Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 16 Feb 1928, p. 19

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Katherine Blunt, Dr. Herman Bunâ€" . desen, Dr. W. A. Evans, Dr. Morris C Fishbein, Miss Julia Lathrop, Dr. Joâ€" ' soph B. DeLee, Dr. H. Douglas Singer, h &.I-Al.k.(hlul.ht #p Dr. Joseph Jastrow, Prof. John J. Morgan, Miss Flora Cooke. ’ Biennial Midwest Meeting at f Which Prominent Educators â€" K SCHOOL PLATOON PLAN By advertising and labeling merâ€" ADOPTED chandise for exactly its quality and £ IN 34 CITIES)| worth, one of the biggest New York : The piabeon plan of schol organâ€"| fashion in business and bas atremty, _ . iention as a cityâ€"wide policy has been| found it profitable. ntrendy i .4 aA +4 states, range in population from 2,â€" 500 to more than 100,000 and repreâ€" nent a total urbanm .pepalation of 6,â€" €00,000. In H of the cities every .‘ \ g...“-.-.b-:‘ platoon plan. These cities have a comâ€" ization as a cityâ€"wide policy has been adopted by school systems of 34 cities A20000, Sexs of PCConal Aindergarten college; Judge Mary Bartelme, Dr. Katherine Blunt, Dr. Herman Bunâ€" Adciph Schaar. Assisting in an adâ€" visory enpacity are: Miss Grace Abâ€" bott, children‘s bureau, U. S. Departâ€" ment of Labor; Miss Edna Dear Baker, head of National Kindergarten the Chicago Association for Child Study, in charge of arrangements for the conference. Other officers of the association are Mry, Harold B. Ickes, Florence Mateer, clinical psychologist, Columbus, Ohic; Dr. Bernard Glueck, New York; Dr. Herman Adler, direcâ€" tor Institute for Juvenile Research, Chicago; Dr. William Kilpatrick, Coâ€" lumbia university; Jane Addams, Dr. A. Eustace Hayden, University of Chicago; Dr. Wm. Healy, Baker founâ€" dation, Boston, Dr. Hazeld Rugy, Lh-i coln School of Teachers college, New tion, Yale niimfty; Dr. E. D. Starâ€" buck. director of Institute of Charac» ter lnufl:b. Uliv:r!uy_ of lowa; Dr. s what we mean by preparing for; forâ€"the most_part of a land and a ehr-!'dmh'-::t. Among u..fv-â€"l-b knew. and of. emotionsâ€" he local organizations coâ€"operating with A"tually felt. His "Evangeline" dealt the Chicago Association for Child| With the wanderings not of seekers Study in their sehao! for parents are:| after the golden fleece in classic lands, Elizabeth McCormick Memorial rud.} but of a migration on a continent with Mothers®‘ Aid of Chicago Lyingâ€"In hosâ€"| which he was familiar. Poetry is the pital, Chicago Woman‘s aid, Union‘ translation into words of uplifting League club, Joint committee of Pubâ€", thoughts or emotions, and if it be not lic School Affairs, University of Chiâ€", SPontaneous and sincere, it is nothing. eago, Chicago Church federation. Wieâ€"| Greatest of all is the poet who is boidt Foundation, City Club of Chicaâ€", able to invest the commonplace with | go, Chicago Woman‘s club, and Wom:â€"‘ romance: to point out the neglected i en‘s City club. | beauty of thinws near at hand Ian_. Among the speakers will be: Dr.} Mark A. May, department of educaâ€"‘ types and forms of childhood, to deâ€" velop in their children 2 wish to make the best of themselves, of their social relations and of their talents. This C Ih-lhhrfl. » = Parents from all parts of theâ€"midâ€" die west are making reservations for the school for parents, showing their appreciation of the need for the sciâ€" entific attitude on the part of mothâ€" ers and fathers, if they hope to proâ€" vHoMehildmrnhmm-i vironment for character development. smammwmmu-l titude on the part of parents, Mrs. S. T. Lawton, chairman of Chicago A:mhdmlu(udmw:. "The old fashioned parents made the mistake of assuming that moralâ€" ity could be imposed on the child! from without. We can force external| Mm;htnmewtmhi nlny-t\eom:oneol'hithdaild‘, himself wishes at heart to be. While| iththemmionofnn;-nnuhmj videthehfldwitbprvmufinu}um‘ h!rvthfnl.hnat.ndvinuou.fn]‘ parents are naturally endéwed with: the ability to transmit their own ideas | of morals to their children. What | parents should do is prepare themâ€"| the three day program will show the relation and importance of discipline and guidance, the effect of the emoâ€" tional life of child and parent, the influence of ideals, of handicraft, recâ€" reation and religion. Particular emâ€" phasis is to be placed on the question Character development will be the central theme for the conference, and around the question of the scientific upâ€"building of character from infancy A score of prominent educators and authorities on child training, from all parts of the country, will address the second hiâ€"ennial Midâ€"West Conference and School for Parents, to be held Pebruary 16, 17 and 18, under ausâ€" pices of the Chicageo Association for Child Study and Parent Education, at the Palmer House, Chicago. J TO BE HELD IN CHI says. School Life. _ of more than tvery ) one of the tags employed told the Y ~Of| customer. Another said, "This dress :lu“ufi‘- ou-l ’~~L'.l-fl--h-â€"*.-â€"_.“;a Companion, adopted for the Christmas shopping season a sysâ€" tem of tagging goods by which the eustomer has the M: information at sight. "This will not wear well," ‘Tries Plan With Success and Finds Populace Responds hard to understand as the poetry itâ€" mid of a table of logarythms ought to something for the literary critics to superiority by pretending to fathom it, but its value otherwise is quite as DEPARTMENT $TORE N â€" forâ€"the most_part of a land and a} ~peopleâ€"ke knew. and of. emotionsâ€"he ; »‘r(unllv felt. His "EVangeline" dealt‘ | with the wanderings not of seckers| | after the golden fleece in classic tands, ! For those who love cubist poetry written by rhymasters who strive for obscurity, and believe that the underâ€" standable is vulgar, that is about the sort of thing they would like. Poetry that has to be figured out with the 5 I / The great literary genius is not a| imm juggler of words in vague patâ€" terns which«can be understood only by | | experts in the art of divination. The | world does not exist solely for the‘ Idelrtution of a few cloistered crmts{ | who dwell in the rarified air of Olym-( | pian heights. Their appreciation of a| | given work may be genuine or it may | Greatest of all is the poet who is able to invest the commonplace with romance; to point out the neglected beauty of things near at hand. Longâ€" fellow‘s songs were of the fireside, of the fields and forets of his own land. of ordinary and universal instinets and emotions. They were spontaneous and unaffected; they were helpful to millions; they have lived and they will live, long after the selfâ€"constituted intelligentsia who debate over whether or not they are poetry hl't‘ Westminster Abbey. Wrote Long!‘eLE be mere affectation. Certainly such critics have always been lacking in discrimination as to the merit of, conâ€" temporaneous literary output. "Was Not Conventional Henry W. Longfellow did not write of conventional literary themes, but T Ww ene io e ter, while they sounded the praises of| pompous poets long since forgotten. It could not be that a playwrignt| whose lines were within the compreâ€" | hension of the vulgarians in the pit | could be of literary consequence. | yer, found anyone who W! mfi- all about, nor e#+*f"%"" * d« ‘and it homself. â€" I "Not Alawys Highbrow" Really great literary productions / are not those which only the elect preâ€" tend to comprehend, as part of a pvo-‘ fessional pose of superiority. Shakesâ€"| peare in his own time was looked np-’ on by the London literary crities as | a sort of potâ€"boiler for his own Pn e o t Sm ty M on Eeetem C have been debating the question of| satisfy Bess Cary‘s craving for ice whether or not Henry W. Longfellow| cream. On that day he threatened was a poet. Ond&thnryp-.h'-v.tnd-uutaldm “m&tw“)mmhun'fiw-& wrote a line of poetry; the other deâ€"| cess. In the next place the girl volâ€" Mlfltdbwwnyh‘&lh’uufibw&-tukd'flfiu -.mw'hmm‘hhhfi-n-flmlhhuh were within the comprehension of| when he started his first venture of morons, and therefore of some use. }huildin‘ horseless carriages, thus ltvfldmhw"difmlhhfhmh'" weakness in a professional literary| entirely lacking. Thirdly, he married critic to admit that anything the masâ€"| Bess Cary, and she has since been nu-nn&ndwuummfin'bmmwdhhfmyh satirically nwh&wuklmk-falliuamd&v&put.'lml M&tmiow Republic. I!re-"ptrfett partnership," he declared. calls e r in a play in vogue vinrude born rway a lu‘. * ln, 'hu'm“n u: s::;‘pu:h“'zf .tfih. age o::xhu ::eom Am.:: clared of one of his poems that it‘ !** *4 served a hard apprenticeship Give me some humbler post flm songs gush from the Â¥ s P \ & a still more efficient outboard motor und today his great factory is turnâ€" ing out thousands of them yearly in M:lwaukee. Mrs. Evinrude, restored to health, is still manager of the business. Evinrude was born in Norway and at the age of sixteen came to Amerâ€" ica and served a hard apprenticeship in all branches of mechanics. He was among the first to build a portâ€" ~blew==â€"~eâ€"suitable for. propelling *vetin«sm Bd it seemed that he was destined to success, but unfortunate partnerships finally sent him back | to his"trade of pattern making. He | then married, only to have lllneu} fall upon both himseif and his young | wife. During his illness he evolved | the motor boat and it became a sucâ€" | cess. Concerned for his wife‘s health, r however, Evinrude sold out his busiâ€" 1 ness and agreed to stay out for five . years. In the rfeantime he designed ‘ would never have thought of a portâ€" able engine for a row boat if he had not rowed five miles though the broilâ€" ing July sun one day at a picnic to satisfy Bess Cary‘s craving for ite cream. On that day he threatened to invent such a motor and two years later he did so with huge sucâ€" cess. In the next place the girl volâ€" untarily assumed the task of writing his letters and keeping his books when he started his first venture of Ole Evinrude, inventor of the outâ€" board motor for small craft a»d now millionaire manufacturer of his prodâ€" uct in Milwaukee, credits his entire success to a youthful romance, he deâ€" Shiige t en s NBA l4 ) ROMANCE CAUSE NO MUD SLINGING IN OF MOTOR INYVEYFTION REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN z::â€"& worm and :-a-' the shock absarber anciacs 6t of ue =hedbase® = -: Set puraliel with the frome. Dreathing system and new -‘-:wvnlnho Service braking area of 189 dent emergency brake. 4â€"Wheel Rrakes â€" New control. Deico Remy : dis tributor ignition wich high Ar Econemical Trensportation WM. RUEHL & CO. 120 North First Street Py able in the e-mp;\gnâ€",-lâ€"râ€"eflg.om“g to be distinctly disappointed. There has been some attempted sniping at Hooâ€" ver, Lowden, Dawes and others, but The Democrats, hovering around in the hope that in the heat of the contest some one of the candidates may open an attack and thus furnish aramunition which will later be availâ€" credit the efforts of their ;po;e;t;. could be construed as a reflection on a rival. The men who have entered the field have held to the conclusion gratifying to all: that success can enly be secured by the plain discusâ€" sion of their own plans and proâ€" grams, and not be attempting to disâ€" to the Republican Party that as a whole to date there is no hint of any change yet to come and the rivalries ere being conducted in a fair, open and aboveboard manner. Neither by that set a new standard in automobile value Buite 4 H. P. State Bank Bldg. Telephone 678 156 Bt. Johne Ave. Hightand Park EMPLOYMENT BUREAU First Class (White) Help Telephone Highiand Park 1206 American Employment Bureau of Highland Park DR.B. A. RAMTETON Induiging in Criticism of And never has this progressive policy been better exemplified than in the Bigger and Better Chevroletâ€"with its marvelous new Fisher bodies, its numerous mechanical advancements, and its thrilling new performance. For years, Chevrolet has pioâ€" neered into the lowâ€"price field the features of advanced design found on the world‘s finest 547 Gray Ave. eatures REDUCED PRICES! 495 TheCOACH â€" SXz .. "665 s $58985 oo‘ / Only) 495 ..675 All pricas$ a h Mn Riras _ % ‘3” All prices £. 0. b. Flint, Michigen .. R navy in the world can only Washing machine, iron, vacuum cleanâ€"] * _â€" *â€" er, fan, refrigerator, radio set m'm properly from the people of seven 60â€"watt lamps in every dwelling| Great Britain. Any of our good imâ€" in the state. | ternationalists will tell you that much. source from which it has some and its absolute lack of authority, it has been discounted even as it was utâ€" , 10 and 15 year plans, straight or with preâ€"payment privileges O-rloaump-d-adby JOHN ZENGELER and fiuancing chargee «vailaiie We Operate Our Own Plant in Highland Park hailed as the world‘s outstandâ€" ing motor car value! impression of the quality and value provided in this new car. In beauty, in comfort and in performance, it climaxes every previous achievement in the development of luxurious transâ€" portation at low cost! Come in today and go for a demonstration. It will take you less than half an hour to learn why the Bigger and Betâ€" Telephone Highland Park 2801 Cleaner and Dyer 25 North Sheridan Road Phone 1110 is. Any expressed desire to have the ®reatest navy in the world can only League of National Nonâ€"Partisan asâ€" sociation that the proposal "that we have the greatest navy in the world is an appalling thing to come from the people of the United States." It sure The Coach PKi d PAGE THEEE .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy