Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 14 Aug 1947, p. 3

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at the angry face. "Go on! Get home, I tell. youâ€" scoot!" Rowdy gouldn‘t have scooted, obediently toward home. He still sidewaih, malthing He wiches ap He picked up a pebble. No doubt be had no in~ tention.of doing rffore than scaring t:tddq.ht&t““fi. pavement and rebounded, striking Rowdy on the head. Rowdy gave a sharp yelipâ€"more in surprise than pain. His head didn‘t hurt so much, but the agony "Fool dog! You know better ‘n to follow me to work. Want to get your back broken by a car? Now get home! Get on out of heref Home, I tell youâ€"home!" Rowdy‘s head had lifted in joyâ€" ful anticipation at the . of grin faded and he stared that morning. An important deal had fallen through. His secretary had phoned that she had a touch of the flu, He‘d skipped breakfast, and now he was hungry. A pile of mail~lay unopened on his desk. Shutting the door on the whole picture he set out to get a cup of coffee. He almost fell over Rowdy He was impellied by an insatiable urge to do a thing he know very well to be taboo. It was forbidden for him to follow the Boss to work, but the longing for the beloved be repressed. He set off at a lying in front of the door. All the petty grievances of the morning gathered and culminated in a burst of rageâ€"concentrating Old Rowdy wasn‘t feeling any too well these days. The pain in his back legs was getting worse, and he was always wanting to sleep in the sun. Even the black cat across the street presented no temptation. Time was when Rowdy would have scared her out of eight of her nine lives, chasing her up a tree to sit there yowling and glaring down at him. Today she strolled, scornful and unmolested in plain sight of her enemy, Rowdy just ignored her cattish demeanor. He didn‘t even care. In his doggish mind there sprung a sudden impulse. A desire to see the Bossâ€"to savor the feel of his seratching behind the ears and the low rumble of his voice: "Good of boyâ€"good old fellow . . . ." Rowdy stretched his stiff muscles. the poor gal to perdition when she was first presented to the public. Now, 25 years later, posterity is again subjecting her to a ruthless DEEP RIVER Proposed epitaph: Rest In Thursday, August 44, 1947 101 N. St. Johns Ave. Phone Highlend Pork 710 Deept and Shallows And so remember, when your feet Are killing you, and prickly heat Is menacing your bright carcer, And you are sure your end is near; And you crab, as anyone would do, lt'smt.-oqdh-,m. dropped forward on the limp front paws, and Rowdy fell into a long, But moisture is on the list Of things they need, to just sub sist. Each dry hot day, in bosky dell, Rings some mosquito funeral knell, No drop of dew on flower or thistle ‘Available to wet its whistle. But males (they‘re not the nibâ€" bling sort), And fertile eggs (as well they ort) TUNES WITH A § -n.nqnczll;g; "Love Thy Neighbor." Of stimulating mind,. ideals true; And then one day I happenedâ€" just by chanceâ€" j To search your shiningâ€"eyes, and there I found. And quite by chanceâ€"that lucky, With never having had a bite. THAT LUCKY LOOK I‘d known you all these years, conâ€" Most pleasantly rewarding to the The sun, the moon, the stars, Our "IT‘was then I knew the truth; the â€" world turned tound, And bells began to chime, till then What treasure I had missed until Great damage to mosquitoes, too. As you abuse the weather man, And weakly mop your drippi The shade in his yard looked good;.the sunlight looked even bet ter, Rowdy limped over to a sunny spot. The pain in his hind legs was down in the warm sunlight. _ Now the ache began to subside. over his eyes, blocking the vision. No matter, he was tired, anyway. there were tears in the sad brown in his faithful heart was intolerâ€" "The Two Mrs.â€"Carroll" Added:i Latest Mews and Thurs., Fri., Sat. Aug 14, 15, 16 Framk Sinatra, Kathryn Gray> August 17, 18, 19, 20 Humphrey Bogart, Ther., Fri. Sat. Aug. 21. 2%, 23 Photographed in Natural Color Added: Cartoon and Late Nows ADDED: Selected Shorts and Alcyon Presently all pain, fatigue and THE POOR MOSQUITO Telephone H. P. 2400 (Clip for reference) “';‘hlnflronh.::: lldgo.flnfiuhhmudm burning for two hours. But they saved the two beautiful homes in mother wore a mauve crepe and petite pink roses. Mr. Stockdale of Estherville, Iowa and Mr. George Wallis, brother of the bride, as sisted in seating guests, â€" among whom were the bride‘s grandâ€" Rain In California Writes Mrs. O. L. Oleson There has been a rain in Caliâ€" fornia, and Mrs. O. L. Olesen, veteran Highland Parker, admits it. But she has an alibiâ€"or a par tial one, at least. She writes: "We are having unusual rain hte_h(_hy.'â€"lld are puzzled as Florala, Alabama, and the groom‘s grandfather. Mr. Warrgn Taylor of Orlando, Florida. The house was decorated with lavender and yellow gladioli with accents of purâ€" ple and white asters for the reâ€" ception immediately following the to whether or not this is due to menting dry ice being thrown into a cloud over the forest fires yesterday (August 7). The Tersent sthooting 24 aie pouin k an asset to society," place by a cirelet of pearl flowers. She carried a Colonial bouquet of white sybidium orchids and stephâ€" Onotis. Miss Elizabeth Wallis, her sister and maid of honor accented her pale yellow gown with a show~ er bouquet d’urplom-t wore a coronet of purple asters her hair. The groom was attended by his brother Mr. Robert Lawry McManus as best man. mer floral print orpamented by a white gardenia corsage and garâ€" denias in her hair. The . bride‘s the guest of her sisterâ€"inâ€"law, Mrs. Olesen, for the past few weeks. background, provided the garden setting for the home wedding of Miss Winifred Wallis of Highland Park â€"and â€"~Mr,â€" Frank Donald Mc~ Manus of Lake Forest last Wedâ€" nesday. The bride was given away by her father, Mr. Eari Wallis at !'quhumnc.u-b . Sherwin, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Highland Park read the marriage vows. The bride wore a cream satin Victorian wedding gown with a which we thought was cloudsâ€" Winifred Wallis Becomes An August Bride In Beautiful Garden Setting ~ "*The capacity to learn does not CGLENCOE TMEATRE 630 Vernen Ave. Highland Park 606 Thur., Fri, Sat. Aug. 21, 22, Ses of Grass" / "THE SEA HAWK" The groom‘s mother wore a sumâ€" ‘The Two Mrs. Carrolls" Aug. 17, 18, 18, 20 Aug. 14, 15, 16 George Tobias # W G, N Scripteasers T H E Talke to for sioner. "Strikeout Story" is Felâ€" ler‘s own account of his rise to national baseball fame. The book is full of anecdotes about Bob‘s dreams of becoming a bigâ€"league pitcher, his early training, his first big game, his career in the Navy and his recordâ€"breaking feats since the war. Feller‘s career has not been without hard breaks, howâ€" ever, and it is the way Bob over came them, as much as anything else, that makes his book fascinatâ€" ing reading. his biography of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, "‘:':‘u- Landis PRESS one of the noblest men in Ameriâ€" can" historyâ€"a man who escaped from slavery to become one of the great leaders of his centuryâ€"a friend of Lincoln, Gladstone, Robâ€" ert Peel, John Brown, Robert Inâ€" gersoll, William Lioyd Garrison and other great statesmen of his generation. Winner of the Julian Messner award for the best book combatting intolerance in Amerâ€" ica, ‘"There Was Once a Slave" tells with feeling and simplicity the thrilling story of a man of action and imagination who took the world for his stage in the long battle for freedom for his race. Baseball fans who are also biog~ raphy readers will be glad to know that the Library has two outstandâ€" ing new books about two equally outstanding baseball personalities â€"Bob Feller, pitcher for the Cleveland Indians, and Judge Lanâ€" dis, baseball‘s longâ€"time commisâ€" tion as top manâ€"and lost; Ty Cobb and Tris Speaker, who were arbitrarily ousted from their jobs in the prelude to the commissionâ€" Graham‘s book entitled ‘"There heroic story of Frederick Douglas, Also on the shelves among the other new biographies is "The Big Yankee", Michae] Blankfort‘s life of Evans F. Carlson, organized of the famous Marine Raider Battalâ€" ion and one of the most impressive figures to emerge from World War and through conferences with the general‘s family, close friends and erican people from the very beâ€" ginning, and in his collective biogâ€" Biography is one of the most interesting forms of literature ac cording to many people, and for those of you who enjoy this type of reading the Highland Park Library has several fine new books. many others form the "lineâ€"up" of stationed in many of the countries ollmn.AdnlndMAQ‘- ica. It was while in Nicaragua ‘and various parts of Asia that he got his knowledge of guerillia warfare â€"a knowledge that he later put to good use when he led his Raiders into the first American land enâ€" counter with Jap forces. The au~ thor of the book was in the Marine Several Fine i lbnhhzr The Highland Park Lwary no baseball Jover will want to miss. home at an early age and joined PSe mel ~~â€"~Olson Printing Company J. G. Taylor Spink, in writing The quest for freedom has been GFor Good Printingâ€" c of the Amâ€" judge‘s posiâ€" PHONE â€" Highland Park of human rights. With m,uv.u--kqâ€"iiw.hwh- times {â€"gedom means different|ing. about these men, Madison things to those who work for it:| shows how their struggles to carry to ‘William Lioyd Garrison, John | out their beliefs have made Amerâ€" Brown and Wendell Phillips it was | ica a finer country than it other the emancipation of the Negro; to | wise would have been. for their ideal of freedom, and in doing so, expanded the whole field of human rights. With changing times {â€"sedom means different LCROSSW ORD * * _»â€"By A. C. CGordon | Northshore GardenofMemories A Surprise Awaits You if You‘ Have Not Visited _ THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN CEMETERY 516 LAUREL AVENUE GREEN BAY. ROAD & 18TH ST. PHONE MAJ. 1067 1â€"â€"Aninial known as "Ship of the Desert" $â€"â€"Aubmal which is _ ; | n i ied New Understanding of The Bible The CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 43 North Sheridan Road 55 7 A new understanding of The Bible gained through the study of Christian Science is bringing release from disease and other disâ€" tresses to many thousands. You may investigate Christian Science at no cost to yourself. The BIBLE, the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE textâ€" healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at OPEN DAILY ++ YOU ARE WELCOME Something About Animals VERY REASONABLE i1 32â€"Hach (abbrev ) 7â€"Class of invertebrate 33â€"Advance _ _ _ animals (ptural) 41â€"Head covering 46â€"To he borne 43â€"To cause to adhere 49â€"One who loves to 1â€"Small species of wolf Answers on page 5 Cages (abbrev.) Thoreau it was the absence of coercion; while to Eugene V. Debs 1$â€"Considered by many «s the most .. 40â€"Inspired with reverent dread 42â€"Neutical for toward °_ a kind of ape _ 33â€"Advance 34â€"Beast of burden 38â€"A flet space 11â€"Homed animal 12â€"Man‘s name 18â€"A color 19â€"Animal related to _ > No. 11 down _ Britannica (abbrev.) Page 3

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