:00 p.m. The pastor will conâ€" duct service at the Railroad Men‘s Announcements Tor the weekâ€" The nursery staff will care for young children. 6:00 p.m. .Organ recital with Miss Gladys Owen of Lake Forest. the parsonage. Tuesday, Jan. 11â€" . 8:00 p.m.. The Young People‘s society, Friday, Jan. 12â€" ‘ The pastor will preach on the subject, "God‘s Star." 7:00 p.m. Christian Endeavor. 7:45 p.m. Rev. N. J. Broadway of Dixon, IIL., will bring the mhesâ€" sage. <Holy Communion will again be observed. _ Following the servâ€" ice the quarterly conference will meet with the presiding elder to give their reports of the last three months. . ble class resumes twice weekly meetings. Sunday, Jan. 7â€" 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. ‘ : 9:40 a.m. Adults‘ Bible Discusâ€" sion group. 10:30 .a.m. Morning worship. New officers both of the congreâ€" gation and the societies will be inâ€" stalled. Sermon topic, "The Place of Christian Doctrine." 8:00 p.m. Evening worship at Lake Forest American Legion hall. Monday, Jan. 8â€" t :00 p.m. The voting body mee 8: a. ing. «â€" *A _Community Church That Serves All." Sunday, Jan. 7â€" & 9:30 a.m. â€"Bible classes for all. 10 :45 a.m. Morning worship with ‘Holy Communion. Page 4 UNITED EVANG. CHURCH S. Green Bay at Laurel R.~S. Wilson, pastor. â€"Phoneâ€"1731 is open to all Christians. Private tional meeting at the church. _ St. John‘s auxiliary will serveâ€"a light lunch after adjournment. Thursday, Jan 11â€" _2:00 p.m. Women‘s Guild meet ing at the home of Mrs. Harry El liott, ~* * 587 West Central Saturday, Jan. 6â€" 10:30 a.m. Young People‘s Biâ€" ble class resumes twice weekly 10:45 â€" a.m.. Morning worship and sermon, Tuesday, Jan. 9â€" â€" § â€"T:45 p.m. _ Annual congregaâ€" l&mhtd branch of The Bunday morning service !mnm.l&'oht: . Small children are cared for durâ€" ing Sunday church service. ( :;h“b-ï¬â€˜ up to the of 20 years, and is held morning at 9:30. 1‘ Adult Bible class. A free public reading room is â€"W&Muun Sheridan which is open daily from 9:30 6clétk in the morning bi’.h&“afln Saturdays 9 o‘clock. On Sunâ€" hyï¬o&.cmhq-tnâ€" :uï¬.b Here the Bible, and num~uu.w WELCOME TO CHURCH Green Bay Road at Homewood Gustav A. Pabi, Jr., Pastor "ST. JOHN‘S CHURCH â€" REDEEMER EVANG. LUTH. Wed., Jan. 10. 8 p.m. â€" Mid 8:00 p.m. Ths church council at The Lord‘s Supper in our chufch BETHANY EVANGELICAL 7:45 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal. -y;.hlp.'“ Subject of next Sunday‘s Lesson l.!l[ ‘Vï¬nlay school and ST. JOHN®E EV. & REF. Redeeme{; Evangelical â€" church members will install the new officâ€" ers of the congregation for 1945 during the morning service on Sunâ€" day, Jan. 7, at 10:30 a.m. This annual. custom calls both the ofâ€" ficers â€"of theâ€"congregation and the executives of each church society to present themselves before the altar for installation. The execuâ€" tive officers of the congregation for 1945 are Mr. Milton Voigt, president; William Wurm, viceâ€" president; Leonard Eichler, secreâ€" tary; Harry Eichler, treasurer. A proper understanding and â€"a true‘ appreciation of Judaism can come only through a familiarity with the great men who helped to form the religious heritage of the Jewish faith. This series of lecâ€" tures will help familiarize the prinâ€" ciples of the religion and the times and conditions under which it deâ€" veloped and flourished. The first lecture, this coming Friday eveâ€" ming, will deal with the Prophet Services are at 8:15 at the Temâ€" ple, Lincoln and Vernon Sts., in Glencoe. i R A social hour follows the religi~ ous service. Visitors are cordially invited. 4 REDEEMER CHURCH INSTALLS OFFICERS The author has written‘ novels with her own Nnm as a backgroundâ€"riow an inspirational book about the Bible. # ‘"There are five miain directions in which civilization can go wrong, mostly by falling out of date and being overgrown with superstitions through not weeding out the garâ€" den. The five are economics, its politics, its â€"science, its education, its religion." Mexico, Magnetic Southland. Sydney A. Clark. All enthusiasts about Mexico should read this book. This shows how the railroads have aided the United States govâ€" ernment in the war effort by effiâ€" ciently transporting men and supâ€" plies of all kinds. C.r_!ol-. Wendell Berge. The facts stated in this book cover an investigation extending over a period of years. This | twoâ€"y publication w The following new books are at the ‘Highland Park public Tibrary: Railroads at War. S. K. Farringâ€" Reader. Mary Elien Chase. Prophets of Israel Beginning this Friday evening, and during the month of January, Rabbi Wax will deliver a series of lectures on the pFophets of Israel. There has been a great interest in this subject shown by the members of the Congregation. be the subject for discussion. Sundayâ€" Wednesdayâ€"â€" â€"»â€":.~â€" 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion 4 and Litany for the Lord‘s Supper will be celebrated. T00 p.m. Evangelical Youth will convene to"formulate the budâ€" get for the coming year. 4:00 p.m. Meeting of the junâ€" ht"e:‘-ï¬w-lbuï¬n’.fl_ H’tvl-. 9 § Thursday, Jan, 11â€" TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH East Laurel Avenue 8:.0&. Annual dinner meetâ€" ing of W.M.S. at the parsonâ€" age. Dinner will be served at 6 lfl‘-.lnhouulolttoneï¬:-' any t?ll.llm direction Esther H. Laubenstein. °* 8:00 p.m. Monthly meeting and election of officers for the Charisâ€" ma clul at the Sleeman home, 842 North End Ct: Special: Announcement will be made of the dedicatory services for Christian Education. Pottery and Porcelain. Warren Everybody‘s Political What‘s Rev.. Christoph Keller, Rector T:45. ‘The finance board conâ€" 11 4:00 p.m. . Advanced class in Highland Park Public :30 a.m. Holy Communion. :30 a.m. The Church School _service. :00 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon. , Jan. 13â€" volume work whose vas postponed for alâ€" came good Nov. 16. Another sugar stamp will become good Fob. 1. .....â€" Expiration dates have not been set for the stamps that still remain Shoes â€" Airplane stamps 1, 2 and 3 in book three, good indefinâ€" said today. Use of these stamps by consumers, as well as acceptancé of them by retailers, is a violation of rationing regulations, OPA said. At the same time OPA‘ explained that red ration tokens continue good and housewives may use them for buying meats and fats. Groc ers will continue to give them to housewives as change for the red 10â€"point stamps. Sugar Stamps â€" 30, 31, 32, 33 and 40, along with all home canâ€" ning coupons outstanding. * Stamps continuing to be good, and those soon to be made good, good Sunday, Dec. 31. Blue Stamps X5, Y5, Z5, A2 and stamps, C2, D2, E2, F2, and G2 will become good Monday, Jan. 1. Sugar Stamp No. 34, which beâ€" for four gullons. _â€" 7 % R \_Fucl.Oilâ€"2 and 3 coupons good for 10 gallons per unit. Blue ration <tokens, however, have not been good since Octobet 1 and cannot be used for canned fruits and vegetables. They are no longer needed as change for the 10â€"point blue ration stamps used for processed foods because point values for these items are set in multiples of ten. which became good Dec. 3. in adâ€" With the strong branches as supâ€" ports for his thatched hut, a bed woven from palm leaves, a fire of husks burning atâ€" the entrance of his hut, a blanket made of paim cloth, a shellâ€"canteen full of coc6â€" fiut milk and a supper of soft palm sprouts and coconut meat and cream, what more could the castaway Marine want unless it be Lana Turner for company. .' Housewives are urged to destroy all_food ration :stamps that have been declared invalid, the OPA Ration stamps which were invalâ€" idated as of 12.01 a.m., Tuesday, Dec.â€"26,â€"1944, and which are not good for consumer use are: Red Stampsâ€"A8 thru Z8 and AS thru PS. i Blue Stampeâ€" A8 thru Z8 and AS thre WS. i When extracted unbroken, the shell of the nut is a natural canâ€" teen. _A small opening made in one of the eyes will let in the air and eventually the meat will rot and can be washed out. A wooden plug completes it. The very hard pieces of broken shells may be used a= scrapers, spoons, or dishes. comfortable makeshift shoes that will last two or three days on the sharpest coral. Dried, the husks are used to‘start a fire or keep a fire smouldering when an open flame is undesirable. The husk fibers can be> woven into useful cord or rope. Shell Makes Canteen most two years is for collectors and those who enjoy beautiful chiâ€" Marines Learn to Use snowshoe and dog team through upper Minnesota and Lake Supeâ€" rior‘s north shore. to the sun, the rich coconut oil risesâ€" to the surace and can be skimmed off and used as sunburn oil. CIFIC (Delayed) â€" Marine airâ€" mers ‘undergoing rigorous trainâ€" ing in methods of survival in the Not only a source of food and water, the coconut palm furnishes dried leaves make excellent and are used at night to atâ€" fish for easy capture. From green leaves, baskets, containâ€" mats are woven. The latter waterproof shelters. useful is the nut itself. When the nut is green, the meat mat be eaten in large quantities without ill effect. However, when the nut is ripe, the meat or the concentrated ‘milk is a natural cathartic. Copra, or dried coconut meat, can be used as an emerâ€" gency food or as a source of light. Small pieces pierced with a stick will burn like a candle. Sunburn Oil or Lamp Fuel § From the grated green coconut meat is squeezed a delicious cream und\_uaflnmriug.Wieumd ‘The author and husband who i} Sections of the green husk tied RATION PROGRAM â€" A14 THE PRESS lM-.ï¬hfl-hhfl- lished will be charged at the reguâ€" inr advertising rates. . ' R. B. Olson, Editor. i Lester S. Olson, Publisher. Born in Italy, Mrs. Gentilini came to this country in 1903, and for 24 years has been a resident of Highwood. She is survived by her husband and two sons, Charles, of Highwood, and Celso of Columbus, Ohio. Of the four brothers and sisâ€" ters surviving, two live in Italy and two, Mrs. Mario Dinelly and Olindo Pasquale, are residents of Highâ€" year; 5 cents per single copy. $3.00 per year outside of Lake county, side of the paper only, and be signed with the name and address dh'm-‘.&dfla-‘ the editor W noon to inâ€" sure appearance in the current isâ€" OBSEQUIES FOR CHARLES MAKER ment. T & A'id.-!r.h'-eluutm,‘ivi-g relative is a daughter, Mrs. Milâ€" dred Di Giovanni, of Boston. Funeral Rites Saturday For Mrs. J. Genitilini Saturday at the St. James church for Mrs. Joseph Gentilini, 66, of 4 Webster, Highwood, who: sucâ€" cumbed to a lingering illness last week at a Waukegan hospital. â€"Mr. Maker, a native of Massaâ€" chusetts, came to Highland Park in 1929, living at the home of a cousin, Frank G. Waggett, 325 Marshman. _ He . was employedâ€" by the Illinois Bell Telephone Co., in Entered as second class matter March 1, 1911, at the Post Office .‘l-ld d-ehv.d“ ty the iHghinad Furk Prem. ht Laure! avenue, Highland Park, 11. Obsequies were conducted on Friday, Dec. 29, at Kelly chapel, for Charles W. Maker, who passed away at ithe local jhospital last week following a brief illness. AFL Presents and emotional adjustments of the Sudden Death of Alfred L. Price Alfred L. Price, 1721 Broadâ€" view, succumbed to a heart attack Jan. 1, while pushing a staHled car at the estate of Howard Fenton, Lake Forest, where he was servâ€" ing, for the evening, as butler. He was regularly employed in the perâ€" sonnelâ€"department of the Commonâ€" wealth Edison Co., Chicago. He is survived by ‘his wife, Amanda, a daughter, Irene, and a son, Everett, the latter a midshipâ€" man at the medical school at Tliâ€" noisuniversity. Mr. Price, 59, had lived in Highâ€" land Park for seven years. Adolescent" is the subject of a ters of the Association for Family Suité 1426, on Jan. 10. The course will run for six consecutive Wedâ€" nesday mornings from 10 to 11. "This process of growing up, of gainifng independence from one‘s family, trying one‘s wings in variâ€" ous fields, at one time thrills and at another discourages the young person as he develops from his early teens to early aduithood," exâ€" plains Mrs. Sora Barth Loeb, eduâ€" olescent in the War Effort." One whole session will be devoted to resources for adolescent guidance such as personal counseling, group activities, tests, inventories, and rating devices. Mrs. Walter Neisser, president of the association, says: "Adolesâ€" cents present a perennial and ever fascinating question mark. Every age and every place has recognized a‘ certain mutual awkwardness beâ€" tween old â€"and â€"young as these changelings grow into their adult ‘"The timeless teen age seen against the present social and ecoâ€" nomic background and in the light of these newer findings offers helpful new material toâ€"all of us who are responsible for guiding teep age people." Among the topics to be considerâ€" ed are "Signposts and Dangers as Growth and Development Takes Place," "Helping Boys and Girls to "Changing _ Attitudes _ Toward School and Family," and "The Adâ€" THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS Subscription rates: $1.50 per Resolutions of condolence, card There ‘are five grandchil be written on one leaders in gainâ€" of the perâ€" Late Jens E. Eriksen An OQutstanding Citizen Want Ads With the passing of Jens E. Erâ€" iksen, 2312 Indian Tree Dr., on Dec. 22, the community lost a man Art director for the Chicago Daily News, he was also operator of an advertising and art studio at 201 N. Wells, Chicago. â€" Interested in local affairs, he was director of Local Railroad Man ‘Taken by Death Regret for time wasted can beâ€" come a power for good in the time that remains. And the time that remains is time enough, if we will WANTED: Part time fair, Mr. Eriksen was knighted l’.lgm‘ubz outstanding achievements. He is survived by his wife, Maâ€" Agents‘ association, he belonged to the Blue lodge and the Commandâ€" ery of the Highland Park Masons. He was also a member of the Sadâ€" dle arid Sirloin and Traffic clubs of Among the newcomers in town are My. and Mrs. J. C. Scott, 1863 Lyman Court, with their two young daughters, who arrived from Detroit, Mich., shortly before Christmas. _ Mr. Scott is associated with the Fruehauf Trailer Comâ€" pany, which deals internationally in commercial trailers, including those for army and navy use. Lt. Comdr. and Mrs. John °C. Fowler, Jr., moved to 907 Ridgeâ€" wood Drive last month, with their 3â€"yearâ€"old daughter. They are formerly of Daytona, Fla. Lt. Com. Fowler, a veteran of two years in the Pacificâ€"area, is stationed at a Great Lakes hospital. â€" of ‘Washington, D.C., are now livâ€" ing, with their two small daughâ€" ters, at 1439 S. Sheridan. Mr. Burt is associated with a woodâ€"ply research company. ; his home at 212 Edgecliffe, last Friday at the age of 75. He was ~ He is survived by his wife, Clara, two sons, Edward L., Jr., of Chicago, and. W.â€" Albert of Glenâ€" eoe, as well as four grandchildren. Edwin L. Kemp, railroad man of 59 years‘ standing, passed awny at Mrs. Scott is much interested in Red Cross work. Stock Yard district. work by lady with college backâ€" ground and. few years‘ experiâ€" ence. Can take medical dictaâ€" tion. Excellent references. Adâ€" dress XX, c/o Highland Park The Wellington Burts, formerly CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM FIRST CHURCH OF Cl‘llli!, Delly & Dully WE. CANNOT DO ALL THE WORK ON THE 41 S. ST. JOHNS AVE., HICHLAND PARK H. P. 1820 HOURSâ€"Week Days §:30 Suturtays 1299 ain. to BPe " * ns t nh‘ . site j where the Bible and all the writings of Mary Baker Eddy may be read, borrowed.. or purchased Help Wanted Authorized Christisn Science Literature in Regiish, Braille. and Still Cooperating with Uncle Sam YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO USE THE # Cash & Carry _ â€" _ Charge & Carry SO WE DO THE BEST World‘s 44p Thursday, January 4, 1945 | "THE FRIENDLY PEOPLE® FOR SALE: Livingâ€"room circulaâ€" tor heater â€" coal, kitchen garâ€" WANTED TO BUY : Serviceman‘s family needs rug, table, chairs, North Shore Gas Ca. steady work and lots of overâ€" time. Inquire at North Shore Gas However, a few Gas Ranges and Automatic Water Heatâ€" turning from a date with a Navy man, "I don‘t know Safety of Gas and Appliâ€" ances has been proved again by Fire Cause Statistics of sociation.. Gas and Gas Apâ€" pliances rate 21st in causes train load of Jeeps going to war. _ It also mentioned a back ‘to civilian use. Friendly People. new war use of Nylon as an A coating seven thousandths of an inch thick is applied to the wires at the rate of 1,000 feet per minute. ‘There goes that pair of Nylon Stockings! Power Specialist® i Wanted to Buy L A B O RER S , SCIENTIST