Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 22 Feb 1934, p. 11

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ve almost daily use in your home. at for a few minutepâ€"o’ r for sevâ€" ater makes it available instantly. you have clean, glawing warmth omâ€"and keep you! comfortable. Clean Heat ick, clean heat of a gas radi.flnt chilly. Mornings â€" for dressing. id weather heat. In the eveningâ€" unâ€"like heat you want it! 3 NORTH BHERIDAN ROAD | > | WEEK DAYS3 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Â¥S8 2:30 to 5:30 for reading onl uced in your own localityj. n MERLE C. TIBBETTS YÂ¥ FARMS DAIRYy A P A N o visit the Reading Eoom, where ‘the ud +. + ligerature be borrowef Bs Je : > s lai-ui:’iy *4 ®e '-u % * wurch of Christ, Scientist 16 > Highland Park Pasteurized Grade A Milk ‘ALL CITIES SCIENCE READING ROOM visit the Reading Room, ® Nogleaning after use ® Always in;tant heatâ€" ® More hedm hcat ©®© Economical to use INALS COMPANY | Tel. Wabash 4740â€"37 ® No fuel to ¢arry IR BUSES Six Major _ Advantages 0e No ashes to remove THURSD + FREQUENT SRRviICG nemmmmmemmebmmimess.,.2... 1 6000 â€") y ) _: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, after the brilliant way he pulled out of ineligibility with such a remarkâ€" aby high grade. That is just a brief summary 6f the amount of work Ken does, inâ€" cludingâ€"his studies, which obviously takes up a great deal of his time. The outlook of Wessling‘s future on to run off. And he‘ll add 50 houts more of training by the end of the season, which will amount to 80 hours of training for 8 minutes df competition. M When Wessling competed against Missouri runners at Columbia, Feb. 10, he had put in more than 30 hours of extensive training for an event that took less than 50 seconds Besides running the quarter mil}. "Zup" will be uged in the 220 and the half mile relays and he will be key man in forming a mile relay team. I Wessling‘s ability at running the quarter mile is not entirely unâ€" known. In 1931 as a slender, smooth running sophomore, Ken won the Ilowa intercollegiate outdoor chamâ€" pionship in 49.4 after a thrilling duel with Lagerquist of Iowa. In high school he was an outstanding performer, his best time for the 440 being 51 seconds. 20 * I Coach Bob Simpson ranks Wessâ€" ling with the greatest of 'CyelIe quarter milers of all time, the foreâ€" most of this group being " _ Wolters, who was Wessling‘s coach during his high school days. b& cording to the way "Zup" has n gathering up speed in indoor workâ€" outs on the oval underneath the lowa State field house, the IowYa State field house record of .48 gfl’;t for the 440, set by "Deac" in 1922, will really be in danger when the outdoor season rolls around. $ "Zup," as he is called by l::: teammates, facing ineligibility si the 1932 indoor track season, through with a 3.1 grade, nt average, (equal to about 92 cent) in his fall quarter “z;‘r Hard work and his love for track were the chief factors in his tâ€" turn to the cinder path. | . Fresh Butter and Eggs. Try usâ€"you will. be convinced on o fl)e purity of our products. ‘WESTBROOK FARMS Pasteurized Milk and Cream There are few fellows in col today, haunted by ineligibility, stagâ€" ing a comeback as strong as = neth Wessling did at TIowa State University recently. ‘Ken graduatâ€" ed â€" from â€" Deerfieldâ€"Shields igh School and entered this Uni ity on the request of his former y "Deac‘" Wolters, ‘who himself was a great athlete at this school.:. | > In The Interest Of Sport â€"â€" T WESTBROOK FARMS 22000R ol wessimg s future on cinder pathâ€"looksâ€"prettyâ€" bright, By M. Warner Turriff Milwaukee Ave. ne Libertyville 1043 ALLOW US TO SHOW YOU â€" YOU TO BE THE|JUDGE North Shore Chrysler Dealers Oldest Dealer in Illinois â€" Established 1900 22.24 South First Street Tel. Highland Deibler Motor Car C NEVER in Chryslér‘s history has there en so much to talk aboutâ€"such a profusion o pnâ€" gineerifig features â€" such a wealth of w ‘ J- while features â€" such a PRONOUNCED DL â€" FERENCE betweer the new models and {@ll other cars in its price class. _ . PLYMOUTH SHOWING of 193 smooth| EYVe 4 smootlfl give a ‘Oh," said the young man, "I don‘t try!" This choir has put on several exâ€" tensive singing tours in the past. 1925 they made a tour of Sweâ€" , singing in many of its princiâ€" al cities, Last summer they took a three weeks‘ trip through Minneâ€" sota, Wisconsin and Michigan. Durâ€" ing the coming summer théy expect to travel through a number of eastâ€" ern states visiting Washington, D. C,. Boston and New York. H. Hvasmann has been the director of this chorus for many years and deâ€" votes a great part of his time to music. : Osgar Green, who does a great deal“&f solo work, will again be one of the soloists. A very corâ€" dial invitation is extended to the community to enjoy this very speâ€" cial treat. ; ‘"Well, Dick, my boy," said. his uncle, "my congratulations! I hear you‘re engaged to one of the pretty Robbins . twins." R "Rather!" re})lied Dick, heartily. "But," said/his uncle, "how on earth do you manage to tell them apart?" . give a sacred musical concert at the Bethany Evangelical Church next Sunday afternoon at a‘ 3:30 vesper. This choir of approximateâ€" ly. 60 voices gave a splendid conâ€" cert at the Bethany Church about. two ‘years ago; at that time they drew an audience that more than filled the Bethany Church,. It is beâ€" lieved that a very large crowd will be out to greet them on their reâ€" turn.visit. _ > The Swedish Covenant Choir of Chicago, a well known musical orâ€" ganization in the Middle West, will Swedish Chorus To Be At the Bethany Church 741. Proapect ‘â€"A-;en.\-a‘e.: wfil:’l;e‘tkl' (telephone, Winnetka 609) or at the office of the Temple, Glencoe 725. Tickets for this lecture may be obtained from Mrs. Barnett Faroll, Dr. Eddy has always attracted large audiences to ‘hear him, and his recent fearless Berlin statements, together with his undoubted sincer. ity ‘in the cause of peace and his strong sense of justice, are endearâ€" ing‘ him to hig ever increasing azdi- ences. + season at the North Shore Congreâ€" gational Israel Temple Center, Linâ€" coln and Vernon Avenues, Glencoe. Dr, Eddy‘s lecture is scheduled for Thursday, March 1, at 8:15 p. m.; his subject will be "The Menace of Hitlerism." ; f That Sherwood Eddy has always been sympathetic to Germany was proved by his collection of half a million dollars for the sufferers in Germany during the French ocâ€" cupation of the Rubr; that he has: no sympathy for the present regime he announced with open criticism of ‘ the Nazis last summer in Berlin. Sherwood Eddy, former YX. K; C. A. secretary for Asia, author and war worker, will deliver the final lecture in the course presented this *T ooo mt .. Talk at North Shore Why Worry? Congregation Israel H ra‘@ the recipe that banishes fat and brinigs into blossom all the natural attra¢tiukness that every woman posâ€" E? tyi morning take one half teaâ€" spoopf@Ilof Kruschen Salts in a glass of bot wat@ér before breakfastâ€"cut down on [rÂ¥y and fatty meatsâ€"go light on xota \butter, cream and lugar-â€"â€"an Q‘ et on the scales and note h many| fi nds of fat â€"have vanished. Nl‘al-o that you have gained in ne our skin is clearerâ€"your eyea sparkle with glorious healthâ€"you feel younget in bodyâ€"keener in mind. Krusâ€" chen will give any fat person a joyous surpt Get m! fhr of Kruschen Saltsâ€"the cost is trifling &ri@ it lasts 4 weeks. If even this fArst g‘ floesn‘t convince you this is the easiest, t and surest way to lose fatâ€" if you o ‘t feel a superb improvement in bealthâ€"fol gloriously energetioâ€"vigorously. aliveâ€"y@ur money returned. : ‘But: b re for your health‘s sake that you ap ! r and get Kruschen Salts. Get‘ them | hy drugstore in the world. | F Gain | cal Attractivenessâ€"Be Free From | tipation, Gas, Acidity and years.) | The college, as President Z recently pointed out, is the seco Hd largest of the privately enâ€" dower llqes for women in this countiy; Smith College being largâ€" est, and Wellesley third. i» fiflent Beatley‘s visit to the Si ii s Club in Chicago is part of a pfogtam whereby he plans to visit l‘fi alumnae clubs in the east and nfgifldle west, to acquaint the graduftes of Simmons with the metBofls adopted by the college to meet| fHanging demands in the voâ€" catiqgnkl and professional fields. Amgorig other _ active , graduates from| hland Park are Mrs. Kelâ€" logg and Mrs. Walter Cowan, and | . Gordon S. Cook and Mrs. Ralph| L. Herman, of Ravinia. nois out! to $ club for Fra Par T h ohostbtats ochatsxilllilharumt inss‘ 4 20 .4 8i édhn,rBd-tbn. will be the speaker of the Simmons Colligel Club of~ Northern â€" Illinois (al le) |at a meeting to be held on y evening, Feb. 28, at the Chi ) College Club, 196 East Delâ€" aw lace, at 6:80 o‘clock. Mrs. q. V ‘Spooner, president of the _ Palmer Graduate eurocalometerâ€"Service â€" 246 N. Green Bay Road ‘elephone H. P. 650 16% Pounds of Fat Gone "I‘ve lost 16%4 lbs. of fat and mave taken about oneâ€"third of my fecond bottle of Kruschen, Sure eeling fine." Mrs. J. E. Burnâ€" worth, Fort Wayne, Ind. COMES FAT sâ€"Bustâ€"Chin . CARPENTER Chiropractor ill | preside. Arrangements linner are in charge of Mrs. W. Parker, of Highland dressing the Northern Illiâ€" b, ‘President Beatley will he changes that have come ons during the past few Will Meet On Friday THAT KRUSCHEN FEELING 120 Liver Bancroft THE PRE were 1 The Sells all vaults used in its interments. The best vault usedâ€"is the|"Wilbert AsphaH Waterproof Burial Vault" made by the American Vault Works., Thik .is a beavy reinâ€" forced concrete box lined and sealed by specially prepared asphalt junder a patented pro¢ess. It is practically two vaults, an asphalt vault within a massive concrete vault. The management believes it tobe the only concrete grave.vault ever made that is waterproof. So confident are the makers of this vault that it will exclude all water forever that they issue a bond for $500 with each vault to guarantee that contention. The price, $100, is fixed by theg manufacturer and is the same to all alike. As a substitute for the wooden "rough box" which collapses under weight of the earth in a grave in a few months or in a few years at most, NORTHSHORE GARâ€" DEN OF MEMORIES makes a reinforced concrete box made in aach:u It will hold _up the earth in a grave forever, but of course, is not waterproof, The price is $15.00 \_with a reasonable extra charge for delivery to other cemeteries. Undertakers usualâ€" ly charge their customers $10.00 for a wooden rough box, which is generally a shipping case in which a casket comes. No wooden boxes are admitted to NO HORE GARâ€" DEN OF MEMORIES. Sunken graves make a sad sight and are a soyrce of n.uch care and work, and we are going to avoid them in the future. * I’I‘Rg’MUCH' MOREéPBUDENT AND SENSIBLE TO SECURE A D VAULT TO y ECT THE CASKET AND THE BODY, AND TO SAVE ON PRICE OF THE CASKET THAN TO BUY A SHOWY, EXPENSIVE CASK AND PLACE â€" THE SAME IN A FLIMSY, WOODKN BOX INTO WHICH MUDDY WATER WIELL ‘RUN AS THRU A SIEVE, SOMETIMES EVEN BEFORE THE NI?S ‘LEAVE THE GRAVE, AND WHICH WILL COLLAPSE IN A SHORT TIME. Mr. Western of NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES has been familiar with the facts stated in the foregoing legal decision for many years, but he has had many threats and bluffs from the steel vault combine, all of which he h laughed at or igâ€" nored. To make his position doubly safe he has sold every lot with the understanding in writing that no steel vaults shall be used. The browbeating thraats of prosecution and persecution intimidated a large percentage of the cemetery nagers and gagzed the cemetery publishers of the country for many years. Mr. Western took the Jead in this country and Canada in opposing the use of steel vaults use he knew that purchasers of burial equipment had been deceived for many years ks to the merits of these vaults. If he had been an undertaker he could have bought kteel vaults by â€"the carload for $19.00 each. These boxes have been sold to the public for years at $75.00 to $150.00 each. In the interest of lotâ€"owners who never consider guch subjects until confronted by death, he used his own judgment as to fighting tactips and won his obâ€" jective without spending & dollar in defense litigation,. At one timeâ€"as late as 1932 â€"he ordered a big Cincinnati lawyer (6 ft. 3 in. tall) out of his office if said lawyer had come for no other purpose than to try to frighten him off his caurse. * Several years after steel vaults had been barred from NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES, Mr. P. L. Scholl, Supt. of Charles Evans Cemetery, Reg@ding, Pa., and his Board of Directors took a very different course to reach the same goal and went thru two years of expensive litigation. The results attained by these two squarely driWn but very different battle lines against a combination of manufacturers with a lot of money are of lasting and almost inestimable importance to ceme ry managers and the‘general public. NOW cemetery superintendents and cemetery blishe re free to stand firmly in behalf of the public in advising their constituent as“m true character of steel grave boxes, or in prohihiting the use of such boxps entirely in makâ€" ing: burials. â€" & "We think the action by the trustees is justiâ€" fied by the testimony which wasproduced as to the life of steel vaults. Several managers of cemeteries testified that the rule is reasonable, alâ€" though not enforced in their own cemeteries. Some of the cemeteries were shown toâ€"have adopted the rule. While it is a question. whether the mere ppinion of managers that the rul; is reasonable amounts to much, the facts upon which they drew their conclusions are of value. One testified that he had dug down along side of a buried steel vault that had been there for eight years and that it was so rusted that you could put your thumb in at spots. Another testified that they had dug up steel vaults during his experience as manager and they came across one that was going toâ€" gether like an accordion, that was put in the year 1925. Another testified that a vault put in 1916 had collapsed to such an extent that there was a bow of at least a foot in the center of the steel vault, which had caused the ground to subside. Anâ€" Puf _ dn tudii t hi tsA e l ies ind old is lt ds s 4 4 44 o2 MB 0A A 5 #° CCR VCnmunig ual the use of steel vaults to enclose the remains of the dead should be absolutely abo}â€" ished, because such enclosures are not permanent but are subject disintegration by rust, that effective destructive agent which was referred to by the great Teacher of all the ages, nineteen centuries ago. â€" : Charles Evans Cemetery of Reading, Pa., while seeking to be rid| of the use of such vaults, adopted a rule that all interments in that cemetery should be encloséed in an outer wall of stone, concrete or brick. A combination of sixteen gteel vault manufacâ€" turers atthcked that rule in the court. The case went thru three dourts. The Superior Court of (Pennsylvania decided that the cemetery management h§gd a right to : adopt such a rule. The following is a part of the decison rendered. Sybsequently the Su: preme Court of the State of Pennsylvania refused to entertain an gppeal of that deciâ€" sion, thereby making the decision final in that state, viz: i s For many years managers of city or suburban cemeteries have } The Contest Against Steel Grave V aults V ilbert Asphalt Waterproof Bur _ Northshore Garden of Mem/o unity Service, â€" | ng was held in the ofâ€" fices of the Community Cefiter sponâ€" sored by Community Service, Inc. It is located on the corner of Laure] and McGovern Streets. Community Service, Inc., is a recreation organization, a corporaâ€" tion that was organized during the World War, and its purpose then was to provide recreation and enâ€" tertainment to soldiers, sailors and marines. It is a notâ€"forâ€"profit corâ€" poration. At the present time it is engaged in providing needed recreâ€" ational activities in Highland Park. Its activities are centered about the Community Center and an average of one hundred boys, girls, men and women use its facilities daily. Athâ€" other testified that a steellvault was put in 1907, that the side walls were eften with rust and colâ€" lapsed, telescoped down tojabout a foot in height, and that the circular top bn the steel vault furâ€" nished a regular nuisance &nd expense on account of the top being round ang the back filling‘never bonding to the side walls, kimply caved in on the opening next to it. AnotBer testified that they had never dug down along side a steel vault, but that it was badly rusted. |The superintendent of the defendant cemetery mpany testified that he had seen disinterments of a number of steel vaults and that in every fnstance of such openâ€" ings the steel vault coll@ipsed at the time the grave was dug along sidqg it, that it was filled completely with water, the foreman of the company confirmed the testimony of the surerin-‘ tendent by stating that thp top of the vault had a depression, the gide of fhe vault was grooved in,â€"bent in, pushed in on tÂ¥e side and bent on the top, and had settled some#hat." Quite a Philosopher ‘Sonny sat on the lower steps, rosy face ing in two chubby hands. * ‘s the matter, Sonny ?" "NotHin‘â€"just thinkint," "What about?" § . "Thirfkin‘ how dumb} trees are, take off| their clothes in winter and put thein ‘em on in summer." g'demm. tivities | is letic ties of all kinds comprise of a part of the program. This soyrce of : _Gpop v. Y P ET AND )DY wWAT: N IME. is of the use of such be encloséd in an 1 vault manufacâ€" urts. The Superior een familiar with . he has had many laughed at or igâ€" the understanding ts of prosecution al V ault F1e¢s en contending that be absolutely abo}â€" to disintegration by ie great Teacher of of recreational acâ€"

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