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Highland Park Press, 31 May 1928, p. 18

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by John Copeiand. Saturday evening, June 2, Mr. and Mrs. George Bird will @ntertain at the formal opening of Â¥he summer season at Skokie. This is to be a dinner dance. The following ay they will hold open house for the young people and many out of town guests who will be here at that time to attend the wedding. Mr. Klappâ€" woth will give the bridal dinner the might before the wedding. and her bridesmaids include Miss Dorâ€" othy Gittere of New York, Miss Mirâ€" iam Way, River Forest, Miss Dorothy Patten of Chattanooga, Tenn., and Mrs. Joseph J. Deifosse of Chicago. John Copeland of Evanston is to be Mr. Bird‘s best man and Stanley Manson of Rochester, N. Y., Jack Klapproth and Jack Cannon of Chiâ€" eago, and George S. Channer, Jr., of Glencoe will usher. There have been and are to be in the coming week an unusual number of delightful parties for Miss Klappâ€" roth and Mr. Bird. On May 25, Miss Henrietta Bird entertained at lunchâ€" eon at the Chicago Athletic club. Two On June 5, Miss Dale Klapproth, daughter of Frederick Klapproth of Chicago, will be married to Curtis Bird, son of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Bird, 1010 Chestnut avenue, Wilmette. The wedding will take place at St. Chrysostom‘s church with a reception at the Blackstone hotel following. days later Miss Joanna Powell of Chicago is giving a breakfast and on May 29 Mrs. Joseph Delfosse is havâ€" ing a luncheon at the Blackstone. Mrs. Gordon Bird will entertain the bridal party at a dinner dance at the Edgewater Golf club on Decoration day and the next event will be a theater party to be given on June 1, Miss Unger was attended by her sister, Miss Unger, as maid of honor. Miss Rutheda L. Pretzel, sister of the groom, and Miss Grace McNurney of Chicago was the bridesmaids. The groom‘s brother, John R. Pretâ€" zel, acted as best man. The ushers were another brother, Carl G. Pretâ€" zel of Chicago, Guildford R. Windes of Winnetka, and Thomas Morris and Donald Wessling of Chicago. Miss Klapproth has chosen Miss Henrietta Bird to be her maid of honor The marriage of Miss Helen Mac Unger. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Unger of Chicago, to Paul W. Preizel, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Pretzel of Glencoe, took place on Tuesday evening, May 29, at 6:30 o‘clock. at the Albany Park Methoâ€" dist Episcopal church. A bridal dinâ€" ner was held following the ceremony at the Edgewater Beach hotel. :( Mr. and Mrs. George Pretzel enâ€" tertained the bridal party at dinner on Saturday evening, May 26, at their home. .of Mr. and the late Mrs. Arthur James Witherell of North Adams, Mass. He was given away by her mother, Amherst college. After the ceremony a buffet supper was served and there was dancing on the lawn, which was decorated with Japanese lanterns. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Peabody Butâ€" ler have announced the engagement of Mrs. Butler‘s sister, Miss Marâ€" garet Hunter, to Robert Donner, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Donâ€" ner of Philadelphia and Buffalo. Miss Hunter attended Farmington â€" and Mr. Donner is a Yale man. Definite plans for the wedding have not been made as yet. Miss Hunter is visitâ€" ing in New York at present and is returning home Monday. She lives with Mrs. Butler at her home on Priâ€" vate road. Winnetka. Mr. and Mrs. Witherell, accomâ€" panied by Ann Howe Jeffries, will leave soon on a motor trip through the New England states and Canada, and will be at home at 811 Bryant avenue, Winnetka, after September 1. Among the out of town guests were the bride‘s mother, Mrs. Thontas O. Howe, Mrs. Ella Michaelis, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Muzzleton and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Howe of Janesville; the groom‘s father, A. J. Witherell, Mr. and Mrs. William Richmond Witherâ€" ell of Great Neck, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Edward Richmond Tinker of New York, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Unâ€" derwood of Wheaton. Howe of Janesville, and the widow of the late D. H. Jeffris. For the past tem years she has made her home in Winnetka, where she is well known. class of 1914. The groom is the son Witherell were married Saturday af~ ut 4 o‘clock st the home of the 810 Bryant avenu,e Winâ€" metka. Oily members of the families was to be given away by her mother, Mrs. Thomas Oliver Howe, of Janesâ€" ville, Wis., and the bride‘s daughter, Mrs. Benjamin S. Pfeiffer was matron of honor and Mrs. William Richmond Witherel}, bridesmaid. William Richâ€" mond Witherell, the groom‘s brother, the Rev. Gardiner €. MacWhorter of !_u__thchutmn.u'ldaqj-nins' The bride is the daughter of Mrs. 4 League club, to Harold Clariâ€" mhison, is being entertained by friends during the next week ky 28 Miss Maurine Tatham bridge party and shower for Helena Crews Bradford, who â€"musrried on June 16, at the f Mr. and Mrs. Brownell T. Bradâ€" street, of Winnetka, have left on Ja three weeks‘ motor trip to the East. | They will attend Spring day at Cornell | and visit in central New York before Ikoinz on to New York City for the |remainder of their stay. extinct in the body of the man. The , Th question under discussion, howâ€" members of the corps had worked unâ€" °VC is not drink, but rather the deâ€" ceasingly for five hours in an effort| sirability of the Eighteenth Amendâ€" to revive the victim. | ment as a prohibitionary law. Is it Ayersman, an employe of the Pub.| A¢complishing its purpose? lic Service company for twelve years,| _ A law, to be a true law, should accidentally touched a wire carrying, PTiDZ about Peace, not discord. A law, 33,000 volts. | to be a true law, should create lawâ€" A crew regarded as experts in use| Abiders, not lawâ€"violators. A true of the prone method of resuscitation,‘ !aW, by its very existence, should inâ€" was hurriedly dispatched to the staâ€" Crease respect for law, and not lesâ€" tion from the district headquarters of| S¢" the respect for law previously the company in Waukegan. Dr. M. | possessed. J. Rissinger of Lake Forest were sumâ€"| The wri moned. All took part in the fight to ¢nness, bu restore life to the victim. | for uphold Ayersman, an employe of the Pubâ€" lic Service company for twelve years, accidentally touched a wire carrying 33,000 volts. A crew regarded as experts in use of the prone method of resuscitation, The fight made by a life saving corps of the Public Service company to restore life in the inanimate form of Robert Ayersman, aged 30, who was electrocuted in the substation of the company at Lake Bluff, last week ended when attending physicians deâ€" clared that beyond all doubt life was extinct in the body of the man. The members of the corps had worked unâ€" ceasingly for five hours in an effort to revive the victim. Mr. and Mrs. George B. Massey are giving an informal tea at their resi~ dence at 705 Sheridan road, Glencoe, this afternoon at five o‘clock for Mrs. Stewart Johnson. BATTLE TO SAVE LIFE OF LINEMAN IS FUTILE The wedding of Miss Mable Voge! of the faculty of the Winnetka pubâ€" lic schools, and Archie Morphet, of Winnetks, will take place this Saturâ€" | day afternoon at 4 o‘clock. A recepâ€" | tion for the young couple will be held \at the home of Supt. Carleton Washâ€" fburne immediately following the cereâ€" | mony. | _ Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Northrup formerly of Winnetka, are enterâ€" taining in a very interesting way toâ€" morrow afterncon. Their small son, | Edward Moore Northrup, is to be christened in the afternoon by the Rev. R. Malcolm Ward at Christ t church and following the christening a |reception and tea will be held as a fhouscwarming at the Northrup‘s new home into which they have recently f moved at 418 Ridge avenue, W#hnetka. Glencoe, Mrs. Cedric Gifford (Betty Miller) of Evanston, and Miss Alice King of Wilmette, sister of the groom, as bridesmaids; Betty Moore of Hinsâ€" dale and Gertrude Kagy of Salem, IIL., cousins of the bride, as flower girls; James H. Moore, brother of the bride, as best man, and as ushers, William Baehr of Glencoe and Joseph Glover and Ralph English of Wilmette. Mr. King arived home from Hartâ€" ford, Conn., May 30. Two recent affairs given in Miss Moore‘s honor include a shower on May 24, given by Norris and Virginia Grover of Evansâ€" ton, and a kitchen shower on May 25, with Mrs. William C. Miller and Mrs. Cedric Gifford the hostesses at the former‘s home in Glencoe. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McBrady of Evanston announce the engagement of their daughter, Gertrude, to Frederick Salmen, brother of Jules F. Salmen of 420 Linden avenue, Winnetka. Miss Brady recently returned from Europe where she spent three years of study and travel. Mr. Salmen is a graduate of the University of Illinois. The wedding will take place the latter part of June at St. Luke‘s church in Evansâ€" ton. has been selected and will be comâ€" posed of Miss Helen Wicks of Chiâ€" cago, the brideâ€"elect‘s roommate at the University of Wisconsin, as maid of honor; Miss Vera McDermid of Cornell officiating. The wedding party mother, Mrs. John J. Moore, 440 Sherâ€" idan road, Glencoe, at 8:30 o‘clock in The marriage of Miss Eugenia Moore and Kar] D..King of 914 Greenâ€" the evening, the Rev. STEVENS‘ MINERAL WATER NATURAL CONCENTRATED Try it for stomach, malaria and kidney trouble, constipation and biliousness. * Bottled only by Zion Building Industry E. A. STEVENS "DAWSON SPRINGS," KY mmr«: for this loc IS18 wl u044 ’m m'."!.l.‘ Avenue Orders filled promptly. "Money back guarantee. J F. FARNETT avenue, and 50â€"50 for this locality Phone Tion $04 WNar 4tm Lo CC CERE Miss Moore‘s mM CC MPVROE MT PRMIME ECTUT EY | Lake Porest, the legacy of Axel Spong | ment. If drink, and consequent drunkâ€" ,mu., could be ‘permanently abolâ€" |ished by passage of a prohibitionary j law,â€"without creating in its stead Jl worse evilâ€"the writer would be in perfect accord with such law. But, {sim the unâ€"deniable proof is of a | eontradictory nature, such Law it to ‘:e opposed before it obtains a foot | held! _ The way to correct fauitiness is to counsel the individual on the inefficacy of ervor, for the mind rules all, and | the mind, in order to rule rightly, must be possessive of material conâ€" ducive to righteousness. Such being the case, it is a step forward in the cause of true righteousness to oppose | that which seeks to frustrate the | Progress of Truth. Forest, was authorized to pay $10 per month for the maintenance of Recent proceedings in probate court, of interest in this part of the eounty are reported as follows: Jane. E. Haskin, Highland Park. LATE PROCEEDINGS IN PROBATE COURT The writer abhors drink and drunkâ€" enness, but that is no suitable reason for upholding the Eighteenth Amendâ€" The enactment of the Prohibition Law has resulted in causing things in general to seem better, though, in reality, it is ‘cleaning the floor by covering up the dirt.! The only thing that is going to conâ€" quer drunkenness and all wrong is development of mind to a sufficiently correct extent to prove to Humanity the irrevocable unâ€"progressiveness of error. True Progress is not superficial.! Conventionality and farce do not en-} ter into its makeâ€"up. j Noâ€"one abhors drunkenness, and harm resulting from drink, to a more decided extent than the writer. Neverâ€" theâ€"less, I know that I am only one of the millions of people on earth, and, therefore, it is only just that I consider both sides of the question. Any Law which tends to forfeit or lessen the import of the Provisions as set forth in the Declaration of Inâ€" dependence is not a true Law. A true Law has an uplifting, not a deâ€" teriorating, effect. Since adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment, people know that, in drinking, they are lawless; therefore, people otherwise lawâ€"abiding cannot feel the consolation of knowing that they are abiding by the law perfectly. The advent of Prohibition caused drinkers to associate with lawless and altogether inferior, unworthy characâ€" ters. PROHIBITION Notâ€"in behalf of drinkers do I upâ€" hold the antiâ€"Prohibition cause, but rather in behalf of those who are annoyed by the results of Prohibition in the lives and wellâ€"being of those near and dear to them. A drinker, during Prohibition, is much like a child deprived of a toy which possesses a harmful feature. When the toy was always within his reach, he didn‘t care so much for it, but, immediately upon being deprived of it, he longs for it, and searches for it despitgrary and all handicaps. Prohibition has inaugurated the reign of gangsters, rumâ€"runners, bootâ€" leggers and other organizations of people opposing the law. Why bring on a state of affairs such as this? When enacting a Lawâ€"or planning so to doâ€"consideration must be given to the welfare of the common majorâ€" ityâ€"not to the gratification of the whims of a few. Because another doés not swear or chew tobacco, should he propose the enactment. of a law opposing those faults? Would that be just? It would be as just as the Prohibiâ€" tion Law! Drinking is wrong when indhl(ed in to excess, and drunkenness results. The members of the Antiâ€"Saloon League are, no doubt, natural abâ€" stainers, that is to say they possess a natural distaste for liquor. Thereâ€" fore, they proposed the adoption of the Prohibi®on Law. Is that just? readers on matters of genoral interâ€" est. All ietters must be signed by the writers and must not contain matâ€" ter of libelous character. The Press assumes no responsibity for the opinâ€" reserves the right to reject any manâ€" This space in the Press is devoted Public Forum â€" || By Lily M. Gallagher. 37 Spon.geCakes,ewh.........'ISc Pabstâ€"ett Cheese, package ...19¢ Strictly Fresh Eggs, doz. ....29%¢ Selected Large Eggs, doz. ...35¢ Juicy Oranges, 2 or 3 doz. ... .$1 Cooking Apples, 3 Ib .......25¢ ASPARAGUS, extra large bunch. ... ..... ... 24 N. FIRST ST. HIGHLAND PARK NEW POTATOES, 6 pounds FRESH PERCH, Ib ....... FRESH HERRING, tb .... SMOKED WHITEFISH, 1b FRESH SHRIMP, Ib .... .. Best Rib R‘st Beef, 6â€"7 rib Ib 29¢ Sirloin Roast, Ib ............29%¢ Prime Ribs Beef Roast, Ib ..39cRump Roast, boneless, Ib ... 32¢ Best Hamburger Steak, Ib ... 15cBest Pot Roast, Ib ... .....24%c¢ Porterhouse Steak, Ib :. ... ..49cBest Round Steak, Ib ... ... .35¢ Fresh Little Pig Hams â€" the pound ......... ... Fresh Pork Liver 2 pounds for ......... California Hams the pound ............ MILLER & HART HAMS, whole, the pound ... SWIFTS PREMIUM HAMS, whole, the pound . BEST ELGIN CREAMERY BUTTER, the pound the pound .............. HOME MADE SAUSAGE MEAT, the pound .. FRESH DRESSED SPRING DUCKS, the pound FANCY ROASTING CHICKENS, the pound .. FANCY STEWING CHICKENS, the pound .. .. FRESH DRESSED BROILERS, the pound .... BREAST LAMB, Ib ........10c¢ RIB PORK ROAST, Ib ... .21%c m move a ." ..‘ ‘:'J.‘t‘-i LOIN VEAL CHOPS | â€" GOLD BOND 100% Whole Wheat MILLER & HART BACON, sliced, 3 Ib for ...................$1.00 SHORT LEG MILKâ€"FED VEAL (6 to8 Ib) Ib ................. . 2%¢ nmm-r%mnomwmmm.................sse BREAST MILKâ€"FRD VEAL (with pocket for roast or is FRESH PEAS RAPP BROS. 2 1b for STRAWBERRIES AT LOWEST MARKET PRICE Three slices of Basy Bread a day helps reduce your weight in nature‘s way. Grape Fruit, 6, 8, 12 for ... ... .$1 BASY BREAD ';'-":'i'm‘...‘.--'(.s.fi&:h.').l.b..:.‘::::::l.% 17 15"¢ GREEN BEANS 3 quarts for FRESH PINEAPPLES 2 for FISH .29¢ . 2G¢ 18e Head Lettuce, 3 for ... ... New Carrotts, 3 bunches . New Beets, 3 bunches ... Rhubarb, 8 Ib ........... Old Monk, Blue Ribbon FRESH WHITEFISH, Ib ... FRESH TROUT, Ib ......... FRESH HALIBUT, Ib ...... SALMON STEAK, Ib ...... Pork Chops, center cuts, the pound Pork Chops large cuts, the pound . Bacon Squares the pound ........... BEEF TONGUES, 1b ... ... ..25¢ LOIN PORK ROAST, Ib. .. 22%c 8 oz. jar 23¢; pint 43¢; at. . . . Wright‘s WISC. POTATOES Friday only, peck HIGHLAND PARK | 21¢ 17c 29c¢ M 22‘/3(‘ s 24‘/zc ... 49¢ ... 18e 45¢ 59¢ 14

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