Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 21 Nov 1935, p. 13

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

eating Co. uaranteed G ROOM Phone Deerfield 7 Foot control A popular gift finished in chroâ€" w CORDS Hiâ€"Speed restore an even fow WEAR ng only, trasting ebony r cells when t with walnut chine, when #utility table. attachmenss. int. Lamp has ory and gold i~ $g95 WAFFLE IRON hland Park 1342 hmerit shade. ished in ivory ientist of waffle irons i & 3495 NOVEMBER 21, 1985 95 up rage ce waffles every $4950 Miss Elizabeth Bredin and Miss Emada Griswold are making resérâ€" vations for girls of D. 8. H. S. who wish to attend a matinee performâ€" ance of the Ballet Russe in Chicago on Wednesday,. Nov. 27. The ballets danced will be "The Fantastic Toy Shop," "The Snow Maiden" and "Aurora‘s Wedding" Mrs. Arthur Pagel will be hostess at a Christmas party for the Evanâ€" gelical Daughters on Wednesday, Dec. 11, to celebrate the first anniâ€" versary of the organization of this group of young married women of St. Paul‘s church. Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Olson of Greenwood avenue entertained twenâ€" ty guests from Chicago on Sunday in honor of Mr. Olson‘s birthday anâ€" niversary. Dr. W.F. Weir was called to Coâ€" lumbus, Ohio, on Wednesday, Nov. 20, to attend the funeral of his brother‘s wife. » Mrs. Edwin Johnson will be hosâ€" tess to Dorcas Circle Three at a Miss Theresa Scavuzzo spent last week with her aunt Mrs. Nicholas Rosenball in Chicago. o Mrs. 0. C. Reichert (Alma Kent) of Los ‘Angeles, Calif., has been visâ€" iting. her sister, Mrs. Peter Van de Velden of Osterman avenue. Mrs. Hans Bahr will entertain the Quid Nunc club on Tuesday evening at her home in Highland Park. Mr. and Mrs. William Johnston spent Sunday at the William Brown home in Chicago Lawn. p Peter Van de Velden is recovering from a month‘s illness. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1935 z> ~~ss is e s 4 T :Ij & '.'- Ek. 4 =<Ainy o4 +7 \ << k ~ _ tnâ€"® ‘..& But turning aside to pass is not the kind of turning that we are interested in discussing here. What we now w + concerned with is taking curves and corners. time to time in these discussions we will find that. | whtnw the same old laws of Nature will be involved. WE want l most among them will be the laws of momentum, and | T0 60 momentum plays the major part in going ;’:‘5 4 curves. Because momed}um not only wants to keep Â¥ us going, but going in the same direction. When it is t anty . / trying to make us go straight instead of curving our 4 1 us to course, it operates under an assumed name, if you 1: 1900 .. _ please. For theén we call it "centrifugal force." i mig. Now of course we all know what cen‘ force t E-mv . is. We feel it when we go around curves. Highways. f4 and railroads are banked at curves to offset centrifuâ€" Y gal force. Aviators bank their planes at turns by tipâ€" o m * ping them with the controls. But even though we all know about cent: 1 ‘force, few of us realize how powetful it is, how much greater it gets the faster we go. i 4 y 4 Nu_ arrer how expert we may be as we are all apt to fall into habits of driving that don‘t quite measure up to what we really know is M‘ & 5 t A j For instance, we all know that we ought to be careful about passing cars, especially when another car is C ‘haowodtod.lm:?n. omm sn j And yet possibly isn‘t one of us E+1 a +9 who hasn‘t, at one time or another, moved s &1 & over in the rbad to pass a car, and L x e 4===< wondered if we would get around in the road, and sixteen cars in a row will reach a new idea to most of ‘us. If we kept it in min unless we were sure that there were no on« distance ahead. rat $ A 3000â€"pound car making a turn of 500â€"foot radius, has to overcome & centrifugal forceof only about 156 pounds at 20.miles an hour. But at 30 mflet an hour, that force grown to 360 pounds, and a a* ==== 60 it is nine times as t as at 20 . . . over fourteen 5 L. 7 hundred pounds its best to push us off m S:Â¥:.. *3 road! The only thing thepousonthmdln 5k . , first place is the 1 between our and the e ns ;# road. The minute the centrifugal force gets â€" ‘s*â€".,..> 0 than the forceof that friction, off the road we go. $o what do we do? We clamp down the It‘s the only thing‘ can do when we find we‘re going too fast. But just the same, approa that corner too fast has kept us from taking it as we should have liked For if conditions permit, it is often d,esinbl.t.to increase m as we around a curyve. As long as our rear wheels not being retarded, but actually pushing us around the curve, our steéering is effective and our is under control. j r > ‘The long and short of it is that we can‘t take liberties with the laws momentum and centrifugal force. Man‘s speed laws may not always observed, but Nature‘s speed laws always are! | } mm ‘The trouble is that we often don‘t realize how 1 â€"z we‘re going. On road trips, for instance, after ,.;-g have driven at a speed for a long time, i‘== seems a small matter to increase our speed a : :: miles an hour. Then a while we may do ® ":= same thing again. In words, we keep \ ,\’-: forward our basis of n till byâ€"andâ€"by i |â€" wâ€"w ._}§ have lost our usual : of how fast we are go Then, the first thing know, we are faceâ€" with a turn or even half way around it and we feel Old Man Cen! Force trying to push us off the road., _ _ | > ; â€" . â€" . WE DRIVERS 9A Series of Brief Discussions on Driving, pd" n‘.‘o.&ldr.w and Pleasure © â€"â€"â€" by General Motors | No. 1â€"CURVES AND TURNS Em op mt helt hn siatatscan io Nax : chroncreienarcl as c cce Now an interesting thing about that, When try to pass a car that‘s going forty A&n hour, it‘s just the same as it tried to pass a standing string of 26 feet long, In other words, it‘s like gight cars parked bumperâ€" toâ€"bumper in the road. 11 we try to p one going sixty, it‘s like to pass line of more sirteen cars standing in w will reach a block. This is probq:z’ ept it in mind, we would never pass a were no cars for a good long lunchéon at her home on . Todd court on Friday, Nov. 22. On the same afternoon at 1:30 o‘clock Dorâ€" cas Circle Four wil meet at the home of Mrs. William Wing on Osâ€" terman‘ Ave. Mrs. Edwin Johngon is chairman: of Circle Three And Mrs. Nathan Burch of Circle Four. Pottenger‘s father sent hyacinth, tulip, crocus and narcissus bulbs. They have been planted and the class anticipates some beautiful The sixth grade room has j.lb- scribed to "Popular Mechanics" with the money earned from the PTA membership drive. i d | blossoms this winter, Eighth graders have received the pins early so that they may enjoy wearing them this year. A candy sale netted $3.65 last week. is money will go toward the purchase of a class gift to the school, Quality Cleaners | RELIABLE, {;AUNDRY DRY CLEANING CO. Phone H. P. 178 £0| School News (Continued from page 9) I Bd ( ‘.“% Dressed m their favorite movie stars, members of the Friendship Club of the YÂ¥WCA will stage.a gay Hollywood party and fashion show on this Thursday qvening.. A cabâ€" aret dinner will be served at seven o‘clock in the famous "Hollywood Cocoanut Grove." Doubles . of Charâ€" lie Chaplin; Bing Crosby, Joan Crawford and Clark Gable have reserved their own table. First, seeâ€" ond and thl!d prizes will be given for the best impersonations. Alice Karvinen is chairman of this unusâ€" vual evening which the girls who have Thurscipy "off" will enjoy. Girls who&;n employed in Highâ€" land Park Homes who are not yet members of the club can drop in after suppert to attend the fashion show withm{t reservation. The fashâ€" ion show will include velvets, silk and‘ sport dresses, coats and wraps all modele(‘ by . Friendship club girls. Hats and accessories to harâ€" monize wtli’n be featured in this showing of moderately priced wardâ€" robe, direct@d by Grace Newmeyer Smith of Garnett‘s., # Boys and Girls "Getâ€"Together" The first monthly "get together" of eighth grade boys and girls for supervised gecreation under the diâ€" rection of Ethel Skidmore Gartley and Calvin Gartley was voted a sucâ€" cess by the fiftyâ€"two boys and girls who enjoyed last Saturday at the YWCA. Mrs. E, E. Leonard, the chairman of a group of mothers repâ€" resenting tfie various schools : who are sponsoring this experiment in good times is already making plans for next month‘s meeting. A small number of young people: will still be accepted for this group. _ Entertain National Officers _ ; Miss Genévieve Lowry, secretary of the National Services Division of the YWCA, was guest of honor at a tea given by the Mothers‘ Club of the Highland Park YWCA Tuesâ€" day afternoon. Mrs. E. E. Paulâ€" sen, president, Mrs. Louis Schemâ€" g\el, representative of the Mothers‘ Club on the local board, Mrs, H. V. Renner, former president of" the club, and Mrs. John Sobey, viceâ€" president, were hostesses, Repreâ€" sentatives from the Lake Fores Y and from all other groups within the Highland Park Y were invited as this was an unusual opportunity to hear wlu{ the YWCA is doing in this country and around the world. Miss Lowry told of the broader meaning of the new purpose which the association members are now signing: "To build a fellowship of women and ‘Firls devoted to the task of realizing in our common life the ideals of personal and social living to which, we are committed by our faith as Christians; in the endeavor we seek to understand Jesus, to share his love for all people, and to grow in the knowledge and love of "God." The new merhbership plan permits three groups of members: »tE O U o oo en e e e e e o e en e e en e YÂ¥. W.C. A. Notes Highland Park State| Bank How ABout REAL ESTATE? THE PRESS We have acquired through foreclosure, son{lle choice. residence lots, also some attractive homes, which we are offering at arâ€" gain prices. â€" ; | : ©Inquiries, almost unheard of for several years, are cominig to us daily. | | 6 MR f ‘It is reported that in thié ‘community, twel4ty-four ho are under construction, | EBs +0 t North Shore Real Estate is coming back fast. The dis parcels are being picked up, and will soon be exhausted. Please call if interested. electors who sign this purpose, assoâ€" ciate members who wish to share in the work of the association but do not care to sign this: purpose, and junior members. Following Miss Lowry‘s inspiring talk on the work of the YWCA in 56 countries where women, regardless of. race or ctod. are linked together in Y work, Mrs. A. S. Burdick, chairman of the Highland‘ Park membership comâ€" On Ocroser 31 of last year, Henry Ford announced his intention to build a million Ford Vâ€"8s in 1935. We are pleased to reâ€" port that this goal was reached in exactly ten months instead of a full year. , ‘ One million cars and trucks is an imâ€" preiiivo total. But figures by themselves mean nothing. It is what they represent that counts. Selling a Vâ€"8 at a low price has brought a new kind of automobile rm»:uzwronnv-sronlmrsNowounmmv.mcnm!mmotmfimms HAS BEEN MADE STILL BETTER FOR THE NEW & es JAN FER â€"MaR THg OuD Reuasie BANK FORD MOTOR C 0 M P BUILDER OF FORD. LINCOLN AND LINCOLNâ€"ZEPHYR MGTOR CARS APR â€" MAY JVUVN : JVL | AVG SEP oct tomâ€"|week. Mrs. W. A. Alexander, or| Read The Wantâ€"Ads 4 ,' ‘ : :A >. LEA DE RG HIP Mrs. James Cushman, formerly of Chicago and Miss Charlotte Niven, aunt of Thorton Wilder, are among the New York members of the naâ€" tional board meeting in Chicago this week,. Mrs. W. A. Alexander, of mittee, distributed the membership Highland Park board, as memâ€" cards. "There is no membership feel ber of the national world service and we invite all women and girls} eommittee, is attending these «proâ€" to become : members of this associaâ€" planning sessions with Mrs. tion," ‘said Mrs. Burdick. rmon Butler of Winnetka, viceâ€" Mrs. James Cushman, formerly of Epresident of the YWCA, Mrs. Silas Chicago and Miss Charlotte Niven, §trawn, and other Chicago women aunt of Thorton Wilder, are among the natibnal board.. © #: mthmmchoftjopooph. \Producing it has provided stegdy work for hundreds of thousands of in the Ford plants, in, . associated industties and on the farm. t These million Ford Vâ€"8 cars and trucks . have helped to n thirgs better all around. In the ten months of 1935 the Ford Motor y paid out, in the United States alpne, $140,119,326.00 in wages and $523.111,389.00 for materials. N Y PAGE THIRTEEN

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy