FisutN®c: _A ‘delusion enâ€" tirely surrounded by men in old clothes. One cannot help but havé‘a difâ€" ferent perspective on life and its problems from way up here. A NEW PERSPECTIVE ... . We can see the Moraine hotel; busy Central avenue; the water tower; the high school; the golfâ€" ers at Exmoor, Sunset, Bob O‘â€" Link, and Northmoor; the efficiâ€" entlyâ€"run hospital where a dear one recently had excellent, care by Dr. D. E. Rossiter and a staff of pretty, pleasant, capable nurses, High over familiar North Shore land marks we fly. It is good to fly with such skilled pilots at the controls . . . A NEW THRILL . . . It is a new thrill seeing our town from the air. "THE FRIENDLY PEOPLE® We scoot off the ground in the light shipâ€"and zoom into the air with the grace of a gull. We gain altitude slowly and fly the plain towards Highland Park. The day dawned gray but brightâ€" ening. The air is crisp, fresh, alâ€" INTO THE BRIGHT BLUE YONDER . .. I‘m in safe hands: _ Mr. Samâ€" mans, a licensed private pilot for years, has nearly 300 hours; Dick has 1600 air hours logged. The writer was thrilled when he was asked to accompany a former Highland Parker, Mr. John S. Sammons, a widely ‘known Christian Science lecturer, and Dick Higgins, popular North Shore bachelor and @xâ€"Navyâ€"fighterâ€"pilotâ€"instructor, on a flight over Chicago‘s beautiful Wiuren mrxans â€" "Sorry, but we can serve no additionâ€" alâ€" Gas heating until neat spring." @ TYPIST wanted i Highland Park office. Out in California Howard Hughes‘ new flying boat, the Hercules, is nearing compleâ€"* tion. ‘This plane is 220 feet long, has a wingâ€"spread of 860 feet, and it is said to have a capacity of 700 perâ€" sons. Out north of Libertyville, contractors are building a new 12 inch pipe line. Nex# spring, that line will carry cheaper Natura1 Gas to you. Unfortunately, delays ~ it steel delivery for the pipe will make it impossible to complete all the pipeline unâ€" til next spring. ®@ Orchids to Ford Motor Company, which has installâ€" ed 700 free kits enabling war victims to drive by war victims to drive by means of a single lever for elutch and. brake. "WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT?" TWO THOUSAND FEET OVER HIGHLAND PARK, ILLâ€" lt’:‘.'b-uflfulm'uâ€"ov-'hnm'n-,flyw-ih ve it! W HITT N. SCHUL T Z Let‘s Take a Look High Over Highland Park! (Bpecial to The Highland Park Press) By Fresh Poultry â€" Meats â€" Fish Vegetables â€" Monarch Finer Foods more conclusive proof of the evils of drink than the horrible case of "Chicago‘s baby murderer" who was "boozed up" when he commitâ€" ted the nation‘s worst crime? Giangiorgi Groc. & Mkt. Thank you, Rotarians, for joyable ln::bm meeting. n C PARTING THOUGHT . .. It is good being among these Highland Park civic, business, and educational leaders. And it was stimulating to hear Mr. Sandwick‘s provocative lecture. We saw many men we know: Dorsey Husenetter, Frank 8. Wichâ€" man, Drs, D. E. Rossiter and G. Q. Grady, Rex Andrews, Harry Earâ€" hart, Lyle Gourley, Rotaryâ€"Viceâ€" President William Copeland, Elm Place‘s new principal, Dr. Casper As a guest of Mr. Richard L. Sandwick, the writer recently atâ€" sandoq t_!_u regular Monday meetâ€" ing of Highland Park‘s excellent Rotary Club. Dahle. THANK YOU, ROTARIANS . .. It‘s good indeed to fly with a friend, a youhg man who has such fine control of an airplane; a skilled pilot who is as at home in a plane as you, Highland Parkers, are at home in your living room. This is a wonderful day! What beautiful country we live in‘ What a marvelous job Nature has done in planning and laying out the breathâ€"taking countryside! Flying is a real sport and, frankly, your writer has been bitâ€" ten by the "flying bug." Happy landings! "Roger. Wilco. And out!" FLYING WITH A FRIEND ... We rendezvous with the clouds over Wilmette, then fly up the beautiful shore, . seeing the sky view of landmarks we‘ve passed time and again in a car. Soon â€"we are over Highland Park. We loop.~ WE dive. : We are cauâ€" tious, We have lots of fun . . . Dick and I are flying in an open, twoâ€"place, Waco biplane. This is real sport. . Atomic Age sport.‘ IN AN OPEN PLANE . .. The next flight Dick and I take; Mr. Sammons is off on another hop., ‘Fenelif But the hest close to Him . . Suddenly the plane turns, banks, heads towards Sky Harbor. We land. Already we feel the uneasiâ€" ness of humanity around us. No longer is there that carefreeness. This is man made reality. This is the life man has chosen. You see the â€" neatlyâ€"laidâ€"out farms â€" not the unpainted farmâ€" house. You see the bright, green Highland Park lawns â€" not the dandelions. You see the blue lake â€"not its rocky bottom. You feel that this is real living for you are farâ€" far away from the little problems that vex mankind... Two thousand feet in the air you get the BIG picture; you don‘t see the little, unimportant _ things that bother man. Up in the bright blue yonder you feel even closer to the Man who keeps the world going. You feel you are at the outskirts, the suburbs, of His heavenly kingâ€" dom. You feel He is near enough to talk to you. What, Dear Reader, could be ou have a grand organization! QUALITY ALWAYS has chosen. . life is up On August 23 Herb Holt‘s orâ€" chestra, consisting of Andy Anâ€" drews, Howard Caro, Dick Medâ€" daugh, Jerry Peterson and Herb Holt, will leave for New York City where they will again compete in a contest, this time with four bands from New . Orleans, Hollywood, New York and Chicage, respectiveâ€" ly. Thceonuniswtonbyl national magazine. The Misses Barbara Holley Ives, Jennifer Turner and Barbaâ€" ra Norman will act as hostesses at the buffet supper following the tourney, and will be costumed in styles of the last century. The group is to be sponsored by Eddie Condon, of the Wurlitzer school of music, and following the contest they will play for one week at a New York night club under the name of Herb Holt‘s Orchesâ€" tra of Wurlitzer School of Music, Tennis Tourney to Be Held at Exmoor Club Many North Shore clubs, includâ€" ing Onwentsia, Saddle & Cycle, Indian Hill, Skokie and Long Meaâ€" dows, will enter mixed doubles teams in the North Shore Invitaâ€" tional Tennis tourney to be held at Exmoor Country club on Sunday, Aug. 18, from 2 to 6 p.m. This event is one of a series planned by Exmoor in honor of its semiâ€"cenâ€" tennial year. Contestants from Exmoor will be Mrs. Robert Bennett Jr., Richâ€" ard L. Williams Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Hixon, Miss Nancy Allâ€" ing and her father, Mr. Carl Allâ€" Why the need is so desperate. The battles that brought ols | us victory scourged most of the countries that fought as our Urge your church, ciuh, or organization allies. The worst drought in fifty years followed the war. Crops eweaiicieaitel failed throughout Europe and Asia. 500,000,000 men, women, n and children are bungry and starving. ues g#¢ omrwirrz, halfway across the world, two | WornewHerz, halfway across the world, two little children cry bitterly from hunger. Children cannot understand the why of hungerâ€"they know only the gnawing pain, the piteous weakâ€" ness. A heartbroken mother listens helplessly. Americans will not be complacent in a starving world . . . that you will share the abundance that is yours. You are pledged to " Share a Meal Every Day," to help supply starving people with fat and wheat products. But the need for all foods is so desperate that you‘re asked to do more .. . to give money to buy food, or give food in tin cans, and to give genes. Where the food you give will go. Contributions of canned foods ‘will be distributed free in warâ€"devastated countries on the basis of greatest need. Why food must be in tin cans. Food in tin cans can be Where little ohildr=" Bigger and Better s Orchestra Out THE â€"PRESS St. Therese Hospital, Waukegan, to Care For Polio Patients launched in Chicago in 1833, while the first iron foundry was estabâ€" lished there four years later. Children‘s Plays to be Presented This Winter At Eim Place School Dwarfs, The Secret Garden ‘ and Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp will be the three children‘s plays to be presented at Elm Place audiâ€" torium on Oct. 26, Nov. 22 and Feb. 1, respectively, by the Clare Tree Major Children‘s theatre of New York. or information may call Hightand . Announcement has been made by Joseph P. Daly, chairman of the Lake county chapter of infantile paralysis foundation, that St. Theâ€" rese hospital, Waukegan, will hanâ€" dle all Lake county cases of polio which cannot be accommodated at the Evanston hospital. A special ward has been set up for the exclusive purpose of caring for polio patients, with iron lung ready for use, and a part of the staff trained in the Kenny treatâ€" ment. Almost any form, design, or colâ€" or of plastics can be furnished by numerous processors in the Chiâ€" cago and Northern Illinois area. Evanston hospital authorities reâ€" port that the hospital will continue to care for Lake county patients if facilities are available. Park 4076 or 2161 Those wishing to obtain tickets on behaif of UNRRA 'l'i.-lb.dh-h Bring Home the Bacon Each member donated a prize in keeping with his particular line of table lamps and electrical appliâ€" ances to cases of fresh egs and five gallon cans of motor oil Practiâ€" cally everyone came home with a prize, but first choice went to H. W. Goodale for a low net of 63 with a 15 handicap. each, and C. F. Hansen was third with 68: > The major prize, a new set of iron clubs donated by Jeffy Glynn, elub professional, for blind bogey, was brought home by L Remen with an 89. Val Betterman was second and J. McLin third. The old slogan "bringing home the bacon" became an actuality when more than 200 members of M. J. Long and J. A. Nelson tied for second with a low net of 67 prizes in the first annual Members Day Golf tournament, Sunday, 810 EVERETT 123 WILDWOOD ROADâ€"OFFICE LAKE FOREST K. J. PALEY HENRY A. WALLACE, National Cheirman â€"‘ Clipping â€" Stripping â€" Bathing Large Outside Runs LSs LAKE FOREST 2760 Thursday, August 15, 1946 M A LE HELP Highland Park 4444 W A NTE D