Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 10 Oct 1935, p. 7

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ults â€" No muss or HER * ear tfm, ren D1O levard Women pet Cleaned at your the foor. ° Perfect d ACROBATIC ANING hland Park 3100 1 soon begin to ie to prepare for ting and renewâ€" ¢s, Carpets, Curâ€" , etec.. You will ng heavy grey) 5 patlk .............. nters ....._.......â€" , Cutting, Laying, BALL S FOR Y BOY Park 1330 eoal are tes Orchestra About Our TPROOFING OCESS! OCTOBER TEL H. P IMner Linings. 1st 1. $5.50 & $6.50 rmpopetindsactwes TYR Sservice | 1er SE and , Call and 3707 10, .50 .50 1985 flv‘SDAYv The Children‘s theatre under the of Catherine Marie Geary is starting its seasons activities this with the beginning of the workâ€" groups in the fundamentals of v diction, pantomime and creaâ€" dramatization at the Masonic building, 21 N. Sheridan road. i taber 10, Thursday, benefit proâ€" *fi Boys and Girls club of, f ;WShields high school, sojl for the Lamps of China" featurâ€" ng Pat O‘Brig" and Jean Muir, M l of Alice e Hobâ€" ?.”' seller, dealing with the loyâ€" Mity to the company of an employe, ’W of the Orient and + .wmdmg of the Chinese character | deserve favorable comâ€" ment qflu and young adults, â€" â€"â€" October 11, 12; Friday, Saturday »The Girl Friend" with: Ann Sothern and Jack Haley. A stupid deceit on the part of a trio of musical comedy eators works to the advantage of eve concerned. There is a flm a play, a parody on Naâ€" #M furnishes hilarious fun and not only saves another wise dull story but converts it into a sideâ€" ”m. Family. October (13, 14, 15; Sunday, Monâ€" day, Tuesday "Call of the Wild." Clark Gable and Loretta Young, adâ€" venture dtama from story by Jack London of Alaskan gold rush. Budâ€" dies seeking gold rescue girl whose husband is missing in wastelands. The trio strike rich claim, romance develops, but where husband reâ€"apâ€" pears, the lover withdraws. Adults. October 16, 17; Wednesday, Thursâ€" day, "Accent on Youth" with Herâ€" bert Marshall and Sylvia Sidney. A *;,' sophisticated comedy of negligible plot, which depends for its charm upon witty dialogue, bits of byâ€"play and the whimsical characâ€" ter interpretation of the middleâ€"aged author, giving it the technique of the stage rather than of the cinema. Very well cast and directed. Adults, Those desiring membership in the various s which meet once a week after school for an hour or those who would like to take part in the seasons plays are advised to make application . immediately by calling H. P. 340 as registrations will still be accepted this week. very interesting feature which has been added this year is the orâ€" tion of a special Boys‘Workâ€" shop group in fencing and stageâ€" eraft under the direction of Mr. Edâ€" gar Tegner of the Goodman: School of the Theatre and the Art institute,. The various Knights tales will be used as material for dramatization as they are particdilarly suited to the type of work which will be done in the group. In this workshop the boys will learn how to fence, build and design scenery, whittle, do woodworking and make puppets by actual experiment. * Rally Day, Sunday, ~â€"â€" at First U. E. Church The annual rally, and promotion day exercises will be held at the First United Evangelical church next Sunday morning at 10 o‘clock. Special recognition will be given to the children who have had perfect Kg, Better Films _‘ Committee Review \The pastor will give a message apâ€" propriate for the occasion. Parents Of the Sunday school scholars are T South St. Johns Avenue ONLY IN PICTURES, THAT NEVER GrRow UP, CAN YOU KEEP THE FLEETING LOVINESS OFEEHILD- HOOD. IT‘S TIME FOR ANOTHER PHOTOGRAPH OF YOUR CHILD. ; Theatre Begins Activities Visit Our Studio Today OCTOBER 10, 1985 Hecketsweiler Studio Photographers sessions in its history. With Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes preâ€" siding and eight associate justices on the bench with him, the court will open its session in its new judicial home, the spaci grandeur and dignified archi simplicity of which it is imposgible for me to deâ€" pict in words. Here decisions will be made which will ge“ a profound efâ€" fect upon the political and economic philosophy of the nation. f Dizmct $ Chicago, Ill., Oct. 5â€"At exactly 12 noon next Morday, the 7th, the Supreme Court of the United States will formally what promises to be one of the most momentous Since December of 1860, upon the completion of the Senate wing of the Capitol, the Supreme Court has occupied the sm:“ll quarters in the Capitol building, approximately halfâ€" way between the House and Senate chambers. Only once were the sitâ€" tings of the court disturbed in that permanent: home, when on Novemâ€" ber 6, 1898, a :.ziexplodon and fire in the court on of the capitol caused the souiot: to be held in the room of the Senate committee on the District of Columibia and later in the room of the Senate Committee on Judiciary. 7 « When one loorfig at this impressive building of Vermont white marble, with general dimensions of 385 feet by 304 feet, he cannot but recall the fact that when the Supreme Court convened in Washington for the first time, on February 4, 1801, with Chief Justice John Marshall presiding, it met in a room 24 feet by 30 feet. But the Washington of 1801, when the Supreéme Court moved, uncereâ€" ‘moniously from, Philadelphia to the nation‘s capital, is not the Washingâ€" ton of today, when the court con* venes in a substantial building four stories high from the terrace.. _ â€" _ By Ralph E. Church â€" Representative, 10th Congressional As a matter of fact, for 126 years the . Supreme Court has occupied some portion of the Capitol, with the exception of the period immediately following the burning of the capitol by the British August 24, 1814. Starting next Monday the sessions will be held in one of the most beauâ€" tiful buildings ;: the world, conâ€" structed at a cost approximately $11 million. > eo* ‘p' -" The records show that in 1801 the total, population of the city of Washâ€" ington was a 8,000 and that the congress conta in the House and Senate 128 members. I understand that in that year there were only 126 federal employ in the city. Toâ€" day, on the other hand, there are thousands of employees in the govâ€" ‘ernment service and the House of Representatives itself contains 435 members. | y It is‘a vi Ampossibility to deâ€" scribe in de the home of the highest tribunal of the land, with its doors â€" of â€" 0 tal bronze, its carved panels, and its delicately sculptured wall friezes. One must visit it himself to feel of its grandâ€" eur and dignity. There are, howâ€" ever, two f for the approach to the main entrance which are vydrthy of mention here. d One is a female figure which repâ€" resents the plation of Justice. With an expression of meditation, she rests her tight hand on a small model of a fi of justice and: her left is on a of laws. The other DRY CLEANING CO. Phome H. P. 178 hone Highland Park 435 k i Wasklngton LAUNDRY is a male‘figure to represent the Executor of Law, holding in his left hand the tablet of laws, backed by the sheathed sword. as symbolic of gnfqr:;ment. He stands erect and pawerful. : & ¢ of ago, will open session this comâ€" ing lqmday which historians of tomorrow will record as being one of the most momentous in history. These‘nine men will weigh in the ‘balarice several :;l ‘the New measures, with a view to d = ing whether the acts of the Congress n:g-th?d!:residant m(«;mhtent th t mental law of the coun as :l,:godhd in thl: constitution. ~ _ Minus pomp and ceremony, nine bldek-r:bed- Supreme Court justices, the youngest of whom (Associate Justicg Owen J. Robm is 60 years It is my . una;l‘;t;;&i-n'; _ that among the measures which the court will be asked to review are: _;1, PWA condemnation of lands for slgm clearance. ME 2. PWA loans and grants to comâ€" peting municipal power plants. 3. Bankhead Cotton Control Act. 4. e Tennessee Valley Authorâ€" ity anfi its sale of surplus power. 5. processing taxes, which have been held invalid by the Boston Circuit Court, . . _ Ni And there are several otiuqr. New Deal acts, such as the Guffey Coal Grocery and Meat: Specialsl t THURSDAY â€" FRIDAY â€" SATURDAY| KipE oLIvEs bottle Large can Golden Bantam Tomatoes gonarch | * AUER KRAUT Noneâ€"Such New 5 pound package Phone H.P. Baking Chocolate mbrosia ANE & MAPLE SYRUP 4400 Solid Pack Vine Ripe . Corn 29¢ 25¢ cans for cans for No. 2 can ; No. ‘ â€"~lHellmann‘s MAYONNAISE 24 per quart [!per Bachge C GRAPEâ€"NUTS Maxwell H Libby‘s CORNED BEEF size can THE PRESS BLUE GOOSE FOOD MART Your Choite Apple Butter Apple Sauce Grape Fruit Juice â€" Grape Jelly â€" Stuffed Olives â€" Bean Sprouts Cut Green Beans with each 50¢ purchase Act, the Social Security Act, the ‘Wagner Labor Disputes Act and the Public Utility Holding Company Act, which gre in the course of preparaâ€" tion for final review by the Supreme io 20¢ <â€" Qur government is divided, under a system of ‘delicately arranged checks ‘and: balances, into three branches: the legislative, executive and judicial. For the past several months the Congress and the Presiâ€" dent have occupied the center of atâ€" tention, but beginning next Monday the eyes of )t*r world will be on the Supreme when it begins its deliberations to de whether the Congress and the ident have exâ€" ceeded the powers granted them by the people in the constitution. Tender Peas Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd will tell the story of his 2nd Antaretic expedition in his initial Chicago apâ€" pearance at a special lecturé accomâ€" panied by exhibits and 9,000 feet of motion. pictures, October 22, ‘ at Thorne hall on Northwestern uniâ€" versity‘s McKinlock â€"campus. _ Byrd To Lecture at > McKinlock Campus The narrative and pictures will cover highlights of eighteen months of exploration, scientific study, and polar adventure in 450,000 square ~ 90¢ puse COFFEE 10c 10c 516â€"518 AQ= Texas Sunkist WHOLE FIGS per glass jar ORANGES Full ‘of juice JONATHAN APPLES : 16c Best for eating 21¢ 17c | * 209C 42¢| Fancy Ginger Ale â€" Rdot Beer 3 packages for BABâ€"O plus bottle deposit Rickey &4 quarts 25C¢C and| his crew made in their huge plane; the rebuilding of Litâ€" tle America into accomodations for i men; the strange wild life of Antâ€" arctic: and the beginning of Byrd‘s il at his Advance Base, 123 miles th of Little America, where for five: months he maintained the ‘brld‘s southermost weather station. of heretofore i antâ€" icti¢c continent. Byrd bring home to every listener the signifiâ€" ¢e of his work in his descriptions of discovéries in . \ fields of entific research at the bottom ‘of the world. â€"© _ . .|.! QEM .expedition discovered beds of Jk@i1 180 miles from the South Pole and such ores as molybdénum and c . They found that the weather at the South Pole affects the entire :fithem hemilpt;ere, that microâ€" bpic life teems in the water melted ftom ice frozen for thousands of yzn, and that in an area protected from the cold of the iceâ€" cap and the g‘h motion pictures depict the exâ€" ploration fiights that Admiral Byrd nd, a Fahrenheit thermometer will ister 120 degrees of m from sun‘s radiation on an Antarcti¢ca summer day. % i [ 5 i¢* $1 25¢ 10c _LARD l 2Lb:35?¢ { FINE MEATS||â€" Ground B%f I 21m35¢ | BEEF CHUC LEC OF t «2534 fls#2" Fememmenene qmues uesses ut PORK LOIN ROAST | 2044 ROAST t 12314 | HIGH GRADE w TS . _ * AT LOW PRICES Save in Our 2}1B, AVERACE ARMOUR‘S STAR Read The Want Ads Franken Bros. HOLLAND BULB $ is comp % f Announces the arrival of their from Free E H PAGE SEVEN i# CA $5

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