Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 24 Oct 1935, p. 12

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ir the entire inâ€" Ceneral Motors V aiue " to : in Deerfleld et. 30;â€"is the date Lake. County conâ€" iyal Neighbors of will be held at the nic Temple. . The will be at 1 o‘clock, ock a dinfler will be ethlehem Evangeliâ€" e evening meeting 0 ‘o‘clock. servations, ‘members plione Mrs. William Bd 334. . , Inc. H. P. 178 ROOMS "Turretâ€"Top" ID UP HAS TUB R BATH TOBER 24, 1935 DAY ne H. P. 2260 e.: The 1936 last 100,000 LAUNDRY D NING CO. .ST C 1 mounting, 15 Â¥A We ‘went ‘across the road to see the chickens. The first chickens were white‘ with red combs. The man told us the chickens would be quite naked because they lose their feathbrs once a year. They call this molting. «The chickens will have new feathers to keep them warm in the winter. In the chicken coops we saw the nests. Some of the hens were on the nests. We saw eggs in the nests. We saw where the chickens roost at night and where they ate and drank. The food was by the chickens all the time. The chickens will not eat too much, but the tows had to be fed because they would eat too much if they had the food all the time. The man showed us how they heated the chicken coops. We saw the chickens go in and out the door. They went in a big yard where they could run i around. We went back across the road. We drew pictures of the farm, ‘ We went back across the road. we played games. Then we went in the milk house. The men showed us how they cooled the milk and how they filled the sbottles and put the tops on. They gave us each a botâ€" tle of milk to‘drink. They showed us how they washed and sterilized the bottles. They sterilized the botâ€" tles with steam. We saw the big ice box where they kept eggs, milk, eream and butter. Then we went home.. A big, long freight train stopped us,â€" Then a little train came. It was an engine, coal car and caboose. We had a very nice At the farm we saw many cows in the barn. They had just come in from the pasture to be milked. The cow has four stomachs. A man in a white suit milked a cow. â€" When the cow presses her nose on the fountain she gets a drink. The cows are fed two or three times a day. We saw what the cows eat. ‘The corn is ground in a machine. The corn is put in a silo. This is the cow‘s "sauerkraut." The cow chews her cud. Then we went to the barn where the calves were. The man showed us the calf‘s teeth. Cows do not have upper teeth. They canâ€" not bite. © .: Our Trip to the Farm (Dictated by the First Grade) We went to the farm in cars. On the way we saw goats, horses, turâ€" keys, haystacks, and many colored leaves. We saw a stream line train. It was the Hiawatha. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1935 by doing your next ironing in your own home FREE we‘ll prove it You can do ,bet1 with a | CONLON AUTOM ® The secret of good ironing is heat and With a ConlonAutom;d%onerbotgo chaenemwado- gree not possible with ordinary ods. t But that isn‘t a Conlon‘s only advantage, You‘ll find that a Conlon enables you to do all ironing easier and in half the usual time. To prove it we will do your next ironing. If you deddetol;?,tempul ‘ as $2 | down and ts a week on { monthly El Service bi J | ‘ LIMITED : Don‘t pass by this s ial offet. | BARGAIN OFFER Phone or call at your nearest Public | | Combination of washer Service Store now and ask for a free | and jroner for only nome demonstration. . | I *3 nown To cover interest other costs, a higher price is cha _WHJ ments. To the prices quoted in our 7 end marked on our merchandise, 53 3% To ie added on agcount af addi tax expenst. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY LINCOLN SCHOOL OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS Columbus had to wait for many years before he made his voyage. Then the good Queen Isabella helped him fit out three little ships, the Santa Maria, the Pinta and the Nina. Columbus was happy. He set sail and steered toward the west. They ufiled for many, days. The sailors grew more and more lafraid. They said, "We will throw you overâ€" board if you don‘t take us back." But Columbus said, "Sail on." umbus thought that this land was Infdia. But Columbus was mistaken. land he found w#s our l}‘nd in which ‘we live, Amerjca. â€"Patricia goner, Grade 3. | | ey are not sad *4 . When they hear the wind calling; Tiley seem to be glad ‘=| > | at they are falling. 1 L They‘ll sleep all winter | â€" |~ _ Uhder the snow > t .1 d in the spring will make soft, rm beds | § ere violéts will grow. | _ | â€"Janet Larson, Grade 5. ne day we went down to the ch to get stones for a rock chart we are making. We found, rocks with crystals in them and| rocks with rusted zrnnite..l.fofind“n fosâ€" sit of a seashell and one with crysâ€" a and different minerals in it. S@me found pieces of lim ‘toge and *andstone.â€"Bob Will, Grade 5. ter they had sailed for hine or ten weeks Columbus said, "I see Ll d."_ They landed right away. ves are in colors | / Of orange, red, and brown, And they are floating, | â€" Gently down, down. [ |___ Clumbus | Christopher Columbus was born in Genoa, Italy. He used to watch the :mps that sail into the harbor. He iked to| talk with the sailors who told him stories that pleased him. Columbus told the sailors that he was going to be a sailor, too. And he did become a sailor. | As Columbus grew older he liked to look at the map. [Now in those days the people of Italy thought the earth was flat. Just a few wise men believed it was round, but Colâ€" vmbus believed it.. time at the farm. ATIC IRONER er ironing ‘ BRAESIDE SCHOOL LIMITED â€" BARGAIN OFFER Combination of washer and ironer for only ’3 Down â€"â€" 66¢ a week 24 months to pay 30 days free tria Autunin Industrial Museum ’LVisit d Friday Last:Friday one [/th de group boarded the high ischou bus and _ Our . science téacher gu been missing a garter, snake ur \home room adjoins the: seience{room. One day last we:; justt before we were going home a boy in our room was getting his bat and ball, and guess what he saw crawling on the floor? :/ It was.the! miss garter snake. | Some boys took eir handâ€" kerchiefs and tied them ground the neck and tail of the snakg:and took him back into Miss Cramer‘s room. Midasg‘ Gold â€"| I came upon moog;et, Its banks were red an It took me back) a thousa And to the da; {old.{'i I thought of poor King And his foolis® Golden And laughed because, af Men hadn‘t thanged By Anne Macpherson, | The Missing Sna! _ Our science téacher missing a garter, snake room adjoins the: s¢ience _ First and Second Grades Leaves dance all :rljuund Aofâ€"â€"| And f&ll to the ground, || | / Norene and Edith, The leaves on the trees . Dance in the breeze. | _ In bright ‘colors, re? and t They dance around and ar The leaves prance, The leaves dance, Un their tipâ€"toes all morning, : What do you think To in with the t $ Wimhe Sun peep And on the ground around, _ _ | /\ My: yard ndorni#xc.; y Isn‘t that a lovely sight ELM'P%CE [ * | My Idéa of Autum» |~â€" When I wake up on an autumn By Margaret Einbecket Grade 6 low-pricocfn d is still the Vâ€"8 engine. Since Ford made it available to all car users (keeping it as economical as cars with fewer ders) the Ford Vâ€"8 has been the n engine on the market, and remains ast for 1936. You may buy a on minor "talking points"â€"some advertised feaâ€" ture "with the thrown in"â€"but, after all, it is the en you buy when you buy a car. we put the engine first. Other new |points ‘about the car make a long {list. Its lines are nuch more beautiful. The hood is longer and sweeps forward over the distinctive radiator grille, giving the car a len and grace that are instantly im ve, The fenders are larger, with a flare. Horns are conâ€" cealed behind r grilles beneath the headlamps.| New steel wheels. Ford â€"always of sterling qujii;ynand e: tasteâ€"is rich and enduring. The of the car "~ ic new to of refinement. There THE NEW FORD Vâ€"8 FOR Why do we The New Ford Vâ€"8 is no question about the increased for 19367 ' $ ~1~1 beauty of the Ford Vâ€"8 for 1936. . . _ By Nancy McDonald, What is new about it? Dick, J ear‘, Charles se and brown nd around. and Marion. round. . . Ray, Betty. hoed ouch, all, much. Grade 6. gold.> d 'ytiars, THE PRESS Next spring before the grade graduates they will be given an achievement test, therefore, during the 8th grade all of them will work hard so that they can p to Mr. Richardson that they are y for high schoolâ€"By Robert Moon, Grade Thi5th grade children fre going to. have a stamp club for| purpose of e*changiug stamps. :\ We will have {our first meeting this week some day after school in s Buehâ€" ler‘s jroom. Any. 5th grafier who has stamps to exchange is invited. â€"By ‘Gilbert Anderson, (G#ade 5â€"2. Fifths Write, Viking Play * The 5th graders in the E)Jm Place school are writing plays in history class. The plays are about ithe Vikâ€" ings. :. Some of the children are writing their play together, Others are /writing their play alorndé.â€"Betty Bletsch, Grade 5â€"3. ( The object of these tegts is ‘to see what each pupil need order to ‘bring him or her up |to high school standards. . CAP The 8th graders were: much surprised . Thursday morning when they| came to school, for (Mr. and Mrs. Richardson of Deerflelfiâ€"Shields high| school were there to|give inâ€" telligence tests.. Of coursp, al\ of the 8th graders consider ves intelligent, but the idea of having that intelligence test rather|alarmed most of them. ‘After they comâ€" pleted the tests, everyone| seemed pleased, and all decided they were not so hard, as anticipated. were off for the Industrial Museum in Jackson Park in connect rith their social science work, Miss Jones and Miss Willcutt acconfpanying them. They came back so| enthusâ€" iastic that other 7th gradets yet to go, can hardly wait for their turns. sur they Mrs hig E.P.S. Football Team Tiek H.S. Last Wednesday, Oct. J6, Elm ivurnes By Dorothy Farmer, Gfade 8â€"3. @m ieaenons & ..Ey Mieg Peeemnte cmes High School Tests Given Stamp Club Organi . In more practical matt improvements have been made~â€" Slouing is easier by a new steerâ€" ing gear nu‘oooung system cir. culates 5%/2 | of water through a new, larger radiator. Natural thermoâ€" syphon action is assisted by two cenâ€" dreds have written grateful letters beâ€" cause this glass has protected the satety of their famili¢s. trifugal water pumps. New style hood louvres permiit a rapid airâ€"flow around the engine. | | The two qualities you want in brakes â€" . that stop the car with Saftetyâ€"asg always â€"in the electriâ€" cally weld anuine steel body. Safety Glass all around at no extra cost. Hunâ€" A car you drive without strain all day, it -y*u like, in city or country. Steady, holds| the road, responds to the (,’/” HHHEE heavyweights | the Schonl Intfiftirel toase Phorguige ended 0â€"0.. /In the first quarter the high school| carried the ball: ten yards within a touchdown. â€" On the next play the high school fumble, and Eim [Place recovered.. ‘l'h:; during a number of plays, the Elm 532 Central Ave. BRAND BRQO of Ford gears A Few of the Numeroug Things Sell to Help You Wi “ his gV ® WASHING oi DERS ® SPONGES " ®@ POLISHES : gl j . @ PATCHING PLASTER ® SAND PAPER [ . ® PAINTSâ€"BRUSHES @ CGLASS _ |â€" _ ‘@ mIRRORS _ ;ff _ _ @ ‘CALCIMINE .®@ FLOOR: FINISHES _ & winpow sHAbrs npmpeamermeinnt FA L d e e riolet (with rumble #e@#). $625, |Fordar Sedan + {‘r $625. ‘Tudor “{: 4 ('-&6 trunk), $$90.. Fordor Tollking Sedan builtâ€" in trunk)}, $650; Con “?» F.O. 3. Detrolt. 8 H{“ ‘ f ‘mm-‘m. , ;: nr.-lv-. MA By types Economicd! enns i THIRTEEN BODY C (5 «in k $510. Tudor Sedan, Fordar \$580. DE LUXEâ€"Hoadster (with rumble . $560. Coupe (3 windows), Coupe (5 wi C LOW FORD Vâ€"8 PRICES this 1996 Ford Vâ€"8 â€"the It really is a gred! coar in every way, fifteen||yards 3 a ',.A ": the‘ wijistle blew ending the first il!' hard |fought game. The |Wecond half 1‘ about like the fni@k Nei ‘am did. much yardagg, and the game was hard fough ’l'he'multi vas 00. â€" By Bob Péliérson, Grade 8. | elephone 1936 ; Sedan ( fith builtâ€" > Sedan, $ Mhory | 5 M i1 Pord Vâ€"8 bogly types ersad HERS es '% o Ne it I! ; 7 949 & sB E ELEVEN

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