Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 5 Mar 1925, p. 11

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1} THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1925« || Daylight â€" | â€"Your Kitchen XCE DO ARTISTIC stoneâ€" masonry, and care for trees, shrubs, lawns, . We deliver black dirt, etc. N;job is too small, none too large for us. Give us a trial and be convinced. Phone us early. in order to avoid the spring rugh. / & t ! j Phone Highland Park 778:W or 2237 ~â€" ; â€" / ve You Been Thinkirs About Beautifying Your Grounds? ‘Edward Norrien Dow & Residence: 829 Ridgewood Dr. Tel. Highland Park 590 Pubtlic Service Stores Auto Yans BAGGAGE, EXPLESS, FREIGHT and TRANSFER . NO.J0B TOO LARGE; NO JOB TOO SMALL PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY This Daylight |__ h Kitchen Unit "is made of snow white porcelain 50° v*-mo?( Fp'i’rh'iirf ILLINOIS 4 51 S, St. Johns Ave,, Highland Park t L Telephot'le568~ ' ind PACKING, MOVING & SHIPPING _ Fireproof Storage Spring Is Getting Near Open 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. The kitchen is the workshop of your home and you should have the best possible lighting in it; You will enjoy this Daylight Unit that brightens every corner and chases PIANO MOVING Dbjmmd the balance in sm gmonthly payments with your service‘ stateâ€" Light turns oam off at <this han pendant switch and you can: also filfll in your iron or toaster here. See the picture at the Taft. ¢ f Long Distance Moving "In 1924 \the. Near| East | Relief ound itself. iLx the midst of the most ppalling . uprooting : of â€" industrious ples in all‘\histor&, the compulsory xchange of | Populations . between | Greece and Turkey, Ple, orghnization, | pngaged in completing a program, of | feeding and training child vigtims of he war, found its plans for dikpersing those children into conditions of selfâ€" gupport, seriously and suddéenly ‘e | sed, if not entirely & > ‘by the confusion of disrupted homes nd multiplied unemployment.: Oat ork under these cirenmsta was orced to expand into new fields. \ "\t o) ‘CrltiuAvertgd-, \,S: ~racial crisis ‘ in . Grecce was verted.. Indignation, misunderstandâ€" ings and‘ international ‘concéern over he hrménian? question â€" there were 3ne and ‘plans for déporting | ; 60,000 inewly settled Armenians: were Fwdera@ed. $ i s t "Shattered | industries were reorâ€" nized. The Near East Relief subâ€" idized > rug factories and | handifwork industries in | Syria and aunched self:gupporting i#dultriu in Greece to absgorb widows, young womâ€" n, anu old .. It released its. diâ€" tor in Armenia_to permit free exâ€" ises of his leadership in the develâ€" pment of semiâ€"private| c&mn‘lorcill ‘\| enterprises,â€" including t}ks\J hing inâ€" dustry on lake Sevan. t "Aiming at restoration of moralée, he organization placed 12,000 o rphanageâ€"trained children in familie n strategic localities, requiring those amilies to measure up to simple tandards and subsidizing them on a inimum . bagis,. In . Armenia‘ the + Near East R'llief built simple model ouses,, bne to a village, installed a trained orphan nurse and demonstratâ€" ed practical ‘child care| and health 'éigo'wda‘af intengive farming, spread methods by practical demonstration, "What ‘the Dawes plan is doing in tern. Europe, â€"Américan| philanâ€" ropy is attempting in the Near ast," gays a report of the| foreign epartment of Near East Relief, preâ€" sented at hf annual meeting of that $ qnilnnti_ n in the HAQ of | Nations ently, . _|â€" y Py 4 â€" ‘The report says in part: ° ‘Near st Reliof: has 'add'g,‘td its}duty of aving life, a demongtration ‘of ways nd means of ~intern tio*nf reconâ€" truction. _ This nabiogcl‘ American lity is not! only the prime essential bf good relief, but it bmme peculiarâ€" 1y necessary Lin, 1924 to ghable Ameriâ€" an philanthropy to proceéed with finâ€" shing its work. â€" # .404 & C c LE : : . Fights Disease j "In fighting . se, thL Near East Relief e ancient sources malignant malaria in _Gr;;ev, proâ€" ndizedâ€"refugees against contagâ€" n, expanded native clinics, mobilized fugee doctors, reduced :&chom ong &l:lldun 25 per cent. J.d . ~*In face of a widespread food hortage, the Near East Relief hayâ€" ng\ no\ funds for wholesale refugee eeding, â€" expanded ‘its farâ€"reaching rphanage program with farm instiâ€" tutes to increase food:‘ n::ruction, obilized five American | ultural xports with thirty farming agriculâ€" urists to equip. senior om‘ku'hs‘ in ethods by (practical d‘emdgot_ratibp, maintained two farm schools with 100 students. | . _ . :}. ty ‘"To met scarcity of clo , the ea:fi' East Relief: distributed : 1,500,â€" pounds of {refugee clothing in ussian Arme:tiu and 1,280,000 pieces of repgired clothing in Greece. | "One of our executive committeéâ€" en, Mr, Morgenthau, took helm of an international program | to settle 000 Greek ‘peasant re s. on e land, and initiated with great enâ€" rgy plans ‘to reclaim. waste areas, bsorb the refugee farmers, btabilize reek exchange and revive producâ€" , "Chid stanvé;idr) ‘was met with a4râ€" rangeéments to see 7,000 re&:gfiee camp children through the: winter with one hot meal daily} . : :# ... ..~). : / AIDS TN RECONSTRU measur s to Its ’Fen‘ltbry What| Daw Plan is to Europe, ares ~â€"â€"Report Presented at _ \‘â€"â€" Annual Meet â€" ~*"Without participating in politicah strife, the ‘Am;:’fan organization apâ€" plied its influence during this critical time toward internal peace and stabiâ€" lization.‘ It held to the prinjiple that governmental changes would not add ;confuiitn "to > the : acute: | situation created by the refugee movement. : "Ta replace leadership (destroyed by war or decayed by ‘racial strife, Near East Relief graduated from its orphanages in 1924, with q-;ininz in western ideals%and methods, teachers for the school#"of Armenia and Palâ€" estine; nurses for ghe hospitals of Caucasian; Russia, Greece Syria; model . housekeepers: for â€"Armenian homeg in Egypt, Bulgaria and ‘Rouâ€" mania;: sanitation |workers for | municipalities â€"of . Alexandropol and Erivan; mechanics for the Bagda railway, and other wof'kers zdth capaâ€" city for‘leadéership in industry and all phases of near eastern life." | ; . ~‘Complained that sfifficiet;:: respect is not shown to the flag, but many men‘ may be so accusto to . their hats on at home that they disâ€" like to remove therg. : ||. =>0 t\ . THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS LR EAST RELIEF _ REBUILDING FACTOR Uprooting of People ‘or Peace and Stability CTION Dawes | Incensed at the failure ofâ€"the state to successfully prosccute. Mw{m city graft cases after they were made the subject of indictmerits returned by ‘a special grand jury later found unconstitutional, State Senator James J. Barbour has introduced ‘a bill to legalize the calling of a speciaf grand juty.":> *) on td ~ The . measure . provides trlt the proper officials may impanel & second grand jury which may performm "its duties at the same tine the. regular grand jury is meeting and may serve LEGALIZE SPECIAL® _;_ _ ~~~ GRAND JURY CALLS Senator Barbour Has Bill In the ‘State Lexishtie (For â€" ~~+ 5 â€"That ) Ees se o ooo 4. |â€" JGkty â€" Office ...‘ > / 1617 First National Bank Building Randolph 5340 _ ) H i * yore S rite s â€" r finds that it is not so, easy to make biscuits according to cookbook recipes. Just now she is wo ig what Bill will say when ze tastes her first biscuits." . : @ ~THEY CHOSE WISELY â€" ~ROSEHILL CEMETERY COMPANY On the roster of the Rosehill Mausoleum will be found the names of many prominent families of Chicago and vicinity. The choice of these citizens ‘of the Rosehill Mausoleum as the burial spot for their own carries added weight because of their achievements. . The judgment that made them leaders in life augge:%hfll Mausoleum as the most perfect and apâ€" proptiate interment memiorial, _ ( V [ 1. e ine atd You may have complete confidence in the Rosehill Mausoleum. Your choice of it will be amply endorsed by .the families who have made it their own monument. . The ample trust fund of Rosehill constantly increasing and a perpetual charter contributed to %h,gir wise decision. A. limited number of Memorial Rooms areâ€"still available; single crypts, arranged in varying groups; and family seth‘:x of five compartments. An inspection may be arranged at any time, _cards of admission obâ€" . tained at the cometery entramee.". >‘ >_‘yn _ * Great Moments in a Famous Comedy knows it‘s | AF&S@Q&«:“AM"%&% | .. ~Enormous Popularity in Chicago ILL â€"McALLISTER, the appleâ€" \42: ~ ‘influential Uncle Matt into giving him a soft job. _ Uncle Matt, although he filattery, simply can‘t resist Bill‘s mirth provoking blarney i . Adromkk t ied + * by Barry Conâ€" ners, is a tale full of laughter. and human sentiment. â€" The thero believes |that. people can be made happy by means of encourage: ment and flattery, and he proves to be right in the en4. 4 ~ The demand of for the right to organize and its protest at the use of injunctions was in a bill presented by Senator Daniel Webster, icago. The bill declares the right of t omk to. organize into unions â€"and forbids the courts to interfere by injunction with free speech or with | labor disputes. sar4 Both measures were referréd to the | committeeâ€" on judiciary, j At the . right the hero is shown winning a five dollar bet, folâ€" lowing a hot argument with his . prospective fatherâ€"inâ€"law. I+ longer than one term of; court, until discharged, : ; :*;. :; s=c. wl Descriptive Booklet Upon Request MOSTâ€"CHURCHES ARE . |/_ _ CELEBRATING LENT ~~That the Lenten ‘season of" the ecâ€" clesinstical year is proving a nea: seagon for spiritual prc s may b â€"| by ‘the fact thng ‘even â€"those aegfithn bodies which frowned‘ upon the O6bservance of Lent a few decades i 9 observe..the season are now . adop the same season as a period h life. The first anniversary of Resurrection oiJugn Christ was ‘ ceded by the kpostles by a tw four hour ericd of preparation. time â€"went on the period was 1 entd to forty hours and later in the centuries to forty.days. : It is one c&n oldest b?&.-:vnnces of the tign church: The custom has beenâ€" lowed from ~eatliest. time in ' Church of England and was into America ‘by the priests of ‘ Church of England with the colon! he. doctors tell us not to and some folks have decided not o do ‘so amy more about their. x tdieollece student should not 1 standing in his bunch even if he d make an effort to learn his lessons. THB Arate and crabby Pa Robinâ€" son accuses Ma, who safety razor to cut her corns with. Ma, querulous, ‘but . with her back to the wall, indignantly.> d en ies the charge.: beaten, of using his Ravenswood Avenue Edgewater 0714 PAGE i.

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