Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press (1912), 6 Nov 1919, p. 7

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15c 25¢ fill-“IE North Shore Trustfi-TCO. General Banking Business [Eflfifififlfimflflflfi mammmmmmmmm E on»; 0:21.209 mJkad AdMFZmU +3. A Substantial Style Raund. roomy I506. Close-fitting l kid A wrinklcss fit. $8 SC Foot use Ilvi/Iyl Loam made on improved Real Estate elephant 247 Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent Corner Central Ave. and Sheridan Rd. \A sum Bunk\ ay u.-."- ll Style Shoe fitting heel. ln soft glued A 1 :1 gnate 1, 1 Kyle Shoe ;" Buy Bostonians. Their up-kecp cost is low. $8, $9, $10, $11, $12 ‘1 I 1 1 THE HIGHLAND WHY I BELIEVE IN SCOL’TING (By Mary Roberts Rhineharti~ Girls are great idealists. No one fa- miliar with the Working of the girl mind can fail to recognize how quickd ly they respond to ideals. They (li'eaml dreams, not of success. but of happi-i ness. They look up rather than out. But they are vague and uncertain. t'ull ”f “'l’mcu‘ Warnings that lead‘ -. , StiCk nowhere. Given a cause and a leader. and they will bring it to the utmostl pathetic eagerness, staunchness, loy-l palty, enthusiasm and unselfish efl'ort.l E ‘ ‘ There comes a critical time in a (1130”! girl's mental and spiritual life. when1 ‘ she is waiting impatiently for young‘, HE boy Wh' Womanhood. The things of her child~1 . , days is the hood have lost their interest. She . . to his duty for ,has abandoned her dolls. The littlel lboys she la ed with ha '> i ted ‘ ' p y u (eser l eggs. His pota lher. and found the girl~less associa-1 . .. . is in brine and l 'tions of the teens. They have theirl clubs. their sports. their meeting plac- , can can-y his 0‘ fes. But to the young girl there is; , _ lnothing but that period of waitingl He 18 a go‘nfl QShe is peculiarly isolated. Her fem-l V .in often finds her strange. She isi your faCtory am .moody and dreamy. She begins tol tha‘ 0f the cattl spend an almost alarming. amount Ofl worst lockout i! time and thought upon her appear-1 ant'e. The family says: “What in thel Young man, World is the matter with Jane?" And in the west but her father suggests that it is too: much going to the moving pictures. ‘ conferences. I But the truth is that Jane is idle, - 5 She does not belong, between baby-1 In a Felephone’ hood and womanhood, anywhere in‘ work; let the ci the social organization She is actm ' » ‘ nature, and" t l we and romantic. Her days are long turity, and with maturâ€" Gompers or M l waiting for ma I ity the fulfillment of her dreams, of» 1 love. of marriage, of motherhood. She. . E Th b n} haunts the moiies because she finds > ‘3 a a ,there vicarious romance and vicar-fl i the youn n lious adventure. The great out-doors» l] :is hers to play insâ€"on the screen. i a 3 And at the same time, with no inâ€"l ,creased outlet for her activities, her'E . imagination is being stimulated as= a] Inever before. Books, magazines, au-‘l3 ’ ' " l tomobiles, moving pictures. all are re- l ‘ vealing to her this strange thillg‘ . _ . . The .we call life, which is hers to observei FRANK J' BA ibut not yet to live. She is a yearn-i - ’-' . ' ing onâ€"looker. Presulent It is time to realize that hundreds. .of thousands of young girls in this , country. ithey are ,tential mothers of future citizensâ€"â€" ‘that these young girls be given oc- lcupation, a feeling of responsibility, a practical ideal to which they mayi ‘ ibring their innate loyalty and enthus- l » They need organized play 3ndl we give our girls occupation, when : They need soniethiniz con- i we get them out of doors, when we 1crete to tie to. They need to be , give them organized play in the open. tankht. if YOU please, what is the there will be fewer morbid women. Spirit among the bOYS~ They: Give them something to do that in-' em. Get them ‘out into thei i am that their young bodies ‘_ terests th 'ng years with are to be used, instead of decoratedflair. Fill in the waiti play. Give them some rules L'ntil they learn that we shall have.w(,rk and sickly mothers and puny babies. No ‘ of life which will appeal alike to their. emth for the improvement imaginations and to their instinctivel no Bd< desire for something better. Let them . candorik out as well as up: , Nearest of all the proposed plans bUildiY‘K UP morally, spirit- . to cope with what an indreasing num- futui'e mothers. l ber of families are finding to be their They need to be taught certain loyv 3 problem, the adolescent girl, the‘ alties, Sex loyaltY» Loyalty t0 ideals. l Girl Scout movement fulfills all these Loyalty 10 WUMFY- This 183‘, loyâ€" l requirements. It is sane, healthy and “115' 10 country, has to be taughtdnormal. It teaches, honesty, purity, When a man learns to take otl' his hat vigor and love of country. And it Spect for? takes the girl in her teens and gives to the flag, he has a new re 'her a live interest in the present in- it, Some of the girls need to be taught stead of the future. ~“ , - .....,. anir dreams It should have nation-wid doubly important now that:I future citizens and the pol l iasm. ‘. athletics. “gang" need to le 2 single mov of American people as a race, of science or sanitation, \‘tHlt’k‘ 119C85- compare in importance with the sit)’ for ually and bodily, our 9 support. muuh ruin»: But tht‘ SlmI docs T' hum! and (he sm'ial we and rm‘ waiting for my the fu lqu', Hf ma hunesty. They cover (next with small deceits. They : munce out of sheer boredom, driven intu hypocrisy. The fewer dreams to conceal, a! honest with the honesty of and the great out of door 1'. W. C. A. NEWS PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS girls new! to be taught v cover th’eir dreams ysty of fresh air of doors. When ragga. < We give our girls occupation, when we get them out of doors, when we give them organized play in the open. there will be fewer morbid women. Give them something to do that in-I lerests them. Get them ‘out into that“ air. Fill in the waiting years with‘ Work and play. Give them some rules of life which will appeal alike to their imaginations and to their instinctivel ‘ desire for something better. Let them ‘lonk out as well as up: 1 Nearest of all the proposed plansl COMMUNITY SHOP l The regular monthly meeting of ' 'n he held WWWV/v v‘v V the (‘ummittee of Sixty Wi at the Army and Navy Center on Thursday. the thirteenth of November at ten thirty o'clock to which the public is cordially invited to he pres- ent. Mrs. Frank Allport will be there and give in detail th wonderful Work [wing done by the Service League for the handicapped to which the Commitâ€" tee of Sixty are making a mnnthly (lmmtion. L L. The chairman of the handlwm'k noâ€" pzu-tnwnt announces la sale on Tue» day and Wednesday (vf next week. Thu shup has already l‘et'qivml a numlwx nf (‘alomlar blottors, also dolls, toys and articles of all descriptions suit- ulxlv for holiday gfits. Tea is wrw ed daily from three to five, OVER EIGHTY ALIENS TO RECEIVE PAPERS has been and effur eightieth the ban ‘nomlcs has howl lifted in Lalto ounty. Accordingly n-ll’néts were got \ln much with; all these nus-n“ «hm numhL-r eighty; And all have lwvn uu'atml exveptinn’ 61103. Thu> the l~an has been lifted fromf'IQ of the 80 mvn and effurls will be {made to locate the elghtieth so that he, can be told that the ban has been lifted. In checking «wet the 79 men it hfis been found xha‘ all of them are mile}. The majority uf' thvm liw in Wauléoimn. mault- tn THE boy who sits on the top of the world these days is the farmer. He is there. He can go to his dairy; for his milk and the kids can gather the eggs. His potatoes are in his bins. His salt pork is in brine and hams are in the smoke house. pHe can carry his own wheat to the mill. He is a going concern if the world suspends. .Sell your factory and buy a farm. The worst walkout is that of the cattle from the field into the corn. The worst lockout is that of forgetting the key. Young man, stick on the farm. There is nothing conferences. in a telephone, get a lot of machinery to work; let the cider harden by the insistent process of nature, and" thus live, not caring whether Mr. Gompers or Mr. Gary has the world by the tail. Young man, stick on the 1am. in the west but bolsheviks and um conferences. Buy a phonograph in a telephone, get a lot of ma work; let the cider harden by the nature, and" thus live, not ca Gompers or Mr. Gary has the we Young Man, Stick on the Farm This bank is eager the young men w Editorial f1 The Old Reliable s eager and ready to encourage men who stick on the farm. Iron: ‘17:: Chicago Tribune: Vice-President and Progressive Blnk 206-212 Genes" Street, Waukegan Beginning ONT C. F. GRANT Cashier SensationaI--- Thifi widely appreciated annual event was long in preparation and is rich in u-nnmnirs that grew out of our fiinuularly advantageom negotiations in a decidedly easier market. The mam Are xn advance midwinwr model. and in richer, smarter, more srrVK'CaMl‘ fabrics. Many are fur trimmedâ€"many adnpted for Wear with separate furs. Takr-n altogether this is tru- ly a "WONDERFUL SALE.” PAGE SEVEN Including tile Very N‘ Short Long Stacie, at and Newest

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