Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 5 Nov 1925, p. 3

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* 700 Deerfield Ave. 20¢ ; 2 lbs. ) have served owers. . Our vhy not come sem the ages of 7 and 14 ged for. Inquire at Witten :30 a‘clock, or communicate Loan Dept. entâ€"Loansâ€"Insurance t., Chicago Evanston L I N G I N G T N G ore at 700 Deerfield [ovember 7 ve Advice CIVE YOU BETTER R PRICES THAN EWHERE i & Son fialists URSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1925 Park and other ges _ I BROS. EGETABLES WEE K ~Highland Park £L OF DANCING vard, Chigeago ries and Olive Oil â€" _ Res. Phone 685 NDUCTED BY ing O LOAN yson, Sheridan Road NTEED 35¢â€"40¢ $1.80 $1.80 Inc. The modern girl doesn‘t have her hands in the dishwater much, but she is not afraid of getting them into the automobile oil. As for the Pied Piper of Hamelin, everybody knows that, animals are responsible for the entire story, and as the procession of rats becomes a stampede and a rat riot, the wonder grows as to where so many could have been found in all the world. But the Pier Piper promised the Burgoâ€" master the pests should go, and if you happen to see a straggler or two clinging precariously to the pier or to a door, have no fear. The Pied Piper is supreme and none escape. The afternoon performance will be at 4 o‘clock and the evening at 8:30. Reserved and numbered seats may be obtained from Mrs. Carl Bingham, Highland Park $4, between 8 and 9 Moses may have been a very meek man, but he couldn‘t have looked half as meek as the average citizen when being bawled out by the traffic cop. "Treasure Island" includes a lively disagreement on board the pirate ship. A dog and a cat on the same craft make things interesting for each other, as well as those who see their antics and their disagreements. Dumb animal life on the island where the pirate crew finally landed is suffiâ€" cient for the most critical. With "Treasure Island" as the eveâ€" ning offering, and "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" with shorter novelties for afternoon, it is felt certain that the most captious will be pleased with the entertainment, whether they be six years old or sixty. One doesn‘t have to be in either their first or second childhood to enjoy the Marâ€" ionettesâ€"so much may be stated for the comfort of those adults who are afraid that puppets might be "infra dig." ‘ The Highland Park Woman‘s club wil bring the Marionettes to the Elm Place school auditorium on the afterâ€" noon and evening of December 1. Tony Sarg‘s Marionettes to Give "Pied Piper of Hamelin‘, and "Treasure Island" PRESENT PLAYS DEC. 1 i AT ELM PLACE, SCHOOL The program committee is comâ€" posed of Edwin Gilroy. ‘14, president of the alumni association, Arthur Olson‘19, Hazel Bell ‘14, Wm. Wrenn ‘05, Leslie Schauffler ‘14 and Robert Pease. The program after the dinner will last about one hour and one quarter. Three speeches of about ten minutes each will be given. Cheers and songs will punctuate the eating. The footâ€" ball boys will be present as guests of honor. Dancing will follow. /pearance. This will consist of mashed potatoes, chicken patties, â€" string beans, salad, ice cream, cake and coffee. In the lunch room at 6:830 dinner will be served. A business meeting will be held before this happens. After being cheered up by a pretty cocktail the regular menu will make its apâ€" The D. G. A. will have charge of decorating the field for the big game, and something unique in the way of appropriate adornment is being planâ€" ned. The girls will sell balloons to be turned loose when Deerfield scores its first touchdown. Hot dogs, candy, peanuts, etc., also will be sold to help defray expense of decorations. Dinner at FSCJ ..... ... .22 222 00 H. $. Band to Play . The high school band will furnish music for the game under the direcâ€" tion of Mr. Bolle. Special space will be reserved for the band and Deerâ€" field students, and a score of ushers will be on hand to direct them where to go. La Grange so far this season has lost one game and tied another in the Suburban series. They held Bloom to a 7 to O‘score in an uphill battle and tied the husky Thornton team. In previous years they have also had good teams, and the last time they met Deerfleld, La Grange carried off the honors, 19 to 7. Football Game The football game commences at 2:00 p. m. La Grange'hu a strong team, but Deerfleld has a better one, and an exciting game is promised. The afternoon feature will be the football game between Deerfield and La Grange. A dinner for the alumni, faculty, seniors and football team will be served at 6:30 with suitable program in connection and dancing will follow. Harding‘s orchestra will furnish music for the program and dancing. * +000 Everything is in readiness for the sixth annual home coming at Deerâ€" fieldâ€"Shields high school, and there is every indication that this year‘s gathering of alumni and friends of the school will exceed â€" all previous records, as each year the attendance has been increasing â€"and. interest seems greater. ; AT D. ‘ S. HIGH Annual Reunion of Alumni Satâ€" urday; Football Game Big EVERYTHING READY _ FOR. HOMEâ€"COMIN or 6 and 7 p. m. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1925 Feature In Afternoon; B :Ew ~avall w Buy Christmas Gifts Now at Prices You Cannot Duplicate in December fir@}l e f "It is not to be understood that every privately owned utility is more efficient, more economical, more proâ€" gressive and provides better service than any publicly owned plant. It would be going too far to say that _ "But today conditions have changed in both of these respects. The coming of giant power is bringing it about that almost any community can obâ€" tain electric service without the necessity of resorting to municipal operation. And in most of our states we have established utility commisâ€" sions or beards, such as the Indiana Utilities Commission, vested â€" with wide powers of regulation and conâ€" trol over‘the rates, service, securities, plant, equipment and facilities of pubâ€" lic utilities; This power to control is flexible and adjustable. The commisâ€" sion may from time to time‘ issue new orders or decisions regardinz‘ these matters, as necessary in order to meet changing conditions. If the rates are regarded as too high, if the service or facilities are thought to be inadequate, the matter may always be referred to _ the . commission. Prompt and impartial consideration is provided. The â€" commission is clothed with full power to order such changes as are necessary to promote the public convenience.â€" The estabâ€" lishment of adequate machinery for regulation and control, through pubâ€" lic utility commissions, has substanâ€" tially weakened the demand for pubâ€" lic ownership of utilities. "The ‘conditions responsible for the municipal ownership movement in the United States have to a considâ€" erable extent disappeared, or:are in process of doing so. One Factor . "Doubtless one of the most imâ€" portant factors responsible for the municipal ownership movement has been the existence of many â€" small communities in which private corâ€" porations did not care to undertake the service because it did not appear profitable. In ‘most states there are a goodly number of municipally operated electric plants which owe their existence to such a condition. Also, the abuses and evils which were due to unenlightened management of certain utility companies were strong factors in creating the demand for public ownership. Burley & Company CHINA â€" CRYSTALâ€" LAMPS â€" ANTIQUES Seven North Wabash Avenus the commission haye been disappointâ€" ing. Neverâ€"theâ€"less, viewed purely as a form of government machinery, there can be no doubt that they have proved the most effective machinery thus far devisedâ€"much superior to detailed control by legislative bodies, state le‘gislatures, city councils, etc. Not Above Suspicion "Not all of the state utility comâ€" missions have been above criticism, and in some cases the appointments to This is the Month of Our 87th Anniversary Sale Despite the failure here and there of privately owned niunicipal utiliâ€" ties to function satisfactorily, Dean Ralph E. Heilman, head of Northâ€" western University School of Comâ€" merce, told members of the Indiana State Teachers‘ Association in session at _ Indianapolis, that privately owned companies, supervised by state utility commissions, are to be preâ€" ferred to publicly owned and operated utilities. Dr. Heilman has made a special study of public utility ownerâ€" ship, operation and control and is of the firm opinion, he said, that state utility commissions have proven "the most effective governmental machinâ€" ery thus far established for the reguâ€" lation of public utilities." Dr. Heilâ€" man‘s topic was "Government and Business" and he followed the theme in this way: Interesting Discussion b Heilman Before Ind MAKE COMP A RTIS O N Teachers on Public P OPTOR tefot P erinn d ib ameninint dber. Alrins.otnis xc tion. Certainly if we not able to administer the fmachit:ery and laws that. we now have for regulation ‘and control, or to improve them if necesâ€" sary, we are not justified in assuming the burdens of ownership and manâ€" agement, which would prove infinitely more intricate and difficult.‘" 4 "If we do not regard our machinery or laws for the regulation of busiâ€" ness as adequate, we can change or improve them, at any time, by legislaâ€" 7 PubeniV SE EDt SpLatal o operated utilities. Certainly | public ownership at its best is better than private ownership at its worst. But political conditions are seldom favorâ€" able for the operation of ‘public. ownâ€" ership at its best; whereas under present methods "of â€" regulation and control, the evils of private ownerâ€" ship are rapidly disappearing. / J . â€" FPOR DRY CLEANING & DYEING RUG CLEANING & CURTAIN The Phoenix, Kranit and Burlington lines contribute their best numbers to this collection of fine hosiery. All the popular shades are found, including fawn, camel, airedale, jackrabbit, beaver, biege and black. The values are splendid at whatever price you‘wish to pay. Dr. Denton‘s Softâ€"Knit Sleet{)ing Garments, made of héw, clean, highâ€"grade unbleached cotton with a little naturalâ€"colored, very fine wool, carry off all fiixc'spiration, keeping the body dry and warm. Sizes 0 to 5; open down the back. Sizes 6 to 14; open down front. 3 $ , & j e es & ' Accordingly From $1.10 to $2.75 â€"Pinpoint â€"â€"Velour «_ STRETCHING _ THE RELIABLE LAUNDRY PHONES 178â€"179 ‘ A November Selling of â€" > Smart New Coatsâ€" at Tempting Prices . $29,.50 to $89.50 ‘ THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS Dr. Denton‘s Sleeping Garments â€" _‘ Nizes 0 to 14 years mds Fabrics are the Finest and Practically all Coats are Elaborately Fur Trimmed Every coat has been lowered in price for this selling, thus affording an opportunity for a saving decidedly unusual. Then, too, there is a definite satisfaction in choosing a coat here since their practical qualities aré as marked as their beauty and becomingness. _ Black and Many New Shades are Shown â€"Fourisuede â€"Bolivia ‘ â€"â€"Lustrosa FABRICS Silk and Wool Hosiery GARNET T â€"S Fo;- Women $1.00 to $2.25 “Thefirstnhn,“kphrinctluuppot 'nir," deals in a popular mnr:r with the scientific side of upperâ€"a robserâ€" vation work. <It depicts flights by Weather Bureau meteorologists | in airplanes, dirigible balloons, and free _balloons in the study of upperâ€"air conâ€" \ditions for weather forecasting. An airplane flight above the | _ & dirigible journey in the ne od. of St, Louis,. the beginning and t end of a free balloon flight, the mk-j ing of "dust counts" high above the earth‘s«surface are among the : strikâ€" ing scenes. + Three days after the scenes w?; photographed, Lieut, James T. Neely, of the Army Air Service, and Dr. C. Two new motion pieturufim';ro leased by the United States Departâ€" ment of Agriculture show the upperâ€" air observation work being conducted by ‘the Weather Bureau, and one of them gives incidentally a review of iniportant . American aeronautical activities. is\ vte ’ j Department of Agriculture Has MOTION PICTURES To _ _ SHOW AIR EXPLORING â€"Fox â€"â€"Beaver Forecasting The good quality of the materials and the careful tailoring, to meet the demands of disâ€" criminating women, suggest these robes for gift giving and the experienced shopper will make her ichoice while assortments are so extensive. "Prices are very reasonable. Pretty N ew Corduroy Blani New colors and effective combinations mark this collection of bathrobes for women deâ€" cidedly outsofâ€"theâ€"ordinary. The new puffed sleeve and collar effect is a pleasing feature. â€"Fitch A Splendid Gift Suggestion â€"â€"Mandel thi _ and Silk $3.75 to $18.50 great Na mwâ€"' oah and mail planes from New Ym:i::s.a Francisco, the detection of forest fires ‘by airplanes, and the "dusting" of cotton and other crops as protection lllinttinuctl'. The film closes with the statement: " ‘Fifty years from now we‘ll all be flying,‘ is a frequent phophecy. If so, the . Weather g:r«:;mtg:um‘ its present ns, be ready to bebmfiwfl:.nfirbdetorm" j fliights by Army airplanes and dirigiâ€" ble b'r"m N::i’ seaplanes, the kites ‘and "pilot" balloons, the asâ€" sembling of the information ‘at foreâ€" cast ‘centers, and the distribution of "fAying weather" forecasts from these centers, But first the film shows the need for the forecasts by means of a succession of pictures which conâ€" stitute a fairly complete review of American “aojt;na;tigl. s I-t“;;k; Leroy Meigsinger, of the Weather Bureau, who in the scenes, left IWMQWM:-W mmlmfly a static The second "Watching the mthorabm”t:lhl:'w-thedlibm of Mn:'mdr observations at numerous stations by means of large Cloth No, 5202 _ _ ~_~ s2%5 Set Linen oreteds Each p a c k a g e contains stamped articles, fast color parel for women and chilâ€" dren, all stamped on finest quality materials. giving and there is a wealth of ideas in this showing »of Priscilia Package â€" Goods â€" decorative articles for the home, various pieces of apâ€" Easily Embroidered for those who prefer to give handâ€"made It is not a day too early to Package Outfit â€" Bucilla between 2).--,lndlp;va“? all day Saturdays and Sundays, nence by the National Real Journal and the Celotex and which the Public Service of Northern Illinois has chosen : ie onstrate the modern â€"lavor electrical devices for the TL New [ 18 t 64 pt

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