Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 19 Mar 1925, p. 2

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id 4 L}} a i 4 6t CY Â¥ 48 t5] :‘;p . How a man respect the law while in‘ a pint flask in his pisâ€" tol pocket s inias! and Baron Munchausen were careless about the truth; howsomevér one Means could give ‘em both an‘ spades an‘ win their underwear| offin their backs. PAGE TWO PRIMâ€"PREST all and explain this service â€" let us send or your bundle. , o é & Reliable Laundry BUTTF heldeal Family Laundry Service Tour family laundry called for â€" every ingle piece carefully washed, thoroughly insed, starched, and dried in pure, fresh hone us today â€" have a representative Launderers, Dry Cleaners and Dyers Phone 178 â€" 4 "The more you buy, the more we give" aster Novelties ommunity .Shop Central Avenue Telephone 544 SPECIAL T hat‘s What "Primâ€"Prest" Service Means _ BECAUSE An Ice Cream Brick of delightful richness, uniâ€" _ que flavor and creamy smoothn)ess. § UTTERSCOTCH er for hemstitching will be promptly filled _ | NEW YORK ICE CREAM Division of National Dairy Products Cerp., are now coming in Highland Park, Illinois This Week In Some ginks shovel snow off the wolk like ‘as if they‘d, learned how from a correspondence school, "Smiles" is the longest word in our language, ‘cause there‘s a mile in beâ€" tween the first an‘ last letter, yet they‘re the nicest an‘ éasiest things we‘ve got‘to give. *‘ QUaART BRICK We ing 0o * UNITED EVANGELICAL * Topic, ievag Noyth avenue and Lauretta® Place _ Wm.â€"B. Doble, minister : 9:30 p. m.â€"Sunday, school. _ | 10;45 a. m.â€"Morning woership,. 3:00 p. m.â€"Junior league.) | | .. 6:30 p. m.â€"Epworth 1¢ x d 3 7:45 p. m.â€"â€"Evening serviee. |â€" > The service will be in charge 6f the! oman‘s Foreign Missionary soâ€" ciety for their annual Thank Offering service. Dr. Zimmerman a &-etumed Missjonary will be the speaker. > Kuis is a Any can J. G. Finkbeiner, pastor | ‘ . i9 45â€"Sunday ‘school session, | 11:00â€"Morning worship. Prof. H. R. Heininger of the Evangelical Theoâ€" logigal Seminary, Naperville, Illinois wlil} have, charge of the service and pregch. _ . ; > LA l ‘ere will be no evening service. Sunday afternoon at 2:30 there will} be an Evangelical Mass meeting at the" Chicago (Temple auditorium;, Washington and Clark streets wé'th J. J. sArnold© presiding. Bishop S$. P. Sprérig will, address the meeting on the \Great Missionary Conference re: cently held, at Washingf(m, l; «C. Thete will fe special musi¢. | e pastor and F. C. Noerenberg will! leave on Wednesday for Chadâ€" wick, Illinois where the Illinois United Annual / Conference session will| be held. / The session will likeâ€" ly close on Monday morning. e New Movement Sunday s«*hool class through its treasurer, , Arthur Olson presented the pastor and teachâ€" er with a splendid leather brief 'ue.i This) completes the necessary e{nip- ment for the trip to Chadwick. | . e pastor last Saturday received a y of the book “Thg Pedagogy of S$t. Paul" whose author is Rev. H T. Kuist, M. A., Ph. D.| Dr. Kuist is a Highland Park "boy" and is a\member of the Ebenezer church. Anyone desiring a copy of the l)ook can secure it from the Misges Carrie and (Louise Kuist. Ptused 10: Gréen Bay: road and Lnurel»ipveliue. * F. R. Cardwell, pastor: /\ 9:3D a. m.â€"Bible school. ‘The Inâ€" onal ‘Uniform lésson series are a. m.â€"Merning worship. Serâ€" y the pastor. | 37 p. m.«â€"Christian © E#degm-. "What:Can We Do to Win Othâ€" ps.,m.â€"-Evaanistic semc&’ j nesday 8 p. m.â€"Prayer nicetâ€" tG all©> EL. Aeq ou are cordially invited to make of the reading room at 387 Cenâ€" avenue, which is open every week from nine o‘clock in the morning 1 six.o‘clock in the eve and jlay afternoon from twoâ€" y to o‘clock. .. : £ m tTHE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS * . .‘ of | - | HARDWARE ..*In the present unsettled condition of |the ,wirld. living in the midst of miional' ambitions, jealousies, suspiâ€" cifiu and hatreds, it would be puerile and foolish to cast off the instruments of | defense. : Our national security must be preserved and we believe that in national defense rests America‘s best peace insurance until such time Peace! with honor is the end of which we strive," resolutions adopted by the conference declared. : * plédge ourselves as individuals and as a, nation to promote the. cause ‘of peace, Yet these earnest convictio and i must not «bind us to the world of reality.. I Support‘ of the American people in p\‘tting the national defense act into full effect was asked: Moral support and efforts to see that necessary :: ds are appropri:te‘gw_n suggestâ€" | j & i.) va . Plans for furthering the work of the conference will be evolved in the n future by an extension commitâ€" tee created by the conference. This committee consists ‘of the presidents of the coâ€"operating organizations or rejmesen‘t;ntiveq appointed by them. _ | A. nationâ€"wide educational |camâ€" Jx’i:n in support of the national deâ€" e will be undertaken by the sixâ€" national â€" patrioti¢ groups . coâ€" rating in the Women‘s Conference on National Defense as Peace Insurâ€" ce held here recently at the call of e American ,L:;i‘im Autilinzyquml ision was formed following adâ€" sses by Preali.%né Cooli'@ge' and rious representatives of the war and navy departments. luld Women‘s Organization to Back | _ Educational Drive Showing NATIONAL DEFENSE . | \CAMPAIGN STARTED ann Avareneveneta en e anet en t neaaclanlnatlielalntialanlen Waukegan Avenue Necesgity > 8. BERNARDI Free Delivery Porto Rican Gowns ©1.50 Saturday, Mar sarnett‘s See Our Window Al*honk'h T70 per cent of our people vnerelliving on farms in 1870, but 6,â€" 288, ior 25.0 per cent of the people li;te4 inAIWh'p" :m :oere born on farmg. : Although per cent of oh:n:opuhfiop in 1870 was living in cltieqil:.owm ad v ; this 30 per cent Plbfi-:('! 17,990 notables, or Hand Made towns and villages. From those fig. ures, and assuming that most of those :g;v li-tae';io%n Who‘s Who were born 1 the association says the ckpefted onliclusinn would be thut Just the opposite is the fact association asserts. ‘% most of them were born on farms The census of 1870 disclosed that 26,052,301 persons, or 70 per cent, we lim farms, and u,ooafl. or per cent, were living in cities, Accordingâ€"to popular relief, raral life is more favorable than urban enâ€" vironment for the nourishment of greatness. But that belief is not supâ€" po by the facts, says the Nationâ€" ‘al Educational association. To make its , the association turns to Who‘s uM with the explanation that the Lns(u |Of 1870 is nearest the Firth of most of the persons now included in wm %-, 6 I t iA : Where ‘are the nation‘s leaders and| educated? I ¢ Mrs. ? D, Oliphant, national présiâ€" dent of the Anxiliary, presided. Miss Béss Wetherholt, ‘national secretary of the Aukiliary, was elected secreâ€" tary of the conference. [ WHERE LEADERS OF hx ;N-A!?N ARE BORN Statistics Show â€" That Larger 1| Percentage Are From _ â€"~!") Urban Life® â€" _â€" as, by fizm'm,ent, limitation of arms may be pogsible." t 4 ht Telephone 110 ch 21: Highw ‘est Central avenue Gormey rervicu diske, â€"‘ > | English service, 11:00, 4 on w M’::«-h.m Lent he is a‘special Lenten servâ€" it€ at‘ 8. | I (BAOM« _ «) | Many who now kick on their income taxes, hollering in 1918 for the go ht to spend more money so as to win the war quicker. The # ‘‘should now agitate to have St. Patrick‘s day, the opening of the ball season, and the day when the law off on fishing, set apart {b‘;’nlexll; olidays. .| Claimed congress should be at wot but anyway they can‘t spend any the public money when not in : | Women being elected to many pubâ€" lic o .â€" This means orders for fl"_'?'figl'id"flwdllm brooms. . In p on to Polsl:‘fion.' over gix times as many notable people are Foglin as in rural communities. / But ys transportation comâ€" '“nf;;“‘ conclusion by producing a rfim !ommfic.urb gdrban.} Week days a man may be ptain in the city; wéek ends he may bethezl:lterofaehichnhmnw is the offspring of the commuter to be classified ? > â€"â€" s * Eu;mm people living in urâ€" ban produced 1,550° notable men and| women. * sections and wor 74.1 per pent of those liste To pu Each 1 THURSDAY, MARCH 13 !00'0,000 people living in rural produced 238 notable men od, Illinois that conclusion in Who‘s in other HURSD Published week!y by nUMBF and Park kxmmm bu : 8. &z publiq to "mak l he ‘- uU ; nv( ive tax@® th risgks, &A :w ' atic defeatin not to add tp{go\ 3 A F n.:' ‘n iS w m mDe ofg a State ' olice force by the fiincis 5‘!’." < '- iation, & state afd many civi¢ m > 5_-’ ence of d forces, klich as P ui~ / & mt“; «w E the buildi Lawn i ewarms ‘ "WiZLp the bDuuoain have swarme of house , hand load up§ with high po in higRâ€"powered aut {intel'f with them. ng out of ‘ costs, fistate police it is eff@imated, $1.8 Mtl. ‘ it is e $20,00 the ay cratic own s is Go1r exactl ! t\ i k untriu der, t ing for 111137 Secretgry Mell rob a prog both persdial contact. * less {pungsters .18, and ::h?{i i they 0o: yein we OO-OPJ‘ allow Ichildren to & .110' of Â¥o ‘t turn ¢ fill ith knowl th it teeth filled pfrtheP“fl L RC Jat nvest . they Whe of Commert force i ‘State Pr by Senator nois Cham ion, aut ‘many civigé prience of 0 A recepnt â€"value of is no vernorse [ E. as establisl aind. infimid in i 'l‘lw;fi&d t same ,0'“" te police me tection and all Illinois C | murder at s second Cl: inois, under ints Aare & s in the sc lpihuid.: might. Y( Ve ith or un <4 MARCH 9 Oné (€ m n Day ey llion® esir ent TA

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