Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 27 Sep 1934, p. 11

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wide sprin t â€" $ dlays ino indling 6 i+ @ ts er n{pw 1 dalys. z,iiE; i‘y; :ph e YENUE althkul 11 with ERo¢ of the en ng 98 lm.) es â€" v‘“.‘}n i _ aagURrSD Bs 1 _ H c wiilp D¢ NCIG aV ym® ENB SNETWCE me field Saturday, Libertyville versus Deerfield. â€"ef| ukss _ Mrs. Edward Reagan w spent Saturday with her % Mrs. Frank Winkel in Round Lake. ‘ Mrs. Walter Page and Mrs. Leonâ€" ard North will be hostesses this ing to members of the Deerfield ‘tumtcm Star Officers‘ (.'7_!?\;~ Patrick Fogarty of Chicago visâ€" ited at the Edwin Meyers‘ home on Thursday. Â¥ " The Rhoda Circle met last Wedâ€" =lh! at the home of Mrs, IOSCOG ~ Mrs. William Neville will be hostâ€" to members of Dorcas Circle ;:., this afternoon. _ _ _ Deerfield _ Local and Personal ‘ Mrs. Leo Casey has been conâ€" fined to her home on Rogsemary Terâ€" race because of a fall. | y Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Daonaldson and gon Oliver Dean of Englishtown, N. J., and Miss~Betty Oakley of Newâ€" ark, N. J. have been go“.:s this past week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Button. | Mrs. John Traut (Ellen McCrarâ€" en) of Fremont Center, visited relâ€" ‘atives in this vicinity on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred LaBahn, Mrs. F. C. Biederstadt and Miss Frances Biederstadt drove out to see Jack Gibbs at the Chicago Junior School near Elgin on Sunday. . Mrs. M. C. Love, Mr. and Mrs. Berry Devine and son bit, Mrs. Mildred L. Gunekel and. daughter Verene visited at the Charles Welâ€" ter summer | home at Lily Lake, Wis., on Sunday. ;‘ + s At the September meeting of the Sewing Society of the Holy Cross Church there was an exhibit of 25 quilts. Miss Clara [Ender, Mrs. Otto Trute and Mrs. John Gatrity, acting as judges, sel two beauâ€" tiful flower garden degigns for the first football game of the will} be held at the high school : ‘field Saturday, Libertyville Suppose you need heat in your home at / --.ndnimdmtyhnd-y...bm, %U!’n when you want to start your heating plant, 4 find your fuel bin empty. That is the OQ e moment you wil} wish you had ordered a .. M J} supply of Waukegan Coke. Y O U To 5;‘pr¢lnnd for_ just %.:kem“‘émv 5 AV E . . . have a ton or more aukegan Coke delivered to your home now? Then there moNnEY will be no delay in making your home comâ€" fortable if you need heat in a burry! Waukegan Coke is oasily regulated. â€" Supplies the exact quantity of heat you require. Eliminates costly waste > . . for ‘it burns almost completely ... leaves few ashes, Makes clean, healthful, economical heat. > Call your fuel dealer now and ash him to: deliver the size Waukegan Coke your heating plant will burn with greatest efficiency and economy. at the home of Mrs. Roscoe Paul Borchardt y Highland Park Fuel Co. SEPTEMBER 27, 1984 Mercer Lumber Company Rkecommended and Sold by first two prizes. The awards were made to Mrs. Thomas Moogney of Ridge Road and Mrs. P. J. Asa of Chicago. All the quilts exhibited were very beautiful. The door prize, a box, went to Mrs. John Welich and the pillow cases to John Beckman. Hostesses for the very pleagant afternoon were Mrs. Leslie Behrens and Mrs. Huâ€" bert McGuire. It‘s well to go provided against starvation, in case the fish don‘t bite. A large roast will see you through the important meals, and make & delicious filling for sandwiches when someone gets overly ‘hungry or a group leaves camp for a few hours‘ hike. Hamburger patties, pork saus» ages, bacon and frankfurters are other suggestions for the morning, noon or evening camp meal. s For solid savor, ‘we elect holeâ€" baked beans as the classic of camp cookery. Ever eat them, fragrant and flavorous and glowing warm from the bean hole? They‘re rich brown, crispy on top and deliciously moist and soft all through; they‘re perfumed ~with flavor; they‘re maâ€" pleâ€"y with brown sugar, they‘re lively with mustard and subtle with that indistinguishable trademark of | an onion which has been laid on top of the beans during the baking and then thrown out! We recommend holeâ€"baked beans for any camping party that will be more than twentyâ€" four hours in one spot! For it reâ€" quires many hours of slow, thorâ€" ough baking to develop their rarest flavor. Permanent beanholes are often elaborate, stoneâ€"lined subterâ€" ranean cavities which are the sites of successive ‘campfires. If you haven‘t an established camp site and bean hole, it will be necessary . to build an impromptu oven in the ashes and coals, place in it the wellâ€" covered beanâ€"pot, surround it with ‘heated stones and fill the hole with ashes until the crock is completely covered. .. ‘=: Experienced fishermen often preâ€" fer to broil their catch to avoid the smoke and bother of panâ€"frying. After a huge, hot fire has reached the hotâ€"coal stage, the fish is put on \for a halfâ€"hour of slow broiling. \How this brings out the devasttating | taste and aroma of bass and trout! | Smaller fish, such as perch, are @xâ€" Kelvin Kitchen urn QQ (9 x i § ~~you SEads mOoNEY Menoni & Mecogni â€"Deerfield. IIl. Frank Siljestrom cellent when panâ€" ‘Split ther season, dip in cornmeal or flour, f1 in a large amount of very hot f: three to five minutes until wel browned on both si Then serv if someone hasn‘t alt taken the sway from you. _‘ _ | Don‘t omit the appetizers, stuff eggs, pickled fruit, olives, a relis A dessert of fresh fruit calls f cheese. If you want to spoil ever one thoroughly, bring a deepâ€"di apple pie! Snappy September ev nings suggest togsting things . long sticks around an open fire, & the old favorite, marshmalloy should be good for|at least one rol ing chorus of "Auld Lang Syne." :l;ouudgl Afavorite, marshmallo ould be good for|at least one rou ing ehom*; of "Auld Lang Syne." Eight hard boiled eggs, one P age cream cheese, one teaspoon A ¢hovy‘w8:’. M poon salt, | teaspoon pepper, n' espoons ma onnaise. Remove egg yolks and x through sieve, cream mayonnal and cheese, add onings and e yolks and blend ingredients toge thoroughly. Fill\ egg white sh with mixture and garnish with small leaf of parsley. ‘ 3 cups sifted fibur | 1% ten'pon cream of tartar | 1% cups brown gugar . | 1% mmm { | % cup butter , | 2 eggs, beaten| | | 1 cup grapenuts, crumbled find Sift flour once, measure, add s and cream of tartar and sift ag Creani butter, add sugar gradu and cream together thoroughly. eggs and beat well." Add van flour, and grapenuts, mixing W Shapeé into round |log, wrap in wa paper and chill in refrigerator, | | move paper, cut in thin slices | | bake in ‘hot oven 425° B_mimi | Wiill make a deli¢ious filled cook | using a jam ffilling. l RELIABLEK%AUNDR; DRY CLEANING CO 14 s Phone H. P. 178 .‘ The mo g r isunderstood star in the Hellywood firmament. Only five fe %’5 and weighing less thon 190 pounds. Born in Brooklyn, da E‘“ ter of a prize fightâ€" er, backwcxr school, she has risen from " ni; Littlest -Rebei” to the biggest : office attraction on the screen. l;% drink, seldom smokes, live ‘q* herself and avoids men. The ..;1:?%‘,.. g pictorial story men. ine C | of Mae We Cleaners ||_ T€HE PRESS At a most impressive ceremony, ; of Deerfield Unit No. 788, American Legion Auxiliary, Deâ€" nt of Illinois, were installed Monday evening. * . ‘The meeting opened with the adâ€" cing of the colors, thirty seconds silence, pledge to the flag, prayer the chaplain, and the singing of America." s ‘ Mrs. William A. Tennerman, outâ€" ing president of the organization gave words of praise and thanks to officers who have assisted her uring the past year. Mrs. Tennerâ€" man also told of the many accomâ€" plishments of the unit this year, which enabled it to possess the Pearl A. Duncan traveling cup. _A solo was‘ sung by Mrs. Edna Orsborn entitled "In the Garden of My Heart," The nexl)ir-el’octed director of tho‘ eighth district, Mrs. Mary Chase of Antioch, &u introduced, and accordâ€" ing to the department ritual, inâ€" stalled the newly elected officers. . After accepting the gavel the new president, Mrs. Gladys Jacobs, solicited \fl“ continued coâ€"operation of the Auxiliary members and introâ€" eerfield Auxiliary Evanston â€" Winnetka â€" Highland Park STORAGE IREDALE FIREPROOF WAREHOUSES Local â€" Long Distance Moving Phone for ggtimateé HIGHLAND PARK 181 Our 3 warehouses are conveniently located to servie this territory. Installs Officers The. Péoz{ogamwgecém?‘ . THE CHICAGD DAILY NEWS gubversive movements now present in many parts of our beloved counâ€" try. Our privileges to enjoy jusâ€" tice, freedom, and democracy, have been dearly bought. Each one of us should help to guard the principals under which we have seen the most wonderful times in the history of the world and has made us the only naâ€" tion in the world to which people from every country in the world are fchmorlng to enter â€" the "land of t STORIES yiocopfnuguncco[| iehvome m ns apeighuaiisen‘ l‘;\ LAKE Figures epesent | 321. Gveat Lakeo§\\\\| 25| e« â€"* 13Highwood 1 & . HicHLAND PARK\Q\\ w 10 Ravinia _ N\ 4 g 9â€"Breeside \‘,} “*"' T 4 Glencoe \f;\ # 1 éâ€"Hubbard hob \\\ + wmnmr No aâ€" W BAE lan. Ns Evms'rgud‘ \\‘\\ 4 6 C ChesP.râ€" rCHICAGO C opportunity." With each osywuk- ing in his or her commu with these constitutional rights always uppermost in mind, he said, will we prove ourselves true: Americans, The Auxiliary Trio, composed of Mmes. Davis, Orsborn, and Merrill, accompanied by Miss Frances Biedâ€" erstadt, sang "The Bellis of St. Mary‘s." _ t 50 * Rut 6o EVERFW?S Puonpatns tapee o s â€" With the retirement of the colors the meeting adjourned. _ § _ Refreshments of sandwiches, cook~ ies, and coffee were :g by: the social committee. : 24Wau kefan 2+Great Lakes 16 LaKe Forest 1#HighJood Phone Hwd. 5578 â€" J. Cervi, Prop § CERVI _ SALES AND SERVICE Tries, Tubes, Accessories, Batiew D'“M'.'I 532 Waukegan Avenue, Gvecee i e by storm ?| Motorcycles â€" Serviâ€"Cars watet, . it Accessories, Battery Service PAGE ELEVEN w‘ «:: 1 is § C M $3 f s & + & § : § J3 l 8 a | e .ts ul ®e s

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