Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 17 Mar 1932, p. 14

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old â€" a WEIOug UCLUETs RECENERAER TS . MRA T ie c es oc e onAE iN NeE LCO T ies o ce Bc E he comes back." _ | ticular babies well, the Infant Welr-J Helping the mother: in her desâ€"| fare society is helping Marie Bulâ€" f â€" perate need and making it possible| eski to spend her grocery order so ‘for her to keep the family together|as to get the maximum of nourishâ€" C â€"*until her husband comes back _ are|ing food with it. _ Prices in the corâ€" _1 _ wo organizations in Chicagoâ€"the| ner store are reviewed by the Inâ€" ~â€"1_ Infant Welfare society and the Uniâ€"| fant Welfare nurse and with the â€"â€"I 1 â€"tod Charities.â€" Neighbors, hundreds| doctor‘s instructions in mind she of them, were going to Infant Welâ€"| lays out a food schedule for the baâ€" â€" fare with their babies and one of | bies to give them the strength they = â€" N â€" them told Mrs. Buleski that it would | gorely â€"need. The food._schedule is be good for her babies to go too s0| one that the mother can easily folâ€" E while the husband was being tried| low, but palatable and nutritious as for robbery she took her babies,| well as inexpensive.‘ In demonstraâ€" Peterâ€"eighteen months, and Elasâ€"| tion classes at the Welfare station two months old to the Welfare. The| and by instruction by the nurse in : doctor at the Infant Welfare staâ€"| her home this Polishâ€" mother,â€" enâ€" tion found the children well so far| tirely ignorant of dietetic knowâ€" _8 â€" as absence of any specific disease) ledge, is being taught how to preâ€" j could be termed well but the pale,| pare the food in the best way. : 3 listless, anaemicâ€"little Peter obviousâ€" Hand in hand with the rest of the a ly neded good food and: sunshineâ€"| Infant Welfare program for well milk, plenty of it, vegetables, bread,| babies comes codâ€" liver oil. â€" Mrs orange or tomato juice, and, cod| Buleski receives a regular n‘:pply of Fat denbtabe dmen snb aAide eb tikkes| Wis 5 4c Mor n LC woaut To Ininwmntran YÂ¥ork. ip of it her their thall, : . Of her husband the young wife says, 3 "Good man, good father; never did wrong before. Things better when he comes back." * Helping the motherâ€" in her~ desâ€" ; â€" perate need ‘and making it possible _for her to keep the family together J â€"*until her husband comesâ€"back_are terâ€" couu go UEEJIECLU WDWER RAMIM : MBR C SAECCC CA k 114. 28 2 0 2. 200. 0 000 m t mt 1 listless, anaemicâ€"little Peter obviousâ€" 3 Hand in hand with the rest of the ly neded good food and: sunshineâ€"|Infant Welfare program for well milk, plenty of it, vegetables, bread,| babies comes codâ€" liver oil. â€" Mrs. orange or tomato juice, and, cod| Buleski receives a regular supply of liver oil. Marie Buleski had nothâ€"| this prime necessity and is learning | ing to say to either doctor or nurse| that it is not medicine, but food | at the welfare station the first time| which her children must have regulâ€" but to the neighbor on the way ) arly if they are: to withstand the home she said, "I cannot get all| hazards of childhood.. A year of these things. Maybe my boy must| intensive Infant Welfare care has die." carricd little Peter from the zone Dark and Cold of constant danger to life and health ~~â€"When the Infant Welfare nurse| where he has a good chance to be talled at the home the first time,| a happy child and to become a useâ€" one stormy morning in January,| ful American citizen. The mother 1931, two days after the husband| also has profited by the lessons she had been taken to prison, she found| has learned and is better equipped the place dark and cold, light turned | mentally and physically for the K â€"off â€"because the billâ€"could _not. : she must continue to make paid, no fire, no food, two babiss in | and baby â€"Risa is starting her second . bed for the sake of warmth, and Mrs.| year as healthy and happy as it is THURSDAY, live Peter Buleski, Daby LEIS@a anu their pretty Polish mother. The {ather is in prison because when he was out of work, his family hungry and he too unfamiliar with Chicago to know where to go for help, he robbed a grocery store. â€" The "home" is two rooms in a basementâ€"one enâ€" t:r;ly' dark, the other insufficiently lighted by two windows opening on stove, two chairs, : E14 L duh t 10e d ic it ncomtanc ies M racit t ntprint O nwaityy epaP o dishesâ€"no floor covering, little bedâ€" ding, no pictures, no toys, nothing to relieve the drab monotony of poyâ€" In theseâ€"surroundings Marie Buiâ€" eski is making aâ€" va{ia!}tffig_ht_ ;to maintain _ herself teeterâ€"totter). & A Near the Alice H. Wood station| dow to get what little light the Tiz a _ & a s m o C en utan s ie uk 0. ocms liver oil. Marie Buleski had nothâ€" ing to say to either doctor or nurse at the welfare station the first time but to the neighbor on the way home she said, "I cannot get all these things. Maybe my boy must Peter Buleski at play getting MARCH 17, 1932 ment fiat. The immediate need was light, heat and food. Kerosene for the one lamp was secured by the nurse from the corner store, paid for from her own pocket; milk for the babies came from the same source. A telephone call to the Uniâ€" ted Charities by the nurse brought a case and weekly an order for food which can be traded in at the corner store carrying a placard in the window readinge. "We take all charity orâ€" reading, * and growth, and_ giving the m careful instructions on what should do ‘to keep these two ular examination byâ€"the doctor in sorely need._ The food_schedule is one that the mother can easily folâ€" low, but palatable and nutritious as well as inexpensive. ° In demonstraâ€" tion classes at the Welfare station and by instruction by the nurse in her home this Polishâ€" mother,â€" enâ€" tirely ignorant of dietetic knowâ€" ledge, is being taught how to preâ€" pare the food in the best way. : 0 n se eobi en es n oen is B9 00â€" uitra vi'olet- rays direct from the _ Infantâ€" Welfare Helps â€"Besides giving the two ba}:ies regâ€" for food which THE PREBS r‘:egmgll 13_9_Tli. Second St. â€" _ Phone 4240 .. ~~ she One other® helr Infant Wetfnre1 provides for its babies â€" clothing made by women of Infant Welfare centers in the more prosperous regiâ€" dential sections of Chicago and subâ€" urbs. â€"Last year the *women of Highland Parkâ€"Ravinia center made 727 garments for Infant Welfare babies, some of which helped to keep these two Buleski children comfortâ€" able. Never in theâ€" twentyâ€"one years since the Infant Welfare society was organized has there been such apâ€" palling need of and for the babies as there is now; never have funds been so &nadequate. For thousands of helpless babies the Infant Welâ€" fare society of Chicago is the only means to save them from sicknessâ€" some of them from death, some of them from lifelong suffering and land sulting from the privations and unâ€" derfeeding of the present day. _Hig_h- fant Welfare socety which supports the Alice H.; Wood station is now making its annual appeal for funds and is asking all of the citizens of this community to dig down deep and help these babiss. ° â€"_Who remembers the good old days when all of the Roosevelts ran for Parkâ€"Ravinia center of the Inâ€" Our.thoroughly _ modern shops are manned by a force of trained mechanics who exert the utmost skill and conscientious effort on every job, large or small. Bring your next reâ€" pair job to us â€" you will be pleased â€"with our work and fair prices. Mechanical Axtttutsel111}, There will be a big St. Patrick‘s celebration party out at Dietz Staâ€" bles near Mundelein on Routes 59A fun for ev;aryone. Favors for all. Dancing from 9:00 p.m. until 2:00 a.m. to the tunes of Hapke‘s orchesâ€" and .176 â€"Ivanhoe, â€"tonight, _ March 17th. Everyone is invited. <Lots of Er; All for $1.00 per éouple. Also big dancing parties every Saturday night. $1.00 per couple. Deerfield Man Files Suit For Damages Andrew Huhn, of Deerfield, through his father John Huhn, last week filed suit for $5,000 damages in the cireuit court againstâ€"Berthil of Deerfield avenue and Waukegan Berg, Deerfield, for an road in Decerfield. . Attorney E. M. Runvard, of _ Runyard & Behanna, filed the praecipe. Our modern high pressure wash rack system enables us to do the finest type of washâ€" ing on a "production" basis. Hence the low price of only one dollar. Let us show Â¥oU how good our work is. . OPEN TO ALL March 14â€"19 inclusive:~1:30 to 4:30 p.m. at 510 S. Linden Ave., Highland Park Tel. H. P. 1551 > ~ © Keep Your Car $1â€" AUTO WASH GARDEN SCHOOL Single Tickets, $1.00 at Dictz Stables automobile 4\

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