Ti . L2d Canee W TB 0 l t it is the achievement of a life time. A"o"!ll“““fhl‘lhqb‘ growth, gradual but certain and steady growth in nobleness of mind and purpose and in the Godly quality be the richer and happier for the right use of your Sunday morning. To meet with others and face with them frankly and honestly the probâ€" lem of successful Christian living 7 days in the week, this to thoughtâ€" ful people has ever proven a helpful way of spending an hour or two on Sunday morning. Christian character, to be sure, is not the achievement of an odd Sunâ€" day or of a month of Sundasys, but it is the achievement of a life time. Morning worship at 10:30. Serâ€" mon by the pastor. In planning your Sunday allow for this hour of worâ€" shin and praver and for Christian fellowship. Your whole week may Green Bay road and Homewood av. Rev. K. A. Roth, pastor. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Singâ€" ing, worship, Bible study and studies in Christian living. Classes for all ageâ€"groups. We are always glad to receive new pupils into our school. Parents who live in this neighborhood and whose children do not attend Sunday School olsewhe‘re are urged to send their children to our school. Tuesdayâ€" Wa Snend Less on Entertainment. Than Others Do?" Mondayâ€" 3:45 Weekâ€"day religious education clas« for children of the fifth 4:00 Camp Fire Girls. Saturdayâ€" 10:00 Hike for the two Camp Fire grouns to the County Line road and a picnic dinnér with Mrs. Charles I. Brooks. 4:00 Rehearsal of giris‘ choir. All members are urged to be present on time. . Sundavâ€" 945 (Church school. | + H. P. PRESBYTERIAN Let us hope there are few of us innocent enough to believe that the only way to answer is to reduce the tariff, and turn over to our foreign competitors the biggest and best market in the whole world. M But in the face of rubber, coffee, nitrate and other monopolies, with an international iron and steel trust in the offing, even the most ardent free trader must begin to see that there is something wrong with his picture. The foreign producer is no longer a merâ€" eantile philanthropist seeking to help our poor consumers, if he ever was, which is doubtful, to say the least. He is now girding up hig loins and going to the front with the battle cry "hold up Uncle Sam, he‘s got the money." 3:45 Weekâ€"dav religious education class for children of the "Bixth The free traders would work themselves into the frame of mind where they believed that the wicked American trusts, protected by the iniquitous tariff, were robbing the American people, while the pure gallant, honest European producers were only waiting to scale the walls and rescue us. 9:45 Next Sunday the Adult class invites you to hear Dr. A. A. Pfanatichl on "The Struggle of the Dutch Burghers for Indeâ€" mendence: Religion and Politics." 1]:N Mornine worshin. The Rev. Frank Fitt will preach. 6:00 Young People‘s Society supper meetinge. Georgee Hutchinson. Jr., will l=ad the discussion on "Can 2 9‘ The Higbland Park Press This news of an international combination, which will of course have the same economic effect as a regular merger, coming as it does on the heels of our unpleasant experiences with the internaâ€" tional rubber trust, shows how far we have travelled from the old days, when it was argued in all seriousness byâ€" free traders, that in braer to reduce the cost of living at home without upâ€" setting economic conditions we had to ta.h?fl’- the tariff, and enâ€" tj)oy the benefits which the importation of European goods would ring us. The trust, it is said, will not take the form of a merger but will consist of a number of agreements for eliminating "destrucâ€" tiveâ€"competition" by regulating the output and proportioning the business among the various competitors. This, it is admitted, acâ€" cording to the National Republic, will eventually result in higher prices to the consumer. « WORLD MONOPOLIES ; The newspapers of late have been full of :stories of the organâ€" ization of an international iron and steel monopoly.. This combiâ€" nation, originating in France and Germany, is said to be taking in more territory until it threatens to become worldâ€"wide. +9. eigchth grades. :00 Church Night program. "The Portreit of Christ in Mark‘s Gosnel" is the subject. The third of the series of nictures "A pilâ€" primage to Palestine" will be :45 Weekâ€"day religious education Entered as Second Class matter March 1, 1911, at the post office at Highland Park, Iilinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879. ¢ 4 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926 9:00 a. m.â€"7:30 p. m. Fiftyâ€"sixth anâ€" nual convention of the Lake County Sunday School associaâ€" tion. Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes will speak at the evening service tanight. PAGE TWO clase for 30 The Presbyterian Guild will meet at the home of Mrs. E. T. Murfey, 6456 S. St. Johns ave Published weekly by The Udell Printing Co, at Highland Park, children of seventh and tackle their lessons the way the thoy'do the fellow with the ball, they will 1:40 p. m. Evening service. The Christ of the Indian Road. Tuesday, Oct. 26â€"The Woman‘s Foreign Missionary Society will meet with Mrs. W. K. Hout, Deerfleld, TIl. W:dn:day. Oct. 27, 8 p. m. Midâ€" 1+ GRACE M. E. CHURCH Wm. B. Doble, minister Sunday, Oct. 24â€" 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10:45 a. m. Morning worship. Enâ€" largement of Life. â€" The Church School at 9:30. Matins and Sermon at 11:00. [ (The first Sunday in the month, and Festivals, for Communion). Evensong at 5:00. day from nine in the morning until six in the evening and on Sunday afâ€" ternoon from 2:30 to 5:30. The reading room is also open for oneâ€" half hour following the Wednesday evening meeting. Highland Park, I!l., 381 Hazel aveâ€" nue, a branch of The Mother Church, ‘The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass., holds services every Sunday morning at 10:45 and on Wednesday evening at 8 p. m., when testimonies of Christian Science healâ€" ing are given. Sunday school meets at 9:30 a. m. and is open to pupils under the age of twenty. f Subject for next Sunday‘s lesson: "Probation after Death." ' You are cordially invited to uukol use of the reading room, 361 Central avenue, which is open every wnkl The Rev. Peter C. Wolcott, meritus. Our Sunday services aim to be such a help. To worship God and to enrich and ennoble human lives; to provide something to live by for another week, ideals, purposes, worth while life objectives; to give direcâ€" tion to our thinking and longing and striving; to give inspiration and help for practical Christian living; to lift life above the dust of the earth, the sordid, dwarfing effect of low ideals and of materialism; to life our thots and our hopes, our desires and our goals at least for a little while to‘ those heights where we may lay hold: on new power and divine help for thel daily task; this is at least the purâ€" pose of Sunday services Why not | make it the rule to be in church regâ€"| ularly on Sunday mornings? l N?w â€"if" fl_:e college of our daily life and conduct. Every influence for good, every helpful means of enlarging our outlook upon life and our ability to live the finest sort of life is therefore an opportunâ€" ity that should not be passed up thotâ€" lessly or unheeded. 6:30 p. m. North avenue and Lauretta place Holy Communion at 7:30 First Church of Christ, something. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NUMBER 34 Too much political mudsl but most of it sticks to the h: those that throw it. $ This evening (Thursday) â€" dies‘ Aid are giving their ann and supper. West Central avenue. Rev. W. F. Suhr, pastor. German Service at 10:30 English Service at 11:00. ; Church School: Saturday “ Sundays, 9:8$ a.m. The Lessonâ€"Sermon also included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scripâ€" tures," by : Mary Baker Eddy: "If Truth is overcoming error in your daily walk and conversation, you can finally say, ‘I have fought a good fight . . . I have kept the faith‘ beâ€" cause you are a better man. This is having our part in the atâ€"oneâ€" ment with Truth and Love" (p. 21). _ Among the citations which comâ€" prised the Lessonâ€"Sermon was the following from the Bible: "He that ‘overcometh, the same shall} be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels. Beâ€" hald, I stand at the door, and knock; if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me, To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne" (Revelation 8:5. 20, 21). 1 ‘Doctrine of Atonement" was the subject of the Lessonâ€"Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, Sunday, October 17. 4 f The Golden Text was from Romans 5;1, "Being justified by faith, we have peace "with© God through our Lord Jesus Christ." THE HIGHLAND PARK‘ sn > Yss he Laâ€" ial sale Lingint. nds of PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS It is said that Michael a a good plasterer. And pm‘ it were alive now ht‘t‘:"" make mo lastering â€"regular scale thlrybepeonid mk.ing i;uu, | ‘ After studying the results of various primaries we are com to come to ‘the conclusion that results indicate at least one z o en ie tsnnd deplate Pinioicais deilh i2 o4 ® some of the candidates got more votes : Exâ€"Governor Jimmy Cox says our foreign debts are "usurious immoral." He must have dug those words from his 1920 cam Stairways offer a natâ€" O y, Chinchilla in blues, grems snd browns Juvenile Fine Kid Broadcloth or Mad: in Polo style with ear mufis. MADE of heavy warm Chinchilla with plaid or red wool lining and large pockets. In shades of brown, grey, blue and tan, Other Fine Chinchilla Coats, $16.50 to $35 Juvenile All Wool Overcoats, $12.50 to $30 Tots Genuine Camel‘s Hair Overcaat« «in M‘ ghade: :ft the definitely lower prices always assured here. If he‘s 3 years old, or older, you‘ll find his overcoat here. YOU’LL find the newest and smartest Juvenile Overcoats from this country and abroad right in our Evanston Shop. Not a few but the very cream of our tremendous downtown selection at OVERCOATS The Beautiful Chinchilla QOvercoat Sketched, $20 at _ for Ages 3 to 10 pmuine Camel‘s Hair Overmats, &6 ichilla Hats IittleTbtn’Sho‘es $295° |â€" . ‘t§gay _ Chinchilla .. If he wears size 81 to 1 :gveâ€mu. wm%*hmdm ile Fine Kid Gloves, $1.50 and $2 cloth or Madras Eton Blouses, $1.50 Finished complete at 12 cents per lb. for all flaty and 85 cents per Ib. for wearing apparel, soft shi etc. / This, you will find, is real economy.. The gi of our work is good and our service is ‘ 4 prompt. ‘Call Highland Park 178 and we will gladly s our driver for your work and return it to you hunderï¬d. ; © MODERN PLUMBING AND HEATING _ Estimates Cheerfully Given. â€" â€" Jobbinga M Dry Wash at 18 lbs. for $1.80 and 10 cents per ib. for all over 18 lbs. Flatwork nicely froned and the Bs 1 dried fluffy and soft. AeeLe h sc unc c ) t &2 Either Wet Wash at 25 lbs. for $1.25 and 5 cer Ib., for all over 25 lbs. All wash retumd damp;, to hang up or iron.. . #* frie y * $ RELIABLE LAUNDRY . 618 N. Green Bay Road "DRY CLEANERS AS WELL AS LAUND HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. Telephones 178â€"179 P The Finest MORAN BROTHERS . Let Us Do Your Fam Mb nsc Sir 4e PS 94 q4 4 F3