Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 3 Sep 1925, p. 11

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th Wives" . E.Pierson e have a coflpl'otl list of s and | vacant. . l( looking anything in real estate, & "to our office will save you ‘times and trouble. _ of a hfirl:wbo g: ' ve. | 3 ing Beauty n.S' o:.'_’ 1 imedy . s . â€" r‘s on â€"your RAM . ~. â€" | | F.! SEPTEMBER 9, 10 < ul + Ebeatre|_ Susan" | _ NEWB: ; agcount of moving I e a large assortment ised furniture whith | be gold at a . real vain. _ ¢ ORTH sHORE HOMES" IIELS Presents .1 East gide; 3 blocks igin stations;‘ all improveâ€" 5: 2 s to lake; o ~= a Nissen : itton | ~ i f{:Love" OR SALE |:â€" 8 Central Avenue â€" N. St: Johns Avenue jects one H. P. 573â€"1150 orth Second Street e Highland Park 313 . 3. | WEIDLINGâ€" €Oâ€" . GRADE GRAND PIanO8S 444| _ . 388 Central Ave: [ URANCE â€" RENTING l que R 1% 0 _ 10 presents \ n and Ford Sterling in a,, and when she bre y of aigirl: who m : ... Matinee at 1 p, m. t_hcmmangiwapg‘of ‘IRE” 5 & timk in‘erminxled w isf@ction. } & Wastern Ave. Chicago,. E % sgn’zu_n 3, . WHEELER |â€" Yearsa‘ of Experience M O E 8 ing Konmvic â€"-â€"fiâ€"‘â€"-â€"‘â€"__h EMBER â€"6, 7,;â€" and 8 rt Repair While . You Wait. â€" eekly Special nufacturer at factory ntial saving and comâ€" intermingled with $4500.00 / $ ‘and Mrs. C _ EP Rev. Lelapd | Dar _â€" E getemony at, the < ::\:? ‘the Holy Comfo *\ [ swening. < M Ati«« Elizabeth B0 0b e ooo /o :‘-Mll Stevens, daughter of _ $ 1Mr. and Mré. ‘Edgar A, Stevens ofl $ enilworth, | was married ‘ Saturday ol ng to Mr. Jahn Corey, son of Mr} <~ 0 ‘and Mrs. Corey of Brielle, N. J.| _‘ I Rev. Lelapd Danforth performed the} c ny ‘at, the Episcopal . church , of | _ | the Holy Comforter at 8:30 in the| ;* ‘,5â€" ‘_ Miss Elizaboth Stevens was her sisâ€" | %. $ rer‘s maid of honor, and the bridesâ€"| Jt d " were the Misses Lonfiezfir-i _ *1 jam, Helen| White, Frances Sttyons | _ $ \and Mrs. John Ellis of Newatk, N. J.} «w r‘ E lorace Corey attended his brother | ’§ is best man, and the ushers included | (z [ , Messrs. | Robert Ellis, Stedman Wilâ€"| fi‘ ‘ tard, Clarence Herchbergér and John aolk< A . teception at the Stevens J res followed the ceremony, : 1 P Saytys. Alice Baillie, of the Edgewater iz ‘ hotel has recently announted _ $ "the engagement of her daughter, Marâ€" \ $ mrie to Harbld D. Bordy of Florida. ) B Rhe marriagt i to tak; pl_oge‘October NEWS OF INTEREST O A¢ st the home of the brideâ€"clect, ;, Mrs. Gg C. Tunnell of 61%1!& < Mr. and Mrs. Carlâ€"Keith and son‘s, &u and Eldridge, of Kenitworth, are gone to Yellowstone National Park, where they will spend several weeks touring. â€" They will go from there to the Yosemite. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Howe of. 455 Wainut avenue, Winnetka, anâ€" mounce the engagement" of their :fihfl, Mildred La Rue, to DPwight koder of Chicago, son of Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Yoder of Goshen, Ind. The wedding will take jplace in the late PART 2 Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Fisher of Wilâ€" â€" have ‘as their, guests Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fisher and twin daughâ€" gvlmh ‘and Roberta, and son , of Los Angeles, Calif. ~Mr. and Mrs. Atthur H. Woogward, ©885 â€"Sheridan road, . Winnetka, and Miss Elearior Woodward, ther daughâ€" ter, are at th; Woodward. summer o home, a most _ delightful place: at Champion, Wis. | Miss Woodward en: *Aertained 4 rather large house party y‘Te past week. Among the n:uutl ‘were Migs Dorothy Pickard & Miss Margaret Scott of Evanston, Miss ;2’ Ann Patterson of Indianapoli® . 808 a few eastern friends. . J & $ H Wott PV PWR EOOE CGIEC :éfi Mrs. Charles E. Purdy and Miss ;"Mi"’ [Purdy of Mimneapolis, who akte Mrs. Purdy‘s house guests for me time. Assisting Mrs.’LPufdy _Were Mrs. George H, Miller, Mré. Paul « Mrs. Emmions Blaine, Jr., and her amail daughter, 960 Sheridan road, have spent a delightful summer at a «amp on the upper St. Regis lake. She i mow at the Stevens‘ house, Lake Placid, on a trip through the mounâ€" ‘‘Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Fatch of Wilâ€" fi:'n back from ten days atâ€"Lake j spent at t;; Kome of Mr. and iMrs. Arthur Southworth. | / I tains. She will return to the village ih the early autumn. 1 f ‘*The bride and bridegroom are T€â€" siling temporarily with Mr. Edwards‘ %’t’.k Dorothy Beflnefi,r daughter of ?:duxn 3' A. Bennett of Kenilâ€" t@pending a fortnight in the â€" Sast, where she is attending several * Wednesday evening of this week was the occasion of the marriage of Miss Beatrice: Andrews, daughter of William Andrews of Hubbard Woods, 40 Fred Edwards, son of Mr. and Mys. William Edwards of 372 Hazel aveâ€" Ru#, Glencoe. , The ceremony was petâ€" formed by the‘ Rev. William B. Leach, ‘at his hom&clk Green Bay:road. Miss Catherime $chmitt and Harold Clavey Were the only. attendants. _ Â¥1 oR _ Mrs. Stewart W. Purdy .of, 716 :; Greenwoofl atenue, Glencoe, entertdinâ€" L‘ Friday afternoon ifrom 3 until, 5 ~Welock at a:tea at her home in honot Wallace Renoids Condict of Glencoe, announces the marriage of his daughâ€" tet Catherine to Lloyd Deming Yates, which took place Aug: 2%0 Miss Kathâ€" #tine Howard of New York attended Â¥te bride and Edgar Arnold Hill of “eoe was best man. > ~IHt lane, Glencoe, a* leaying Septemâ€" tE 3, to motor to Redfeather Lodge, "By fot a week‘s rest. * / anmd Mrs. Samue} Clark of Ful+ parties in the vichnity of New North Shore Society A \The \ _ Miss Betty Rice and Miss Gertrude | Ingersoll ‘of Wilmette entertained. at i bridge at the home.of the former this | week for Missâ€"Mildred Vosner of Butâ€" ; falo, and: Miss Dorothy McKee of | Pittsburg, who are guests of the girls. â€" Mr. and Mrs. @ome Haskins and Mr. and Mrs. George Chapman of Winnetka and )z and Mrs.. J. V. Rathbone of Kenilworth, were weekâ€" end guests of Moltdandp Mrs. L. P. Zinke of 375 Woodlawn avenue, at their summer homé, "Tarryâ€"Aâ€"Whyle" on Lake Winnebago. : . .. Mrs. Herman Beardsley Butler of Winnetka has isgued <invitations to a dancing party at her home, Hillrise, on S'afilrday“eveng\g: following Elizaâ€" beth Copeland‘s mavriage to Mr. Paul MacClintock . at, Clirist church at 5 o‘clock. ~There will be a‘ reception in the gardens of the William C. Boyâ€" den home following the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Chester F. ‘Sargent and their children, 214 Ridge avenue, returned this week to Winnetka after two months spent./at the Lake Placid club in New York. ; Mrs. Archibald Lynne: and little daughter, Gertrude, of 143 Fuller lane, Winnetka, are ;ending_this week as guests of frien#s at Lacdu Flambeau, Wis. Mr. Lynne will join them before their return. i)h. and Mrs. (Paepcke (Elizabeth Nitz@) are back from Estes park and will be in Lake Forest for the rest of the season. ; } A bunny. day will find guests from Chicago and the north shore gathering in the house and garden of Mrs. Edgar Foster Alden of :352 Linden avenue, Winnetka, at 1 o‘clock today for the luncheon and benefit card party given by the garden committee of the; Illiâ€" nois Women‘s Athletic : club .at the home of its chaitman. Tables will be arranged for bridge, bunco. and five hundred, entertainment will be providâ€" ed for those who do not play cards, and motion pictures will be ‘taken durâ€" ing the afternoon. Announcement‘iis madé of the reâ€" cent marriage of Miss Dorothy Elizaâ€" beth Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Charles E. Miller of Chicago, to Barâ€" nette Edgar Hamrick, son of Mr. and. Mrs. A. W. Mitchéll of Hubbard Woods,‘ which toqk;place at the Lady chapel of St. Lulse‘s Epis¢opal church in Evanston. The bridegroom was A member of the 1924 graduating class at Northwestern university, and the bride also was a student at the same Mrs. Clyde .E. Ustick and her fAaughter, Marguerite, returned Monâ€" day to th¢eir home at 665 Bluff street, \Glencoe, from Annisquam, Gloucester, Mass., where they ‘have been spendâ€" ing the simmer. Mr, Ustick returned to Glencoe from the summer resort some time ago. t t d institution A number of Winnetkans as guestâ€" members, are keenly interested in the“‘ Fox Hunt school to be conducted : at ‘Onwentsia, Beginners ‘and â€" children will be given the opportunity to learn the etiquette of‘ the fox hunt when the Onwentsiaâ€" club. inaugurates its biâ€"weekly pony. drags early in Sepâ€" tember. These events will be _conducted in the same manner |as the regular hunts, with the ‘exception that the jumps will be low, the pace easy, and the course shorter. The pony drag also will permit |,one to school a \"green" or timid _ horse. Austin H. Niblack of Lake Forest is master of the hounds. id J Mr. and Mrg. Fred Jehs, Jr., of Jefferson Park, announce the birth of a son, Raymond Frederick, Augâ€" ust 24. Mrs. Jehs is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Edwards of Hubbard Woods. A | ; \, (owmme 100C + is ‘ New Triee High school football men will be the guests of the alumni of the 'Univer;lty of |TMlinois Thursâ€" day, Septémber 3, at a banqguet to be held at the Hotel Sherman .in the Louig XVI room. 4 The famous Red Grange and Coach Zuppke will be the princival speakâ€" ers and the digcussions will bear upâ€" on the latest : football | < regulations. Wharton, Clay, Fritz Warner, Howâ€" ard Bent and Elmer . Stults will be ttbe hosts to the lceal prep eleven,. Mrs. W. V;‘ has as her moib("!'v hfifd’ Beverly Hills ‘DeBefard of Wilmette est for some time her F. J. Emmons of the hotel ‘at ‘Beverly Hills. cmcégo BECOMING _ _ HoOW PLACE OF WEST Public | Parks, Buildings . nui © Boulevards Shaping City | Beautiful of Future â€" _ â€"| The dfv(elopment of the park sys tem | of| the © Lake .Front: of Chi cago continues to progress steadil t and (has ‘already ddvanced to such an . extent that, firstâ€"time visitors to the, city amazed at the great stretches | of park |and boulevard which the city | offers f'&r their enjoyment, | With the opminz‘[of the new South Parkwa: skirting the eastern gide of the A Institute and â€"uponâ€" which; the .n Goodman Theatre: of the Institut 5 opens, the way is clear to penetrate ) comfortably and quickly into ‘:}; } ujlous 5! Side . district and pass down the beautiful Drexel and Grand| boulevards into the great park sysâ€". tem of the south side. That Ctdca 6| is in a state of evolution which will witness )her emergence at no distant day into one of the world‘s conspicu[-‘ ously béautiful cities, no one fmimf ‘with its present development | doubt. Elex: citizens, alive to the valu'Pi of béauty, not only in a commercial but a moral sense, unhesitatingly vo bonds for these impquemm. as witâ€" ness: of voting of $5,000, for } i rehabilitation of theâ€"Fine Arts Buil ing in Jackson Park and the jvotin of $2,000,000 for the beautification . ! the north shore from Grace street . | Montroge avenue.. Chicago, therefore, is in the midst of an area of conâ€" structive improvement wherein a mgui- imum of attention is paid tq physicgl Ibeautyu‘ It has &lways been‘a. quesâ€" tion as to just show much influence a city with great physical charm upon the moral fibre of its inhabiâ€" tants, but that it has considerable inâ€" HIGH fluence for good cannot be denied.cu; is up dn the: inhabitants of that cit SPECIAL SCHOOL FOR. . || â€" | _ CHIEFS OF POLICE Indications are that at. least 200 chiefs of police of the United States and‘ danada will attend the sperial school to <‘be, started for them: next summer at Northwestern university if present: plans of the ntrfiz)rpe:p'q tos committee are realized.‘ Morgan tA Collin, chief of police of‘Chicagq,lis chairman of the committee and‘ is working with his fellow mentbers |to make (the "chief‘s school" a real sucâ€" univel officia mittes follow Chief Chief I“.: ( Chief Winn CRYSTAL LAKE PLANS ; | [ _ "FOR $100,000 MOVIE Crystal Lake, which has witnesged a remarkable growth the past two or three‘ years, has been sclected as the location . of a new . $100,000 _movie theatre. The building will be 72 ii:t wide, 132 feet deep and about 80 feet high, with a seating ‘q‘apaclil:‘r of ll,‘: Mn s o o on o en nds o in d T 009. The building will be %dusgtd in ‘Spanish style, and will contain two store| rooms in addition to the main algditl)flum and ba!cogf. The bu’il‘ will te1rected by a, Chicago diâ€" cate headed by Fred C: Dierking. | 6x« |Mr. and Mrs, ‘H. L.‘ Street, 592 Slwr*dan xoad, : Winnetka, | among those injured in‘ 00113:”!«{ of tourist Ml trains, near th}f&}le mountain station |of |Granâ€" ite, Colo., just ‘west ‘:; Buena }vm‘: Aut?st 20. Mr. Street suffered a sprained ankle and ri:tis i.Sm a \wrgnched. back as a ret!}t of the acciâ€" ‘dent, With the Streets were | ‘their ‘four daughters, who were ing fromi a prolonged vnéation;';:: at ‘Diamond G Ranch, Wyoming: and dt "Yellowstone National park. â€" â€"||â€"‘ Coâ€"operation by Northwestarn:‘ sity. has been. promis¢d, it is Iy amnnounced. â€" Upon the comâ€" with Chairman Collins are the ing well khown chiefs df poli¢e: H. E. French, Qolumbus,‘@h;;: W. A. Wiltbérger, Evanston, ‘hief Lee Heath, Los ymgp;:s;' â€"Constable Chris‘ H. <Newton, peg.) Canadas o) 50| * PARK, ILLINOIS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1925 e is CCR oe P $ y of |1,â€" [ (Of lesgigned | [Rplp tain two | BV all he | j fni nds building | [Bruc 0 § di""‘ £ dng‘. | _"" rect, 592 J § a, : were ‘| w colligion |125.0 ns ar i hid |Granâ€" |[PS a [Vista, | g 1* :fl‘:::'d a|{men Street a ) the are the| Gept j pol‘ibec i n & Ohfo.:_ it C mmwn.l [ 1 ngeles; | f Newton, | l-fl B ! u: { | . | ward 3 (a E },"" Dt o P . y || B _ U sys~ | ',‘: C349 3 chfews : adily | C% nrxd h a, /. Contests ke PBR O ce 00 00 Nok o. ie ies tmés;‘ed'i i) every game ¢hg}uz tfioébr": ce ‘did he require ti as “hel Fas in the Towa pame. moyie | Wwhen he was knopl:;d is 79 feet | Opponents danded on hi 20 foct | had recovaired a fumble . of 1, [ |Other vetérapns who edig‘Le_d Iph "Moor": Baker,, ain t}wpl /ally ‘Seide! @and. Ba e 'zzt\i\: ndse;.â€" and | Bob . Joh soil, \Bruce, tatkles. â€" dty | tÂ¥ ) _ C 0 VAY>i > Evanston, I Ag“v' gity‘s : foot! i ghes i tute / thik fall, oned m;el’ n in the phnd | thed .two sc i the visiting~ T "'ngff i New Orl ;ygh % Uniyg 31 alon on ta.n 1y ‘nn:i-â€";iT'.b An i d e > amEs on srage FIELD h the next Saturday, October 24, arlgther trip will be: made to Stagg "E this time to take.on Tulane uniâ€" vergity, â€" the only . hersecgiml game on the purple schei T.llev this seaâ€" son . Tulane comes north with an enâ€" vihble récord d'tlain.ed ‘\in . southern fdapball cireles a "is\ exnected to give thd Northwestern gridders a. tough agffignment.} )| l9 loml 1( )s { © Indiana will He met October 31 at FEyanston. This will be| homecoming \for the purple and a large crowd I1 be on hand to see‘ the eami in its \ohke home conference game of the seaâ€" '{\u. The game with the Wolverines A§I] be one of the‘outstanding contests ‘‘the pturple schedule this year and i expected to fill the great stadium Chicago‘s lake front. The Purdue, wnr‘ne at Lafayette on qyember 14 willâ€"close the conference ::;u;on for Northwestet However, 11 another importarit game remains i. the schedule, and one which Coach ?tlethwaite’s boys are looking forâ€" d to ‘with considerable . expectaâ€" n. . That is the came with Notre vh .‘ Ralph, "Moen‘" Baker Returns _ A ‘squad of fifty men is expected to pnewér the call g«f\r firgt practice on eptember 15. this, number this‘ en are letter men from last year, led y Captain ; "Fichting" Tim Lowry. Lowry, coach Thistlethwaite has of the g@reatest centers developed [the conferent¢e, in yéars and it 6:1 round ‘this lanky l&d that the: for ward will be‘ built. . hsn |Durinw® two vears, of oonf:‘:fl competition Lowry: has |never. misse a‘ single @innte?qlav: He bl: bde.fi ‘\Waukegan‘s population / is put at ‘ 25.097 by| R. L. Polk,; |and company, hich has completed a survey pré. paratory to issuing a new city diâ€" rectory.. This figure is taken as ofâ€" icial by the city éngi :«departâ€". ent, and yaries only, slightly from the figure of 25,150 estimated Wopulation pecently: by City Enginegr «d Dollthit’- (H9: " $ 4 ‘ ¢ [ ‘The survey shows an increase ‘in pdpulation of about e,?»po;.sm 1926, rhen. the; government census, taken ev dechde, showed‘a" population of anston, Ill. ?â€"vaorth\mtern‘_ uni+ a:ey’é ,f"[ thall team will journe 1 ge‘ to s&z field on the Midway Lfall, once to meet Cgoach Stagg‘s en in the annual game veen cago and | Michi! ontestants; Thist] Will Have Jack R ; ~Steger A'sdisd me to be played at. South Bend ivember 21. . Last season the purple ve Coach Rockne‘s frmous: eleven JAUKEGAN POPULATION __ ~_â€" REACHES 25,000 MARK he University.. of )llichignn»'y'rrm e to Chicago on November 7 to t the purple at Grant Park staâ€" Play Chicago oaw 12c c‘ ice the : Chicago contest is dw¢l iighlight : of: the: purple football n, Thistlethwaite | find it neeâ€" y to push his, meitat a rapid to have them in & this early Ar€ wbad td Ffihwai.te : an and ethwaite has rs developed ars and it is hat the forâ€" f â€" conferenc rnfler m!uo: ‘ He has been ut and only e out.. ‘That wo years ago, 1d" when two head after he 11 be back are tar halfback; ney. Mathews, son and Fred JC m Chief e it Sm on ‘f | they |show : in he * * |ig e ’h:r"‘fl %J xsl t were proceeding to Chicago, was goâ€" ing. south on Sheridan‘ road when the Ford ing, â€"without lights and in } of the Boulevard stop sign, Loue or on soim rthi nt a wrood rate of |speed directly in the path of Ann "Lake c patroln thorgu; or in lfv'us c the . n makes â€" nois, a‘ ed, . the \law .',r;ppjliu only to motor: vehicles, the state apparently. asgumâ€". ing t fibonulqtobeeominguthd‘l' f in the gural di:::ztl or :are too slow movigg to be deemed worthy of ,don-l sideration in the effort to lessen acciâ€" dents. |\ f Es ‘The law applies to all of the smaller cities where the hard roads extending through the corporate limits were | paid for by the state, ?he statute is strengthened â€" further by the law rwhich vests control and regâ€" ulatio traffic on city, town or ‘vilâ€" lage streets, paved by the state, in the h y ‘department. 3 There are a number of smaller comâ€" mun| in Lake county which are aff. by"the new law. â€" Motorists as ‘a rule, have not become accustomed mun : aff D as‘a rule, to absery and ‘gever fore they U e 4 to observing these | boulevard stops and geveral arrex may be made be« fore they learn of the existence of the new law:! es b+ nexy w t 2i cs 1 B HOB ke dounty from Springfield that troimen of the state highway \deâ€" rtment are commencing to enforce e: new ‘law which automaticalls ikes mbond-iuue roads of THiâ€" is, a‘ boulevard stop for motor ve: cles roaching from intersecting orgughfares, whether in the country in city streets where the pavement is cphstructed by the state. â€"_.* For gome reason not as yet explainâ€" // â€" IN CRASH AT POST kanl Rams Ford Which Fails to pbserve Stop Sign In , â€" |Fort Sheridan 3A id FMUST-STOP Ne td _‘ AT STATE ROADS IRTH SHORE . _ ts occupants injured: when a ‘touring car and the Ford the intersection ‘of Old ‘Elm Sheridan poad in Fort Sheriâ€" lky: night[}% a=.liâ€"jm. 4010005 ackard, in ‘which J. W. O‘Bryâ€" family of Lawrence, Kansgas, d car demolished ‘and a nymâ€" %MERGES FROM WRECK WITH A YAWN ads Boulevard Stops; \ ~~. Penalty incement has ‘been received in i: if the folks will pay their with the same ‘enthusimam| that ghow : in hollering: for m{m juntry willbe prosperous. || . | 19¢ P hercb THE RADIO CLE 8 KILL AT 100 MILES MAN LIVES, LONGER MAUSOLEUMâ€"AXD TRIPLETS a miracle as the miracle of the radio. And no man living knows what radioâ€" destined to do. for education \. | rnh-o'dp rtened * men‘s ~and .t&l’:nph&â€"_sbnmfl m g messages, so radio moving pictures will make shorter by more thain nineâ€"tenths the jourâ€" along the tiresome road of know!l= tifted Pac; qusfiq;;vifia his own " Later, when he starts filying, Macâ€" Milhnwiflbeablatodbmerqu'nâ€" tions by radio while in flight. _ . ~‘If men can do that now, how soom will: they talk the ether, to ‘those cosmic machines,, the \ planets, floating in space* § No static or 0 trouble présumâ€" ably, once you get outside this earth‘s ‘mtmosphere, only about 500 :miles \‘An invengion from «New â€" Z@ lflldlhi;mbfim thmrhthea' in torpedoes guided by wireless. ‘ air torpedoes operate. as do waterâ€" tleships at sea, it i. ‘And: the New Zealand: air torpede can b.‘.hf“:h.d mim:“;h enemy, fiiflt MOI’ mh‘â€" dir’fll‘mil:o' away and wreck th¢t obâ€" â€" In the State of New York the averâ€" age age has rig: from twentyâ€"{four years in 1840 thirty . years now. means that common sense, sciâ€" ence and good doctors have added six years to the average life of every wvidnll.' y “ x Sect © against "Hdl_' i it is steered by invention and be ready with it. ty *h ue 120 Te t io. Cl ie ces s age life of man is increasing. .\ Every year saved in udultml:h means an<increase â€"in. the, nmation‘s wealth. It costs money to bring up children, as well as effort and anxieâ€" EARNING period. Bmmthe-vm‘ rage adult‘s work is worth to this nation $10 a day, and that‘s a low estimate, . You can figure out for yourself how much it means in money to add six years to every adult‘s life, Cut the $10 to $5. : Cut that amount: in half to allow for women and othâ€" ers not working, and you still have a pfiu.dnimudmdfivm to the tune of seventyâ€"five millions of dollars a year. |. es +3k ~Ours is a civilization of interesting contrasts. For. instance â€" consider the father who lives in two whiteâ€" washed roqhs‘h Jersey City. Out of work, he was worrying about feeding seven children when : the neighbor, called in "to help his wife," announced triplets,â€" making the number of his whiteâ€"washed walls, but a fine mis ~â€""When chupches ask, "Why are we not crowded?" one answer might be, "Because, while mothers of ‘children MacMillan, 3,700 miles away in the The United States should get that The" motto ‘of this dountry shoold t 34 f Be friendly. with the whole world. _ > Be READY for the whole world. ,â€" * All over the United States the averâ€" The years are added in the MONEY PART 2 | NUMBER 27 mt t 49 Nn E

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