Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 14 Aug 1941, p. 6

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gagement of their daughter, Esther Harriet, to Richard J. Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Jacobs, Wauâ€" kegan. Young Jacobs is stationed at Camp Forrest, Tenn., where he is a sergeant in the antiâ€"aircraft and tank company. Miss Davis just reâ€" turned from Camp Forrest, where she visited her fiance. No date has been set for the wedding. Frank Scornavacco has returned home from Northern Michigan where he was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. Sherony. TELL ENGAGEMENT OPF ESTHER® DAVIS 831 Euclid avenue, announce the en Mrs. Bertha Gardner has returnâ€" ed to her home in Ottumwa, Towa after visiting Mrs. Tillie Collins Sheridan avenue. -zâ€"nâ€"m&.um HIGHWOOD AUXILI ARY avenue, Saturday morning HOSTESS TO DIBTRICT friends from Wilmette for a 12 Highwoo vacation in New York Clr.‘l‘zl_ Members of the Highwoo Mr. and Mrs. Gene Pailmieri and children, 333 Waukegan avenue, are vacationing in Roundup, Montana. Mrs. Probs Tossoni, Detroit, reâ€" turned home Saturday after spendâ€" ing the past week at the home of Mrs. Linds Biagetti, North avenue. Lucy Pasquesi, 1013 Fort Sheriâ€" dan avenue, is spending two weeks at Camp O‘ the Hills, Michigan. 322 N. First St. Auto Repainting Cold Frame & Axel Straightening , : Body &. Fender Repairing dhin WiAtson 4Label proteits your tabls DAHL‘S Auto Reconstruction Co. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Davis Wilson‘s Certified Tender Made Ham in tins is a ready» toâ€"cat ham with a richer flavor â€"whole, half and quarter (famâ€" ~d-3 hams; boneless, no waste, :‘-Hhâ€"-:: or for everyday use. :-rlh*- This month Wilson & Co. celebrates its 25th birthday. It is my proud privilege to reâ€" call their high purpose then, as now: To bring to America‘s tables meats more tender, richer flavored, than those formerly enjoyed by the wealthiest. From this aim flowered a brilâ€" Mant succession of meat im« provements. For example: Tenâ€" der Made Ham, the ham you out with a fork, so unbelievably tender that it ranks on the banâ€" quet table with filet mignon and “:k tically fok. meats, democratically priced. Only Wilson & Co. makes Tem« der Made Ham. Below are suggestions for the use of just a few of these meat foods made inâ€" fnitely better by Wilson & Co. PAMOUS WILSON "FIRSTS" SPRING SERVICE STATION WELDING AND SOLDERING Hishwood This Week WILs O N‘s Coneul tant Wikion & Ca Phone 77 ag e\ reaipes Mrs. C. J. Turner is president of the club, and had the following comâ€" mittee chairmen in charge of exhibâ€" its: Mrs. C. E. Piper, chairman; Mrg. C. W. Boyle, Mrs. Anthony Mecurio and Mrs. Harry Muhlke. Mrs. Donald Easton was in charge of the publicity. Mrs. Constance McPherson, Deerâ€" field, filed suit for divorce from her husband, Robert M. McPherson, enâ€" gineer with the United States army, now stationed at Alexandria, Va., charging desertion. The couple were married October 17, 1936, in ;‘::::‘qo.ndwmm SEEKS DIVORCE The annual flower show of the Deerfleld Womans club was held Wednesday â€" (yesterday) afternoon at the some of Mrs. Monroe McKilâ€" lip of Brierhill road, Deerfleld. McKILLIP‘S HOME SCENE OF CLUB FLOWER SHOW Members of the Highwood and the Lake Bluff Legion auxiliaries were hostesses to the 10th district Legion auxiliaries at the Highwood Methoâ€" dist church, yesterday. Entertainment for the meeting was provided by the members of the junior auxiliaries. Miss Ruth Anâ€" derson, pianist, performed for the Highwood unit. Lord Halifax, British ambassador, took time out for a day‘s deepâ€"sea fishing while on tour of the U. 8. He caught a 22â€"pound yellowtail, and this barracuda. Wilson & Co. laboratories develâ€" oped ‘"Gelaâ€"Seald," a coating of Thet keape in all the hok faven tenderness and natural juices. Use your favorite recipes. See Veal, "coolerâ€"fresh." Meat when it first leaves the packinghouse cooler has a fresh delicacy of flavor beyond compare. To bring you lamb and veal at their flavor pesk and immaculately proâ€" tected against dust and handling, how much better Gelaâ€"Séald Lamb and Veal taste than ordiâ€" mary lamb and veal. or cover with brown sugar, heat 5 minutes per pound in a 350° F. oven. Mmmmmail Wilson & Co. has crusaded to bring American homemakers ""the meat you love to eat"‘! But they did not stop with meats. ‘They developed a way to make lard so tasteleas, odorless and delicate that it now can be used for the finest white cakes, as woll as for flaky pastrics and frying. Thus, this great natuâ€" ral shortening became the first truly allâ€"purpose shortening. Ask for Wilson‘s Certified All« wfimhfi Sealod package. GELAâ€"SEALD Lamb and CUT DESSERT COSTS WITH ALLâ€"PURPOSE SHORTENING For 25 years, Wilson‘s New Certified Salamis and Corvelateâ€"temâ€" der, Juicy, as sausages never were before. Delicions as cold uts or in salads or soupe. Didn‘t Get Away SERVING HINT: Serve cold tional controversy. Many take the side of the General, claiming that discipline is more important than the soldiers‘ sore feet (from marchâ€" ing 15 miles in a 97 degree heat as punishment for fliirting with some girl golfers) . . . On the other hand, many think the punishment too seâ€" vere. The following story is offered to show that not all officers are starchy. On a dark, rainy night, out from the front lines of Verdun a waterâ€" soaked, mudâ€"caked group of Amerâ€" ican doughboys trudged in the French mud . . . At ease for a moâ€" ment one of them approached an officer in the darkness . . . "Exâ€" cuse me, Sir, have you a cigarette?" . . . "Certainly, son," was the anâ€" swer . . . As the doughboy lit up his cigarette the match revealed the face of General Pershing. “' A mthgfl ‘General Pershing!" said the solâ€" dier. Yes, son," replied the general, "you took an awful chance. I might have been a second lieutenant!" A London arrival (via clipper) brought a half dozen lemonsâ€"which is practically the same as a million dollars right now . . . The boys at the Savoy were smacking their lips over the thought of a lemon in their cocktails, when they discovâ€" ered that Kathleen Harriman, daughter of Averill, had used the precious lemons for a rinse! Typewriter Ribbons: . Nate Colâ€" lier: No horse can go as fast as the money you bet on him . . . Punch: His desire was nipped in the budget vice . . . Lyman Deechner, . 10â€" quence is logic on fire . . . Abe Martin: Hain‘t it a relief when a clerk finally admits he hain‘t got what you want? . , . Anon: You could tell the show‘s goose was cooked as soon as the audience started roasting . . . The Brandon Sun: Only two classes of people fall for flatteryâ€"men and women Notes of a New Yorker After all of George Jean Nathan‘s work and struggle for recognition, his home burg, Fort Wayne, Ind., erected a plaque to a movie gal named Jane Peters (Carole Lomâ€" . . . Ed Howe: A good scare is worth more to a man than good adâ€" vice . . . Lyman Beecher; Eloâ€" Ray Clapper, the columnist, exâ€" hibited some of the abusive and stupid letters he gets from Lindâ€" that abuse has replaced reason in theâ€"minds of those people . . . All of which is a new way of spelling crackpots . . . But get this irony. Those who submit vile letters are the ones who yelp that their heroes are being smeared . . . Hitler claims he is fighting a religious war against the Russians "who do not recognize any church" . . . That‘s a cinch to debunk . . . Every time Hitler‘s air force recognized a church in Englandâ€"they bombed it. . . . Jack Warwick: Many things can happen while the experts are Bernard Shaw: In Heaven an anâ€" gel is nobody in particular . . . Dolores Anderson: Everything in Hol pie When the White House sent some of the secretarial staff in a White House car to the funeral of Louis Howe‘s sec‘y at Asheville, N. C., the car was barred from the proâ€" gession because it did not have a union driver . . . "Any threeâ€"cardâ€" Monte player will tell you," Howard Whitman declares in Coronet, "that good, simple, honest people make crooks will tell you different .>, . The ripest sucker is a chump with a taint of larceny, and be‘s in formance in "Sgt. York" . . . When Gary was a student at Grinnell Col lege, lowa, he applied for memberâ€" ship in the dramatic society there and was spurned because, they said, he couldn‘t act . . . Back from vacationing in the Catskills, a Broadâ€" wayite enthused about the rural secâ€" tor . . . ‘"So peaceful!" he raved. ‘Every night you‘re lulled to sleep Louis Fischer in his book recalls one of Goebbels‘ quotes which is probably choking Berlin‘s lyingest midget by now: ‘"Whoever treats with Bolshevism will end by being devoured by it" . . . The gag in Rumania, they tell you, goes this way: ‘*Ever since we joined the Axis we are getting food like Gerâ€" many‘sâ€"earthquakes like Japan‘s, and an army like Italy‘s!" The Â¥ooâ€"hoo incident between Lieut.â€"General Lear and troops trainâ€" ing in Tennessee bas aroused naâ€" by the chirping of crickets, the croaking of frogs, and the ripple of the borscht!‘* . . . New York is like this: In the office building at 515 Madison Avenue the tenants include the America First Committee and the R.A.F. Benevolent Society. Comforting Thought for the Draftâ€" ed: The Commanderâ€"inâ€"Chief wants them to stay in an army camp for another year so that their families will never be shoved into a concenâ€" tration camp forever. variably hooked. llywood is realâ€"except the peoâ€" stands & Academy pâ€"top perâ€" Mrs. William H boy, August 13. Briergate Country Club Plats Land for Homesites ‘The strip of land bordering : northeast corner of Briergate Co: try club, has been platted into homesites, and have been put on | market, landscape architect : half owner Robert Bruce Harris the club has announced. Mrs. Louis Santi, Ravinia road Highland Park, girl, August 10. Mrs. Louis J. Marco, 749 Ridge wood drive, girl, August 12. Mrs. Stanley E. Bye, Libertyville boy, August 13. August 6 Mrs. Albert Tizzato, 499 Eim "rwmm.m Price restrictions are $8,500 t Mrs. Floyd Sullivan, 1547 S. St hns avenue, Highland Park, girl The backbone of our nation is cradled in the home where health and sanitation are so vital to our daily lives. Constant hot water is the enemy of germs and disease, the defender of our strength. Every moment of the day, "tapâ€"ready" antomatie water buy-mlqwhhlhh*h m--‘dhpfi. It is so necessary and so Automatic HOT WATER iv. Chicago . . Lv. Evanston (Davis Ar. Milwaukes . Ar. Wysville . . Ar. $t. Pout . . Ar.Wysville . . . . . *6:38 pm Ar. $t. Pout . . . . ; 9:15 pm Ar. Minnecpolis . . . . 9:45 pm ns oraariine Bhtbeans ma w Will got curry prssengers locally FAST AFTERNOON SERVICE TO THE Ask chout deferred payment travel NORTH WOODS Master Plumber or los . Parker, Highwood, First Line of Defense NORTHBOUND â€" Dail (Central Standard Time Kellay, Wilmette Copeland, Ché St.) 3:00 pm *3:12 pm 4:15 pm The Flambean, to Eagle Riverâ€"Watersmeet Ironwood Districts. L. Clliu:o 12:05 p)- (CST) daily. Arrowheadâ€"indian Head w to Minongâ€" Gordonâ€"Solon Springsâ€"Duluthâ€"and â€" Cable â€" Drummond Districts. Lv. m‘uoo pm (CST) every Friday Special literature. Deer Park Grove or Twin Lakes. Ask for literature. Low round tri Sunday and Holiâ€" he 19 | 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8â€"day tours. Ask for pr overiook beautiful Briergs try club. $10,000, with all plans subject vroval â€" of the club archit committee. Lots will be fr Briergate . is owned by Bruce Harris, and his bro Frank 8. Harris. It is a fe Apply to your local C. & N. W. Ry. Agent or You‘ll enjoy every minute of your trip on the "400" . . . In the cheerful, soug tavern or lunch counterâ€"the modern coaches, parlor cars and observaâ€" tion lounge, or the colorful dining carâ€"the atmosphere of gaiety perâ€" vades the "World‘s Finest Train." Excellent foodâ€"at most moderate prices. And no extra fare. NORTH SHORE P TOILET PAPER 4 KS # E"S”‘I‘%m.;.“i flau/M Highland Park â€" Ravinia Phone 2600 â€" 2300 Van Guilder Motors, Inc. «PPB w AT TODAYS PRICES Still Just a Few Dollars More Than Smailler, Lowâ€"Priced Carsl INSTALLATION ‘CHARGE 125 N. St. Johns Avenue MR Oe e eee e nous to Change without Notice BASY TERMS As CETF A SIN ay CO. ugust 14

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