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North Shore News-Letter (1907), 20 Mar 1909, p. 4

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mm as: m North WWW W'EDGBWATBRâ€"Edcflmtcr Lodge. Ru. 901.1.F.A.M..neoun Inn-and Winthrop avgnuo, first and Walnu- 1‘me .LF.A.M ' “fia’x’éfihifi'fi ind Lune u "cane. second and fourth Thursdays. nAVENSWOODâ€"Ranuwood Lodge. No. A. 31.. noon like: and 117. A. F. I; flaming: "elm. «can dudhnrthlonâ€" baumm 0F ST. AUGUSTINE Holy EucharistLâ€"kso a. m. Morning Prayerâ€"10:30. Sunday Schoolâ€"12 noon. Evening Payer-#7:”. FIRST METHODIST EPISUOPL'. CHURCH. ‘ Lake‘and Wilmette Ava. Pastorâ€"W. C. Cleworth. ' Morning Services-40:80. Suns-y Schoolâ€"11:45 a. m. Vespersâ€"Jim p. m. ‘ worth Leagueâ€"6:10 p. In. , edneaday Payersâ€"8:00 p. In. - Aid Society-J‘Sru Thur-61y ot the month- Church Boardâ€"First Tuesday of ‘the Month w F. M. s.â€"§econd Thursday of tho HIGHLAND PARKâ€"A. 0. w No. 676, AHF. a A. LL. mt third Thursdul. EVANs'roxl-Enns Lodge, No. 524. A. F. a A. )1.. meet: first and third nun. dun , , mm gangâ€"11m mm, No. as. , .‘ 1.1-4. .._A Iu-a ST. JOSEPH’S CHURCH. Sundayâ€"6:80 a. m., 8:00 I. m.. 10:80 a. In. Vespersâ€"2:80 p. m. Murmanskâ€"3:00 to 4:00 p. m. Duly lamâ€"8:00 a. m. - CHRISTIAN SCIENCE. Readerâ€"H. A. Hall. Sunday Servicesâ€"10:46 L. m. Sunday Schoolâ€"12:00 noon. Wednesday Eveningâ€"8:009. m. Sermon~lOz39 I. 1!). Sunday School-42:00 noon. Young People’s Meetingâ€"0:80. Evening Serviceâ€"7:30. Wednesday Prayersâ€"8:09:11). Ladles' Societyâ€"0n aeoon FridnYa. minionsâ€"On fourth Friday; evening. 1:“ p. In. , Christian. Endeavorâ€"4:45 p. m. Sund-y Schoolâ€"10:00 t. m. Wednesday-rays: ma. 8:00}. In. [fiddlyâ€"Bible Study and Choir. 81% p. m. FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL. Puto’râ€"Rcv. B. R. Schnlm. Sunday Servicesâ€"10:45 A. In. 7:80 p. m. , Week DI (GomPâ€"Wodneadax 7:80 p. m.: nxbb. my. 1:“. KENlLWORTH UNION CHURCH. hatchâ€"Chas P. Horswoll. Servicevâ€"ll 00 a. m. The Womp' g gunman-y Societyâ€"Wod- rms'r CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. Pastor~Vlctor J. King. Preachingâ€"11:00 x. m. Sunday knockâ€"3:30 p. 11:. Young People's Medinaâ€"4:00 p. In. Sermonâ€"8: 00p Tuesday Servicesâ€"8: 00p. Friday Bible Chasâ€"8: 00 pm. SACRED HEART PARISHâ€"LAKESIDE. Pastorâ€"F. J. Earth. High Massâ€"10:00 1. m. Sunday School to a. m. (cl Judy and Ang.) Earning Service and Se 11:00 I. m. (Services in Chapel. Linden Ind Oak.) Communion on all How Dayâ€"7: 30 CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. Sheridan Road and Humboldt Ava. Rector: Homer Worthin Communion 7.- 45 n. m , 13¢ Sand:{ in month. Sunday School non. m. (cl uy-nd Aux) longing Wall“! 35 _ _ _n: 00 3.31: day m ménth. u: out! 13.1. Evening Prayu “d Sermon, S: on p.111 Sunday School. 9:“ I.lll Pastorâ€"B. S Winchester The Graded Bible Schoolâ€"9: 45 I. m. adorning Sermonâ€"11: 00 a. In. - ‘1‘th HithScppol Grades and Hen’ I Bible THE CHURCH OF ST. ELIZABETH. “pl-com.) , luv. Luther Pumice. Priest in charge. Holy Communionn 1:3oa. m. Snood Celebration Ind Sermon an: Sunday in month. I: no a. In. Morning Prayer and Suntan. except first Snu- dnv 1n manth. Hanna n14 GERMAN LUTHERAN cmmcrt Pastorâ€"Rev. C. Hints. Sunday Serviceâ€"10:00 n. 11:. Wednesday Evening Meetingâ€"1:30. - Cliislezzo 35. in; Vaporsâ€"5:00 p. In. mns'r SCANDINAVIAN ENGLISH CHURCH. Sunday Serviceâ€"10:“ ; n. Sunday Schoolâ€"13:00 noon. Wedneyadny Eveningâ€"8 .00 p.111. mum ms. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. Plumâ€"Rev. M. W. Div-ling. D. D Sunday Schoolâ€"924K . In. Sermonâ€"11: 00 a. m. * Young People 3 Clotâ€"6: 80p. Payer Meetingâ€"Won“, 8: '00 p m Paterâ€"m. Leroy Dakin. huntâ€"Rev C. P. Goodm. Sunday Serviceâ€"~Mom1u3. 10:80. Sunday Schoolâ€"12:09 noon. Weekly Prayer Hauntâ€"Wednooday. - 8:00 p. m. , ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH. I’mâ€"Rev ’lu. O'Neill, D. D, Sundayâ€"fint 11333.1 A. m. sunnyâ€"Second In“, 10 n. m. ' CHRISTIAN SCIENCE. Pastorâ€"A. Burch. Sunday Servicesâ€"15:00 a. 7: 80 p n. Womn'a Societyâ€"First Thursday in Sundt? Serviceaâ€"Mornlng. 10:“; even Int. 1: 45. 8. Y.P . PL} Young Mo'sâ€"4:00 9.11:. Sum] Schoolâ€"12:00 noon. Wuhan! Prue: Katinaâ€"7: 45. Rumorâ€"G. F‘. Courier. SundnLSugvigene-yommc. 11:00 3. 131.: Reach-Rev. P. C. Woloott. D. D. . Holy puchnfigtâ€"{Izgo :: n.._ Ln! 6!: leg: ,,AL "junk and first §undnyvv l_n monih 11 I. In. nuns and many-11 I. m. Bunionsâ€"69. . Sammy Schoolâ€"9: I! s. m. NorthShorc Wheaten. indict: CHRIST CHURCHâ€"EpiscoPAL. WISCOPAL CHURCH (Trinity). PRESBYTERIAN CHURCI’I EVANGKUCAL (Manson) GERMAN LUTHERAN. Lake Ave. and 11th. No. This may be a 206d time to re- mind the club that it owes some- thing to young Highland Park. And upon the club with its new adhesion rests the duty to guide and guard official posts against 'unfit occupants. As we look at gthg offices to be filled let us not turn merely to the list of candi- dates. Let the citizens look around and select men whom they shall honor with their confidence and who can end will serve the public, and let this club help to direct and ‘select. ' What Highland Park now need -indeed what every North Shdre ‘constituency needâ€"-is a governing body ofmen who >poss§es intel- ligence, ability, and’ above allâ€" moral fOrce and character. This ought to impresE the voters with 51 new sense of .the kind of men to beelected for office. :The% Council should notbe allowed to‘ 'drift into a mere club for petty politicians who ‘wish to make it a' step to personal ends and future advancements. ‘ It has come into this inheri- tance at a time of much action ‘and expectancy. Improvements are in the air. New duties and new responsibilities are thrust up- on us. The park way is but one of several great advances that are. called for. e - _ -It was probably not in the minds of its leaders to limit its actions to merely social functions of fellow- ship, but in accepting the terms of union with the Citizen 5 Associaâ€" tibn it is now definitely committed to aggresive work for the material and moral advancement of the city. The Fellowship Club of High- land=Park has now, by its own act, chlargcd it§ .spherc and - increased it.s"responsibility. REINFORCED MEN'S CLUB. Mr. John Finne‘y is not to have a Walk over without a contest. Mr. Grant announces hisihtention to run for that office. ' Fred Dcnmén contests. the issue with. Byroh Stevens fin the first ward. W. E. Brand proposes t6 run in the second ward. ~ George Huttcr enters the list for the fourth ward. ' Thingsr'are Waking up to'a lively time’in the city affairs. In'addi- tion to the candidates announced- in last weeks paper other moves have developed. ‘ Emma's Normâ€"The editor ‘ leaves to-day for a needed change. ‘He goes «to Iowa where he will preach on Sunday. and thence to Omaha where he is announced to give his lecture on ”A Prophetof the Nineteenth Century-"p The occassi‘on for the lecture is to share in the opening of the splendid new building of the Omaha Young Women 5 Christian Association. 1! this notioc'il marked you a: invited to two to thin paper. ‘ Chock. weaved hr subscriptions are alone: credited. and 9M date cm ”unprinted mcwmflzunrm Subscriptiofi 3!.50 l Yétr 5c per Copy W Every Sunday a HW Park. Ill. Win. BURGESS. Managing Editor FREDERICK C. D. LANG-Mun Enema "”. the Put-Of“, Highlul Pu), Illiuil 45 um! cam sum” OTH SHOE S- LETTE SATURDAY, MARCH '20, HIGHLAND 'PARK ELECTION. TBLBPflONB No. 92 moire potential to cam what he; does not collect. The day‘that we ,can go back to’ the simplicity ana equality of; money, as a medium of exchangé only; we shall not ignoi’e its value: as an agent of commerce. but We shall. strip it of its enslaving pow-i er, audit 'will ghen be no longer". worth a rnan's while 'to spend hid lifefin collecting what he does not; cam. for' it will be greater and Some day a greater than Bryan will arise to show the world that 'thé- cconomic'law of God is wholly} perverted by giving to money al place and power that .ig corrupting-l and cnsl‘aving. ' The secret. lies in the enthrone- ment of money as the Czar of all the world“ It is raised to a false position of absolutism and power that is given to no other agent 'in the world. By it thrones are bought and sold. governments are created or overthrown, the great instruments for the advancement of light, law and liberty. and bv which they perverted or restrain- ed: the pulpit. platform and press are bought and sold; the school} is exploited for revenue. and justice is blinded, not by equity but by purchase. , This is all'so tfue that the ringf inc, honest dcclamations of such a man as Bria!) are' applauded to the echo. the North Show, News-Later ~ _ But why is the mere possession of money the chief him of men? If the most they can 'get out of it is food, clothing, home and travel. vihat magic charm is there in the possession of mm... when I‘m"- aul: would give as much of these things as one can use without the burden and care involved in the possession‘vof millions? That will be the new emancipa- tion~n6t of a/ clan or race-but of the whole world. when mankind will place money in its right re. lation to human needs and bless- ings and dethrone it from its present absolutism. Mr. Bryan puts the matter in strong light when he says: "A man may earn five hundred mil- lions or. more but 'the rnen who have ea‘rnetHhhave not had time to colleet it- and the men who have collected it have not had time to earn it.’ When William]. Bryan 'deliv- ers. before tivo thousand people, his masterly address on "The Price of a Soul," he finds his key- note-not in the'philosophy of men. not in the science of ages. not in the political creed: of the greatest and freest nation . on earth. but in the interrogation of the Master Soul of men: ”What shall it profit a man if he gains the whole world and lose his own soul?” To the great mass of men nothing is s'acrIEdflnothing free. nothing independent.-in ptcs- encc of money. The economic conditions of all society constitute ' the all-pervad- ing issue of public discussion and political action. Money buys and sells everything material and puts a mortgage or licn upon human souls. We have asked. again and again, for sdm’ebody to assume the duty of inauguratlng a sane national birthday. '-Now is the time and the 'club is the. organization Raviriia' Park has not yet been pre- empted for July Fourth. Why not convert that Park on that day into a veritable holiday sach as shall make us all glad and shall prbve a valuable resort to thousahds from the great city. .who wish to escape the din and danger of a veritable babel. MR. BRYAN'S ECONOMLC SERMON Then there is the lot southeast comet of East Lame! and St. John's Avenue. lying between St. John's and the city library build- ing. This tract of land is la the most conspicm ‘part of. High' land Park; just where visiton are certain to notice'it whether com. ing to the city of passing through it on the train. It always pre- eents a disreputable appearance. In the wane: it is grown up to Then there is St. lohn’sAv'enue from_ Laurel south to Sheridan Place viaduct. Here is (main street eighty feet wide. because intended to be a principal thor- oughfare. instead of being im- proved in accordance with the original plan. the trolley occupies ‘one side of the streetway. a cow.- ‘path the other side, and between a strip which at best was too nar- row tobe either ornamental or useful as a parkway. and which is continually being narrowed by1 the efiort of VChiCltS to get room enough to pass each other without colliding. One has but to stand in the street between the .Depot and the State Bank to realize the absurdity of the so~called im- provement. The parkway should be taken- out and the street moved to the middle and made to con- form as nearly as possible to the street south from Sheridan Place viaduct and north from Laurel Avenue. It would. seem about time that the unsightly electric polesâ€"twi- ley. telephohe and telegraphâ€"1 should be put out of sight. It mév be all right when these lines run through 3 (am: country. but the unsightlv poles should not be allowed to disfigure the appear- an'ce of the streets in the heart of a city like Highland Park. In a recent issue of the North Shore News-Letter under the title of ”Looking. Backward and For- ward." the» writer suggested sev- eral needed improvements in our city. He did not. however. by any means exhaust the list of needed improvements.- HIGHLAND PARK In ungfaded schools. 'where salaries are lowest. there are 11,489 teachersâ€" 3.002 meu'and 8,478 women. During the last year the men taught an aggregate of l9,440.months for which they were paid 9992.92.57. The women taught 60,574 months and received 32.400.084.42. The av- erage salary} for men teaching in the ungraded schools of this state is. therefore, 47.47 and the aver- age salary for women in the ungraded schools is 339.52. The Illinois Educational com- mission, in a report justissued. gives the minimum of_ teachers' salaries in_‘ a number of states. The average monthly salaries of men and women teachers in both graded 'and ungraded schools in Illinois is given. The report says a i'study of the statistics of Illinois with reference to the salaries of teachers will reveal a condition from which it is not easy for the friends of the public schools to derive satisfaction." According to the most recent re- ports train the various counties, the number of teachers employed is 28 524. Of this number54ll are men and' 23,113 are women. During the year ending June .30. {1908, the men'taught an aim 'gate of 40.751 months and re- ceived $346,854.97. or an average monthly salary of $82.13. The women taught an aggregate of I95, 484 months and received $l1877 793. 76 an average of 8‘10 76 a month. TEACHERS SALARIES IMPROVENENTS A. B. Rowen. (Jerk PRESENT MAKE UP 0? GLENOOE SCHOOL BOARD U. B. Kleuin. Pm... term «we: I909 FACTS FOR VOTERS IN GLENCOI Ode. c It mun. Culm. cooucmnu. Clan. 1‘. Kill... lanc- F.M [ Wuhan-l. Hughegkcjaylu. Gainâ€"G. D. Hall r Maelnnrlfiw 1' lane. Funk PRESENT MAKEUP or Curacao: VILLAGE OFFKIIALS. Great interest is manifested 10 school matters at Glencoe. “the Board will now advettite I not meeting at which all the people. including the ladies. have an op- por'tunity to learn how. matters are run. there will be one of the best mass meeting: ever held in this town. PRESENT MAKE UP 0!" GLENCOE LIBRARY BOARD. I 0. R. Bum President. g “mun. A. BUSINESS. North Shore Nun-Luau SCHOOL BOARD INTEREST. Mr. Geo. Hicks was the presi- dent of the Sunday School con- ventionâ€"not Mn. Hicks. who was present is a delegate only. ’ LATEST ITEIIS. Our report in another column show; that Killcn received 98 votes. whereas it should tend 89. Mr. Woolley therefote was a suctessful nominee for council- man. ‘ rank and noxious and o‘eneive weds. scattering their seeds far ‘and near. and there» of the year ‘it is stmwn with ms and other refute. Last summer it In: some of the time need unmputure. The owner of that. lot is a per- eonal friend of the writer, but it he will not imptove it or sell it to some one who will improve, it. but continues to hold it unoccupied while Its value ueudily is incteaed by the improvement: made by resident citizens and My owners. then in all (aim should not such pmperty he messed sufiiciently to enable the clty to keep it cleaned up? Jamel: or Punâ€"June- F. Deeds Amount-M. T. Culva. ’rinting umbutprinlin‘ thupolh,thc kind Nottbckinddnt I910 I9l0 WI 1 19! l

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