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Highland Park Press, 26 Jun 1930, p. 38

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Tttttop " ll As it F.. REG i IST kit KD S. S. ARR "HHS! Jt FIRST TO WEAR NEW " " I'NII’OR‘ .lunuw Mm. Mort "t WIMETTE _ _ messes mammary; QAVINIA INDIANHILL HIGHLANDMDK WNETM Hle-MOOD umwooos EVERETT GLENcoe LAKEFOREST K Phones: H. Pts.d290 . Emergency Service H. Pk. 3291 Quaker State-Havant, Waxfree Motor Oils-Greases Wilk Il w A CAMP NH 27 BRAUN BROS. OIL Co. , mum-1m GRADE FOR EVERY BURNER PERSONAL SERVICE _ W w Th W r Wa Kn K ,rth Wester ghlund Park "inn up in c ltt h M lclw " FUEL OIL d " bar Mr. and Mr Iloir Traub, Th: or' " [GINA N " PARK 1'31 ll " If thr, Derby ywmu Distributors ot mun wler, ma n Imp fir The rald mm lh " at ll noun SHORE [iii8il.'f,t,l,)._li,,l.ii' NOJM - A.’ -AA- '5 Ar AKA-”I‘ll“ H m, tsud unif TRttol uh linur Har "It " y A. Olin, 205 Warwick boule- Kenilworth, is the first North e boy to wear the official Cub rrm. Jnmex is A. member of the Pack in Kenilworth and his Cub er. Robert Townley. was able to M; the suit in order that this pie- mittht be taken. Later all Cubs be able to secure the unifurm. It ue with Kohl stripes and the cap 'wut Mt iv-s "an: ;‘ won NCIL- No.7"- BOY SCO 73:36 F AMERICA following " NOW HAS w had rceiritt war the (Tub insignia. opeatvd before the 'execu- of the North Shore Area "mtly in tho uniform and wmin-rs what a boy's reac- to this new program for 9, mber tant COVHCII "IANUA‘i s' ~u$IIIIlm ID- mHA-O'AOIJttIM "E---- “I" Grim atlvr rem and 'utuut Tht otrwers. and scouts: smusson. chairman, Rev. Allan Billman, Khorn, H. R. Stren- ittim .Iosvph J. Yure, of the committee. s.rrutrnaster, Walter ieoutmaster, Waino patrol lender. F'red Julian, and Vincent "ti, are the Mieers. t Raymond, Emmet rik, James Christan- is tht mitt-r: the the Malian night meeting F'r'u boys paid he coming dd member tered. The program lor , us. This prom Boy fit-nuts oi " by them the program. list and 'Y Ire trand. uf the ye r'ulay their two ll at sen. Robert Bunsen, Roy Cederstrand, Crrurtte Bousson. Jack Neale, Tony Konsitzki, Kenneth Kennedy, Sy Han. sen. Henry Hansen, Gilbert Douglass an": the seouts.-Waiho Newmann, Luke Forest Praia club. "ARE-A ND-IIOl'NDS RACK IS ENJOYEI) Troop 52 of Deerfield met Friday night at Warington road near West. uutu- avenue. We farmed in line by hmght. 'snnouneements were made and dues collected. Six boys acting as hares went on ahead and scattered confetti alone the trail that they made, It went through undergrowth. along a creek, through fivlrlr,. and finally to "Camp Oak," the campsite of troop 52. A campfire was made and about dark we adjourned for home.--K, Vet, tvr. l)--c-rt'u-hl Press club. T Black Bear Patrol The first mo-eting of the Black Bear pull‘nl was held at the home of Mark Andrews, patrol leader. _ The scouts of the patrol are: John Dun-gin. Billy Sanders, Clarence Lock- man, Harold Hildvia, Gerald Lucas, Lloyd y'randers.--Gerald Lucas, patrol SEA s'COUT' IS MEMBER AMERICAN CCP,YACHT CREW Able Sea Scout Richard Clark, 19, of Nowhurz. N. Y., member of the crow , " the New York and New Jer- sey Regional Sea Scout Flagship, Constitution IV, has been selected from the membership of the Sea Scout division of the Boy Scouts of America to be a member of the crew of the Whirlwind, America's Cup'Yacht of the Thorne-Hammond syndicate, ac- cording to Thomas J. Keane, National Son Smut director. Sea Scout Ste) is already at work aboard the Minas) lYirwess,lase ship for the Whirlwind/ anchored " City Island, N. Y, 1 Paul Hammond’s Invitation Participation of a Sea Scout in the work of preparing a yacht to defend the historic America's Cup was made possible through the invitation of Paul Hammond of the Thorne-Ham- ttl' ml syndicate, who is Regional Sea Scout Commodore for the Sea Scouts of New York and New Jersey. The Minas Princess, 169doot schooner hull, which is being used as a base ship for the Whirlwind, is owned by the Sea Scouts of Manhat- tan and was chartered to the Thorne- llummond syndicate for the dilation of the races. Participation in the America’s Cup races is the third great adventure in which, because of their excellent traininz. Sea Scouts have been-in- fited to participate during the put Otter Patrol _The members of the Otter patrol HID: Milton Merner. patrol leader, Dun Clrk, assistant patrol leader, Charles Unborn. Harry Allgbrow.-. Milton Merner, reporter. rim GLENVIEW MUNDELEIN GOLF LIBEDJ'YVILLE NODJ'HBQOOK DIAMOND LAKE NORTHFIELD HALF DAY DEERFIELD RONDOUT BANNOCKBUDN IVANHOE few years. As deck crew of the John-Borden Field Museum expedi- tion to the Arctic in 1927, eight Chi- cum) Sea Scouts made for themselves an enviable record. None of these Sea Scouts were over twenty-one years of age. Then followed the great adventure of Sea Scout Paul A. Siplo of Erie, Pa., in the Anartie with the Byrd expedition, and now the selec- tion of a Sea Scout as a member of the Whirlwind', crew. Good Scum-n _ Since becoming a Sea Scout, Clark has taken every advantage of broad- ening his experience on the water and with the handling of water craft. Fur the past year he has acted as en- gineer of the local ship. Late last summer on a cruise from Newburg to Greenwich, Conn., and return, he not- ed as a navigator of naval cutter of thetonstitution IV. Later last sum- mor Dick acted as cook and kept the log of a motor cruiser from Fair Haven to Highland Light, N. J., and from Sandy Hook across to Romer Shoal Lighthouse, where the crew weathered in heavy sea to deliver 'lux- uries to the light keepers. Clark also spent 10 days last year abroad the Sn: Scout training' ship "Theresa White," cruising Long Isand Sound. This winter he completed a course in navigation under First Mate A, L. Smith, and is élso noted as an expert signal man. . Following an hour of closing argu- ments a jury in Circuit Court last week absolved the owners at en amusement park of all bla.me for the loss of a child's finger. Vance Askew, 5 years old, of Chi- cago. asked for $10,000 for the loss of the little,finger on the left hand. He sued Master-ht-Chancery Ralph J. Dudy and Probate Judge. Mnrtln th' Decker, owners of a Gaga: Lake park. J"fe"g','e,.hog,ed, that the child lost the fin er on "an ocem wave swing" last summer. The member was crushed so badly that an empu- tation was necessary. Attorneys for the child represented the swine as a dangerous instrument that should not be permitted in en amusement park. . Jury Absolves Owners of Amusement Park in Case Over Finger Loss The defendants showed that the swing was regularly investigated by meehanics and that during the sum- mer thousands of children had plnyed on it without injuring themselves. Chicago stands 39th among the larger cities of the United States in homicides per 100,000 of population, according to figures compiled for 1929 by the Prudential Life Insurance company and cited by the Chicago Association of Commerce. Chicago Only 39th in Homicides, Report Says Thursday, June M, 1930

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