Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 12 Jan 1950, p. 2

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Communications intended for publication must be written on one side of the paper only, and be signed with the name and address of the writer.) Subscription rates: $1.50 per year; 5 cents per single copy. $3.00 per. year outside of Jake. County, llinois. 1 1 Issaed Thursday of each week by the Highland Park Press, 516 at Highland Park, Illinois. THE HIGHLANDâ€"PARK PRESS .. Entered as second class matter March 1, 1911, at the Post Office + The weekly workshops: of the North Shore Creaitve Writers for the 1920 season are now underâ€" NI, Telephone:. Highland ~Park Novels, Poems, Short Stories Underway At Writers‘ Club > Laurel avenue, â€"Highland Park, â€"~ _ But if they want to bedeaders, they‘d better train nowâ€"not just so H.P.H.S. can win basketball games but so‘they can win at this rugged game of life. It still is . . _â€"and it‘s about time certain youngâ€" sters realize that if they‘re planning to be bums, they‘re doing fine dissipating. | > â€" â€" F3 "All this talk of the welfare state remindsâ€"me of the army.. The Army is typical of the welfare state. You don‘t make much money ; you eat three meals a dayâ€"not necessarily good, but wholesome. You have someone doing your thinking for you and telling you WELFARE STATE ... . es e apsins oo ue$d _ Chatting with a fellowâ€"World War H w last week he said: . % $ IT‘S COLD THERE .. .> Last week it was 40@‘&3 below zero â€"‘in Hell, Norwavy‘! nometgenets : is R.~B. Olson, Editor. | 345 begn in bed for months and doctors have been oing their best to comfort him.â€" C Last week an AP newsman asked O‘Leary about his trouble. § : O‘Leary smiled and said: f $ "They‘l stop soon." _ . _ / 4 Title of "Optimist of the Year", in our opinion, goes to that patient young man, Jack O‘Leary, of Los: Angeles who has been hiccupping continuously for the past 18 months. _ ; f* â€" (At last count he‘s hiccupped 157,680 times.) ~ Now there‘s only 69 more days left . . . . and then each Amprican citizen will have paid his federal taxes days out of each year to pay his taxes. â€" _ _It‘s costly livingâ€"in_qur great nation . . . but I surely think it‘s worth it! ~ S $ A REAL OPTIMIST .; .. 4s | 20’“0 «sreciar vo usls moncanp for the Well, 12 days have slipped by in the new year. . .. Yes, that‘s correct, each American now warks 81 ! By â€" WHITTâ€" NORTHMORE SCHULTZ . way at the Highland Park YWCA. The group willâ€"meet every Monâ€" day from 1 until 3, through May { 8, for informal and personalized / instruction under the direction of / Marjorie Peters, literary fnledt scout_for Farrar, Strauss, New York ;publishers.‘, . ~ * There are. eight novels now . underway in the group, as well as <‘a number of short stories and poetns. â€" Mrs. William D. Milard, Jr., ~of _ Broadview â€" avenue, â€" is ; among the Highland Park women | whose work is being submitted ‘ for criticism. CE seetetary, at Highland Park 2006. may be secured from Mrs. James resumed this season, Jane Eklund, the author of "The Only Gift", a "first novel" about a North Shore family, motuy published, . was the guwest Mg at the Decemâ€" ber luncheon." f * ! cialists in various fields, will be The monthly luncheons, / with prominent guest speakers, speâ€" Further informat#®i#W»>@boutthe â€" Mrs_ TRan has attained fame a~ a talented speaker and appeared | on radio programs such as Town Heefing/of the Air. She is aL%o‘ noted asâ€"az contributor to the Christian Science Monitor, the Yale Review, Survey, The Nation, Current History, Survey Graphic and the New Republic. * Gilmore G. Kahnweiler, ‘Chairâ€" man of the Forum, stated “[irk- ets for thé‘l§30~5l series have ’lotod. " . . . Like many ‘othex, "Rn-ian exiles, who have early made America their country and have become absorbed ’n their adopted land‘s culture and civic life, Mrs. Dean is neither viruâ€" lently antiâ€"Soviet nor a fellowâ€" traveler . . . It i;"imposlible to find a better com;finruide (than her book) to the intricacies of the" Soviet system and policies." Phone your BUICK dealerfer a LOTS OF L1UGGAGE SPACE, plas a highâ€"foshion rearâ€"end treatment, graces hmwhfi-fihltnuhumu Mhh““d“-&“‘lâ€"h.‘m* sia: Menace or Promise" (1947), the Saturday Review of Viterature 8:15 , P.M. Wednesday,~ January 18, at North Shore Congregation Israel" in Glencoe. ~*Mrs. Dean is Research Director for the Foreign Policy Associaâ€" tion. Although she has written on many European countries, she writes and speaks more on Russia than anyother one country. She Russia , coming to ‘the United States at the time of the Russian Revolution. ul spent ber first 14 years of life in In Glencoe Temple Warld" will be: the subject of Vera Micheles Dean‘s lecture beâ€" typical Buick taper is now found in all Buick fenders. â€" No. we just couldn‘t hold back" the whole big Buick line for 1950. :fh:fn: too goodâ€"lookingâ€"too much fun _ to driveâ€"too jamâ€"packed with steppedâ€"up, > higherâ€"compression, readyâ€"toâ€"ramble powerâ€"to be kept under caver. = So maybc'you'vc already seen some 1950 Buicks on the highway. _ 2 Maybe you‘ve noticed the extra "git up‘ and travel" they haveâ€"glimpsed the wide," models)â€"noted, approvingly, that the "aIP cadIcE Fon FIFTY H.P. 4800 ~ aybe you‘ve even heard some things... Kleeburg Buick, Inc. ing on her book, "Rusâ€" THE â€"PRESS 304 Green Ray Road DANGEROUS pewine whew | worgieq lndiv’lual, partnerships, corporations BARACANI OFFICE SERVICE . n _ k. That Dynaflow Drive, for instanceâ€" standard on RoapmastEr models, opâ€" tionat on allg(hersâ€"‘nowcom $# _ 20% less than on 1949 models. % t . 3 y Abévé all, maybe you‘ve heard of exciting néws on price... ; That there are more than a dozenâ€"andâ€"aâ€" half models to choose from. That there are three power plants in the Buick line â€"all of higher compression, all stepped up in power. That all models are big and roomy inside â€"some. rear seats are better than a foot wider than before!â€"yet in every instance, shorter overâ€"all, so easier to handle, park INCOME TAX SERVICE Open Evenings â€" 7:00 to 9:00 PHONE: H. P. 967 5 rvinstance â€"â€" _ That in the full lineâ€"SpEciaL, Super and tie cvzry ;':m"“k' ‘ROADMASTER seriesâ€"there is a Buick to mer to handle, park: fit practically every budget above the very lowest! i eas p . P rroreq sbove is the 1950 SuPER 4â€"door you‘ve heard of ‘ Sedan,oneofthcn:xjmckbodylypel E... C . _ for 1950. At your Buick dealer‘s are more e, for instanceâ€" © 3¢tual models, the s;pryon sTErR models, Opâ€" _ Hadn‘t you better see himâ€"right nowâ€" | othersâ€"now costs andsecifyon,too,doh‘tfi_ndBui:k“w in on 1949 models. _ choice for 1987 wnaTevck OOR PRCERNEE _ , _ _ ~â€"" 0 un DANGEROUS Popr Road ueHTs Amo mo much SPEED rom wmout Omnarne Highwood, 1II. 110 S. First Street fone in HENRY 1. TAVIOR;â€"Asc Network, every MHoad CE #Standard on ROADM 5o eptomi at exte m%â€"mu* Thursday, Jan. 12, | almost all been sold. Anyone wishâ€" ing to reserve tickets should write. to the Forum, c/o North Shore Congregation Israel, Glencoe, imâ€" mediately. Applications will be BUY SAVINGS BONDS . _ NOW! .The Forum is a joint project of the Sisterhood and Men‘s=Club of the Congregation. c Telegraph Delivery ‘Service North Shore Florist FOR EVERY OCCASION Landscape Service 290 Greenwood Avenue Glencée, Illinois FL OWE RS JOS. KOLBECK\ . â€"â€" Phone Glencoe 6 0 9

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