Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 5 Oct 1939, p. 10

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Any girl or woman who wants to do housework and can meet these requirements is asked to get in touch with the State Employment Office. "A willing worker with a cheerâ€" ful disposition and the ability to anticipate the wishes of the emâ€" ployer is what most housewives reâ€" quire. _ A knowledge of general household duties, such as cnoking, table service, care of children, and laundry work are also necessary. Neatness is essential and all doâ€" mestic workers are expected . to have references." No fee is charged for pllcerfi;r;t' service. ers are alw explained. office have permanent, ers, but it of ealls f workers. "Domestic workers in privat homes," said My, Ficld, "are as whole much better off financially than many of the women worker in industry. Board and room usu ally are offered in addition to sal ary and there is also a saving in clothes and other incidentals." Mr. Field described the require ments for an ideal maid as follows Girls and women who like to do housework can always get a job. All they have to do is apply at the Illinois State Employment Service office at 1033 Davis street, Evanâ€" ston, I!I. ,Manager James K. Field advised today. Housemaids and domestic workâ€" ers are always in demand, Mr. Field Housemaids Always Available Says State Employment Service Working on subscriptions with Mrs. Weisbach are Mrs. John R. Todd, Mrs. Arthur Byfield and Mrs. John Mannings. Many other well known women of Highland Park who belong to the Opera Guild are Mrs. J. Ross Beatty, Mrs. George Mason, Mrs. Dudley Crafts Watson, Mrs. Albert Snite, Mrs. Harry Graâ€" dle, Mrs. Eugene Pfster, Mrs. Charles Mason, Mrs, John Oliver and a host of others. The Opera Guild has a membership in Highâ€" land Park alone of fifty members and new names are being added right along. In New York and San Francisco their Opera Guilds are most active also and they are all striving to keep opera going. Mrs. Harry Weisbach, chairman for Highland Park of the Illinois Opera Guild, has opened an office with H. & R. Anspach, 396 Central avenue, for the duration of the opâ€" era season. Subscriptions are for sale now, and by procuring seats now one is assured of being able to get a seat for their favorites also making a saving over the box office price later on. Gloria Linari, Highland Park high afiuljâ€"hr‘:afl-dlhdhnh the saying, your wagon to a star." For, although she is only 14 years old, her singing has brought her an invitation to go to Hollywood as soon as her voice is "ready." Carrie Jacobs Bond, famâ€" ous Hollywood composer who creâ€" ated "Perfect Day" and "I Love You Truly," issued the invitation when she heard Gloria sing during Mrs. Bond‘s stay in Chicago for the Chicagoland festival. Gloria has fastened on grand opera as her future career, and with the same precocity with which she has become a high school junior at the age of 14, she is proceeding about the business of corraling that star. _ She began by winning a scholarship in voice under Helen Abâ€" bott Byfield. Piano lessons entered the picture this past summer, and with the beginning of school this fall, she scheduled for five solids, inâ€" cluding dramatics and French, two subjects essential to her plans of beâ€" coming a prima donna. One of the first sopranos in the choir of the Highland Park First Presbyterian church, she will give a solo performance there in a few weeks. This, however, will not be her first public appearance, as she Mrs. Harry Weisbach in Charge of Ticket Sale for Civic Opera And that‘s not all. Besides French, there are private Italian and dancing lessons in the offing. So every minute of her time is abâ€" sorbed singing and allied subjects. 148 South Second Street Tel. H. P. 1358 _ Hichland Park GREENSLADE Electrical Contractor Electric Shop UnusuaAL StoRIes it ic workers in private aid My, Field, "are as a ch better off financially y of the women workers y.â€" Board and room usuâ€" fered in addition to salâ€" here is also a saving in ersonality Preview iys in dem Not only numerous fullâ€"time ¢ also rece mp about USUAL PEOPLE open tie workâ€" hundreds and day workâ€" Field local s for Rugby team, managed by clubs."In the spring she will give a recital at the Fine Arts building in Chicago and her repertoire doubtless will contain much of Moâ€" fiakn.'hmworbmpudcnhfly es. With a record of 19 successive victories and no defeats behind them, the team can well be called the National Champions, and it is McLaglen of 'mo;i;â€"Flâ€"n;e.-;t has sung solos with the high school to defend this title that they will meet the Hollywood Light Horse For two years now, she has been taking voice lessons, three and four times a week to make sure she pracâ€" tices nothing wrong. And when she gets a "very good" from her teachâ€" ers, she is supremely happy. Kirsten Flagstead is her favorite operatic star, and "Madame Butterâ€" fly" her bestâ€"liked opera, which conâ€" tains her favorite aria, "One Fine Day." But as a whole Wagnerian operas are to her most thrilling, alâ€" though she concedes they are a bit "heavy." Asked which role she‘d like to sing some day, Gloria said with complete eagerness, "All of them." After years of watching their husâ€" bands from the sidelines of the Skoâ€" kie playing fields, of going to see them off for a metropolis as New York, St. Louis or Winnipeg, and listening to their exploits on their return trip, the Rugby wives are to have some fun. For the Chicago Rugby club is going into the big time of the sports world. She not only "jumps" at chances to go to concerts and recitals, but is also a regular movieâ€"goer, being a devotee of Deanna Durbin‘s. Musiâ€" cal comedies are the movies she dotes on. And radio, of course, brings operas into her home, operas to which she listens assiduously. Love of music comes from her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dominick Linari of 435 Funston Ave., Highâ€" wood, who have inculcated feeling for it in their daughter, who in turn is daily enriching the giftâ€"to be "ready" when her day comes. to Meet Hollywood Team on October 8 Chicago Rugby Club 136 N. First Street THEY‘RE HERE, AMERICAâ€"the biggest, most beautiful, most luxurious Pontiacs ever built! SEE THEMâ€"and you‘ll see added length, added room, added richness . . . new smartness in the lavish use of chromium . , . new distinction in completely reâ€"styled interiors! INSPECT THEM â€"and you‘ll find over 60 advancements, includâ€" ‘The Special Six ANNA J wwWes & LE #//¢/4%LT Four Gxeat New / Victor Soldier . la, 18A )$ en 4 Relull ‘Pa2;g19 Wilder, Mrs. Henri Bouscaren, Mrs. ford. Also helping to sell tickets along with preparing for the Servâ€" fune any Hive" Fokn 1e viegy Bhas tune s ons nn n vice club was one of the team‘s first sponsors. . â€" sout M# + _ When Peter Fortune leads his team, including Vic Harding, Nat Blatchford, Bob Childs, Les Mather, John Irving, and Jay Berwanger onto the field, to the strains of thrir theme "Roll Out the Barrel,‘ (pickâ€" ed because they train on beer after every game) it will be the gals in the front row seats of Soldier Field who will be most excited and the proudest of their National Cahmâ€" pions. NEW BOOKS AT THE PUBLIC LIBRARY "Democracy: Today and Tomorâ€" row," by Eduard Benes, traces the growth of the idea from the middle ages to the present. Popular already with the deb and postâ€"deb set, the boys will see those same faces on the sidelines of the girls who have watched their exâ€" ploits from college campus to Skokie playing field and now at last to the big time of the sports world. "‘The present crisis in Europe and in the world is the continuation of the eternal fight for a better justice, for a better life, for a better politâ€" ical, national, cultural, economic, and social existence for the greatest number of individuals in the greatâ€" est number of countries in the world . . . " "In a word, it is the continuation of the fight for a betâ€" ter society." "That is the ideal of demoeracy. This ideal is something so high, so valuable, and so dignified that it is Larson‘s Stationery Store REPAIRS â€" RENTALS â€" SALES Higniand Park 567 Your Typewriter Man LIBRARY E. K. CATTON THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS8 CALL MARCHI BROS. GARAGE worth being a democrat." Following the trend of the times in biography and history, a number of new scientific books have come from the presses, written in popuâ€" lar style for the average person. The Library has purchased the folâ€" lowing: Scheinfeld; "Atoms In Action" G. R. Harrison; "Glass Giant of Jaloâ€" mar," D. O. Woodbury. "You WAUKEGAN COKE _ sâ€"3>> Plenty of Snap When You Open the Draft Paul Borchardt Highland Park Fu Frank Siljestrom Menoni & M Mercer Lumber Companies â€" Deerfield No need to change fuels during the winter when you burn WAUKEGAN COKE. WAUKEGAN COKE is the dependable all weather fuel . . . Picks up rapidly on frosty mornings. Holds fire for a long period during Indian Summer. Waukegan Coke is the ideal home fuel for changeable weather. Recommended and Sold by The An outstanding vecentâ€" ty placed on fi-m- is "House of Mitsui," by 0. D. Russell. This tells of their rise; how they years ago; their rise in politics. "They operate banks and mines, every large capital." _ In contrast to this is the autobioâ€" books telling of how to camp, what Dependab!® Ruel fo" es Highland Park Fuel Co. Menoni & Mocogni VWVAUKEG to look for in the woods, have been used by many boy scouts Today, the author, ninety years old, is still able to give us a delightrur book. Highland Pork, H. 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