Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 3 Aug 1939, p. 42

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* tries .will be represe1iecL the assemnbled delegates.-will be without, power to commit.their re- sp)ective -parliamnents .-or to bind their respective countries. It l not * a coûference for treaty: writing but rather a conference to lay abasis for common understandtflgs upon which treaties or agreements for the promotion o)f peace may possiblY be .formuated.', The Interparlia- mnentary. Union conference is es- seniafy a inerntional forum for a discussion of basic world prob. lems 'and possible solutions., Even though resolutions may be adopted, they have no binding efféect. Discuss Mauili Probleme in rnany respects the Interp arli- amentary Union .Conferenc~e is an- alogous to the Pan-Americali Con- ference. rhée art no0 treaties~. There are no government commit- ments. There are simply discus- sions11 of mutual problerns looking to * a coopérative solution. At no trne. could there be great- er need for good wil and under- standings between nations for peace. The present world situation makes the Oslo Conference one of the most important held in the 50 years of existence of the Interparliameinta1ry * Union. And it lB a happy fact thiat this partieclar conférenceé wiUl be held, in the quiet, peaceful country of Norway inbabited by a frugal, * happy people. 12 important Questions Twelve Important questions wil be discussed at this Conference: (1) World peace and neutrality, (2) Ethnie, colonial and refugée prob- lems, (3). Overpopulation, foodstuffs and -raw materials, (4) The calling of a >new Hague Con! erence, (5) Promotion of peace by arbitration, judicial settlement and internation- al law, (6) Outiawiflg b5ombing of Wiii spena millions jor, ees u not one cent for, aggresslon.. We seek no territorY. We covet nothin g but liberty and peace,. and our peo- pie are- preparing. to defend' our liberty and peace.. And we beli.eve that >caf be'.best advanced by re- fraining 'from ny àralliances and keepmng out of the territorial dis- putes o! other counitries. It is my conviction, and 1 be- lieve it is shared by the enitire délé- gation,,of. the United States to the Conférence, that: "Thé cernent. of societies lu liberty_ togéthér with mutual' kindliness not imposed by law.Y Those are thé words o! a dis- tinguished French statésman of many years ago. In thé words o! Mis own language. which will be thé language of the Conference: "Le c4iet es, o- ciets, c'est la lWbrte avec.. la bienêveillanlce mutuelle non imposee par la loi." "The Rivais" Is »Next Vehicle for Zurich Players Ini contrast to the emotional in- tensity o! "Love frorn a Strangér," which the. Lake Zurich players pre. sented last wek-end,' the next of- féring 4vll be threé performances of Sherldan's famous play, "Thé RivaIs," beginnwng F'riday evening, August 4. "The Rivais" is as freshly di- vrngas whén it was first pro- 'duced at Covent Garden in 1775 .and this week-end promises plenty of laughter and piquant fun. The action ofth play centersaou the famous character'of Mrs. Mala- . rDwhnse sincere but ludicrous staff Photo The teraporav iaduct which will'serve vehicular ahd ped estrin traffie on Oak atreet.during part. of the toork on the Wrnnetka grdeç separation, pro:iect was ýopened to traffie laat week. Photo above shows somne of the irst Cars passiiig over it. Rail E--ploye es join Plan for IlospitaI Care Employes ofThé Milwauke Road ini the Chicago district start- ed. enrolling this weék in Plan for Hospital Caré, non - profit hospit- alization insurance association spon- sored by seventy-five approved hospitals in the méetropolitan area, jnciuding the Evanston hospitai and St. Francis hospital in Evans- ton. The enroilment is open. to four thousand officers of the road, em- ployées o! thé general office, and memnbers o! thé operating force. Deta ils of thé enroliment were worked out by thé Milwaukee Boos- .ter club, an emnployees' organiza- tion, and. thé. road has arranged for payment of. membershlp tees by pay roll déduction for those who elect to join. Enrolléd employé es may name family members who are entitléd to recéive full. benefits un- der the plan. Plan benêt its include twénty-one days o! bospitalization a year in No ted Actress Has' To Learn to Be 'Ham' imagine a town ike Hlwowod were an actress liké Laura Hope Créws bas to learn to act like a barn! Miss Crews, for years one of the foremost character actreises on stage and scréen, has had to forget éverything she knéw about her craft. Whéré sincerity o! émotion was once ber chief stock in trade, she týoday has to "chew scenéry" as a washed-up opéra singer in B i n g Crosby's new Pararnount film, "The Star Makér." Extravagant gestures, «"mugging" and sweéping entrances and éxits- in short, ail thé hani tricks that flourished in the days of kérosène footlights - are ahl part of M i s s Créw's character. *MOWB1MY'S NEW ]FIELD

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