Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press (1912), 27 Nov 1919, p. 5

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Ht to Make $300? ifiClTE. POGO KLIN COUNTY Kmds .venue CE. Either a 4“! HR 00d. rage 30 NORTH cent Call akeries the famous r5. PoconoNTfi rnunTY SOFT 55019? Johns Avenue n w- “ YUENTS 0000000.. 00000000..... 386 (356:: Avenuc 5 Oxford Gray Wool Sweater Coats, $10.00 E1 values. special at .................... All-wool tww-piece suit of underwear, $9.00 values ....................... 5U I Do your Christmas shopping early 'uptflm 01 the mutahi --n he Hum :md humid; Men’s F urnishings at Cut Prices ]. Bauer Smith Knabe Stark a Clearance Sale Of' Pianos and Player Pianos recently returned from rent and on exchange. Some bargains available at this sale are EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE‘EJLE i and Used Player-Pianos including bench and music rolls of your own selection. Easy terms can be arranged. 21‘) Park Smith Piano C0. 311 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago Oil-n“ Lane Phone 702-R Highland Park, Ill. $4.50 Brown Flam nel Shirts ........ $3.50 Olive Drab Flannel Shirts. $4.00 Dress Shirts latest patterns.. $3.50 Caps with Ear Laps ........... $1.25 Heavy Silk Socks, :1 pain. 8350 Heavy Union Su1ts .......... maimed 1868. We deliver free of charge. Northwest Corner Central Ave. and First St. TelephOne 24} Roland S. Brand The Northwestern 7: Department Store Represented by $7.00 $6.00 $3.50 $250 $2.50 $2.25 Steinway Wellingion V0Se Sons Kurzman THE HIGHLAND PARK mags. HIGHLAND Bring the Kiddiés to our Toy Dept. Home Furnithingg Bargain; $20.00 Golden Oak Dresser ............. $18.00 Genuine Cowhide Travgling Bag, only. . $25.00 Fibre Covered Trunk .............. $10.00 value Three 1n 6 Chairâ€" High Chair, Child’s ker, Baby Carriage, golden oak finish, all for ........... $7. 50 mam ml. the 0pm mat the giu; undanf and 4 much vvgmplu {sum} Isn't it about time hangers to'sit down? Scare heads to the contrary, there is nothing the matter with the United States. The flag that five million Americans thought good enough to fight for has as many stars and stripes today as it had eleven months ago. LET THE CREPE-HANGERS SIT DOWN By Jewett E. Richer. Jr. (From the Illinois Journal of Com- merce.) We have made mistakes. We shall make more. Our government and our institutions are not perfect. They never have been. They never will be. PERFECTION means STAGNA- TION. But America is still America. And -in spite of all that may be said or doneâ€"nothing short of the end of the: world, can, or will. hold this nation buck. ' We are not going to have Bolshev- ism in this country. We are not. going to have soviet rule. We are not going to have “one big union.” ‘There is no more danger of any of those things happening in the United States than there is of Kaiser Bill being removed from the wood pile in Ame'rongen to the mint bed at the White House. For one hundred and forty-three years the MAJORITY of the Ameri- can people have managed to run this land. It is a safe bet they will con- tinue to do so. eight statesy was never stronger thln it is today. And it is the ONLYv“one big union" that will ever prosper on the soil of the United States. Don’t let anyfiody throw the “scares” into you when it comes to that! A year ago We emerged successfully from the greatest war the world has ever known. We fought a good fight. We aceomplished the impossible. We came out of the war the greatest, the richest and the most respected nation on earth. Yet, in spite of these facts, never fefore in the history of America has there been such a NEGATIVE AT- MOSPHERE as exists today. In a re- cent Sunday paper there were eighteen rolumns of PESSIMISM in the newg and editorial sections aloneâ€"eighteen nlumns of eight-point loaded type (19‘ mtod to tearing down rather than Kumii'w up! Eighteen mlumns of hrwgck~ ifisfcml (if hnostsf Eighteen -'1l.mr!:< «f patter by and about anar- .a?-1'\“'n:“‘|',-t:' y‘nssimifis and infi~ The ONE BIG UNION of forty- n... 1)‘ ‘J. EOELTHEI GIN-IS T0 if”: DHWN'.’ $15. 50 E $12. 50 I $19. 50 I [.14 «' ILLINOIS for the crepe- this muntry rightnowmsfewmmion oi le- Cntchoon’s “Smiley maids." ' What we need I: an'antidote oi unnchy is a campdzn 0! America: OPTIMISM â€"the band that mde Plymouth Rock the flapping stohe m a new angbet- m world, the brand that gave Wuh~ ington flitb and courage in the \‘al ley_Forge days, the brand that sent Fremont into the western wilderness the brand that made Lincoln the gran leader of ’61. We need the smiling optimism that carried John Paul' Jones to victory after his ship was all but gone, the smiling optimism that took Furragut across the torpedo fields at Mobile Bay, the smiling ofitimism of Hobson. of Peary, of Whittleoey and all those others whoâ€"dauntless and unafraid â€"hlve made the American WILL TO WIN respected throughout the world. We need eighteen column: and more mh dty of FAITH and COURAGE 3nd HOPE; eighteen columns of UN!- TY wd LOYALTY and CONFI DENCE ' These He the things that will kill anarchy dead in this country before it is born, the things that will make business boom, the things that will keep the workingman -employed n war-time wages. If the United States is ever turnâ€" ed into 3 Russia or a Germunyâ€"if honest liberty is ever destroyed in this countryâ€"it will be the “Lugu- brious Blues" who. are to blame. MEN are in demand todayâ€"real flesh-and-blood men. There is no room in this new world of ours for the mental or physical coward; National Secretary Will Visit Here The club leaders, women who are interested in forming a Girls”Work committee, and the eighty Girl Re. serves in our Y. W. C. A. will have the pleasure of meeting Miss Lola Baumgardner, National Y. W. (‘. A. Girls’ Work Secretary for the states of Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan and Indiana, on Dec..3. The women who will form 3 Girls’ Work Committee, to lssist in planning the work of the girls’ clubs of our Association, will talk with Miss Baumgardner at 10:30 a. m. The leaders of the clubs, and other young Women who are inter- ested in girls‘ Clubs will meet at. 3:30, and will be entértained at dinner at the Blue Triangle mfeuria. They will undoubtedly. receive a great deal of benefit and puny new ideas for the work. All the Girl Reserves, from the high school girlsâ€"down to the youngest girls in the fifth and sixth grades, will meet in the evening for a big rally. Miss Baumgardner will talk to them on the Girl Reserve movement, and there will be stunts by each club, be- sides games Ior all. This will be a big event in the Girl Reserve year. Motion? Club Meeting . On Tuesday evening, Dec. 2, at 8 o’clock, the mothers of all Y. W. C. A; girls are invited to meet at the Asso- ciation rooms.‘ Mrs. Sylvia Morri- son, Staff Captain of the Salvation Amy, who is known to many High- land Park people,'w'rll talk to the mothers about some of here experi- ences in her work. Her talk promis- es to be most interesting and all mothers are urged to attend the meet- J ing. Refreshments and a social hour: will follow Mrs. Morrison’s address. Vespers Next Sunday Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock, an- other vesper service will be held. All girls and women are invited. Last Sunday, the attendance was good, and all who were present enjoyed the meeting. Mrs. W. E. Bletsch gave a . splendid talk on “Our Obligation to Christ.” An interesting program is , being prepared for the next meet- mg. Girl Reserve: The second corps of Girl Reserves, now led by Miss Marion Moseley, gave a party to their boy friends on Friday evening. Many games made the party a lively one. Prizes were given to the winners of several contests. Reâ€" freshments were served at small ta- bles. and everyone pronounced the evening a' jolly one. Practices Monday The Glee. club meets regularly each Monday evening at 8:00 and practices for an hour. Any girls who enjoy singing are Welcome. Basketball practices are being con‘ ducted each Munday firom 8:550 w 9:15 {L m. in the Girls' Gym at the him: school Aster (‘lub Elects Tucker was elected president, md Don Kruger secretary and tram :rer. The girls met for dinner st the Blue 'i‘rilngle «ham and adjourned to the hgsdquarters after the dinner. 't was decided to send Christmas (ifm w the children at the Deerfield Or- }:anage. Each girl chose the name *‘ a mild and will make gifts {or it. at in: zh(m into largeAChristmas " htn the pr.‘ ii: ‘nx-ks on the small ~i:;(~ of their piece of pie. the man- ra: Ls increase 1h: size and charge a '1iRh9Y price. Then when the people 1 ink on the price. the resuunnu IOW- cr that and reduce the size of the piece. Raking up! thvl leaves is endorsed by the doctor: as just us beneficin] ex- ercise as football but you can't mnke the boys believe it. Amr 0 mn- tucking from 25 to f‘ pz-r c-en‘. profits into their inside wl‘ct some pc pie- '(-t terribly an- ry :ur the gn- n“. f labor. W8“ ”new“? Sherida- Bldc. Kieth“ Purl Telephone 874 the number of [Electric Washing Machine» Bec- tric Irons and Vuuum Cleaners in use in homes. reason is easily understood. They are L'nbor Savers. HE Washing Mu- chine does the work. You need only watch it. The Vacuum Cleaner de- mnanfonly that guide it. No amount of prepara- tion is required when you use theEledric Iron other than:t0 connect it to the nearbt socket. Keep Your 9.3 “m3???- PublicServiceCo. A. MARKOWITZ V'. (in ‘2 is 93 )’ “WU 0. P. DOERRIEB LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT 1532 W Rn DR. WATSON DENTIST of Northern Illinois a large increase Monthly Pa ymenu Melody Woods P. O. Box 314 I" all Mum all ”.er KJ _ ( hncngo It’s a Long

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