Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 20 Nov 1941, p. 2

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1941 Dog Show At Chicago Coliseum Twentyâ€"four separate dog clubs participate in the show, each having their own specialty event; in reality making the show twentyâ€"four individuâ€" al shows held under the same roof. Each club represents a different breed. The 1941 show which will be held at the Coliseum on November 29 and 30 will be the thirtyâ€"first such annual show. Yearly attracting ‘ more than 1,200 of America‘s finest aristocrats of dogdom, the huge event is the biggest show in the Midwest and one of the largest shows of its type in the nation. of the North and Northwest side and surrounding communities as the show dates for the large twoâ€"day Western Specialty Clubs Association dog show approach. "BAD MEN OF MISSOURI" Florence Ricoâ€"Leif Erickson Special Matineeâ€"Thanksgiving Day & GLENCOE Wed. to Sat., Nov. 19â€"20â€"21â€"22 FRL, SAT., SUN., MON. N ELEANOR rown.l.b:onm YoUNG, ANN SOUTHERN, LIONEL BARRYMORE COMING: "SAILOR ON LEAVE," "CHAD HANNA," "MARRIED BACHEâ€" LOR," "DR. JYKELL & MR. HYDE," "DOWN IN SAN DIEGO." THURSDAY EARLY Every Evening ... .. ...6:00 to 6 BIRD ... 29 . Sutorgey & Melidays .. 2:00 to 6 TELEPHONE H. P. 2400 Dennis Morganâ€"Jane Wyman ‘TME JUNGLE GIRL" Dorothy Lamourâ€"John Hall Open Mon., thru Fri., at 6:00 LOS ANGELES loves to play. And if there is one hotel that ages, aids and abots it more than any other, it is the charmâ€" "ALOMA OF THE SOUTH SEAS" BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL "DIVE BOMBER" A L C Y O N ""BLONDE FROM SINGAPORE" Highland Park 608 ‘"THE MAN 1 MARRIED" The amazing revelation of a beautiful girl‘s e TYRONE POWER, MARY ASTOR, BRIAN DONLEVY "THE GREAT AMERICAN BROADCAST" A roaring adventure ky morrih (THANKSGIVING DAY MATINEE FROM 2:30) ____â€" ALICE FAYE, JACK OAKIE _ _ _ JOAN BENNETT, FRANCIS LEDERER The gayest musical comedy . . . . ever! JANE wrmuis.‘l:bin'r CconwaAy ‘"YOUTH WILL BE SERVED" The gayest musical show of them all! "BRIGHAM YOUNG" Spectacular, stirring entertainment! PAUL MUNL MOVIES AND AMUSEMENTS "LADY BE GOOD‘" "HUDSON‘S BAY" N. 8. Sunday Evening Club to Hear W arden Lawes Warden Lawes is a foe of capital punishment though it fell to him to direct 303 executions during his time in office. He says he found some prisoners to be very fine men. Warâ€" den Lawes introduced many notable reforms during his administration. Warden Lewis E. Lawes of Sing Sing will speak at the North Shore Sunday Evening Club of Sunday eveâ€" ning, November 23 in the school auditorium. His subject will be "20,000 Years in Sing Sing." Warden Lawes recently retired from Sing Sing after serving as Warden since Jan. 1, 1920, and is now giving his time to lecturing and writing. Speak At Orchestra Hall Next Sunday The Club will present at seven the Naperville singers under the direction of Grace Fredenhagen. Floyd V. Filâ€" son, Presbyterian Theological Seminâ€" ary, professor and writer, will give the Bible Talk at this meeting. Doors open at 6:45. Admission is free. Bishop Hughes W ill Music by the Club‘s choir will preâ€" cede his talk at the eight o‘clock meetâ€" ing. The program will open with "Anâ€" gel Voices Ever Singing" by MacFarâ€" lane. Other numbers are "The Wings of the Morning" by Scott and "My Faith Looks up to Thee" by Schneckâ€" er. Louisa Hoe, soprano, will sing "Hear Ye Israe!" by Mendelssohn. Bishop Edwin H. Hughes, who for many years has led the work of the Methodist Church in religious and educational fields, with headquarters in Chicago from 1924 to 1932, will speak at the Sunday Evening Club in Orchestra Hall next Sunday. He will be introduced by President Clifford W. Barnes. There will be special music by the Club‘s choir of 125 and the viâ€" mdk. YÂ¥. M. C. A. chorus of Naperâ€" vi Next Sunday he will continue the Thank*sgiving theme, talking on "Thanksgiving in a Shaking World." HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. NOV. 21â€"22â€"23â€"24 e h Excelfent Service to the KINGDOM OF THE SUN ROCK ISLANDâ€"SOUTHERN PACIMIC ofters :30 :30 Because the regular Lions meeting night falls on Thanksgiving there will be no meeting this week. However, president Dr. James A. Butterworth urged all Lions to attend the Kiwanis Thanksgiving dinner at the Moraine Monday night at 6:30 o‘clock. _ Instead of holding their regular luncheon meeting Monday, Rotary club members â€" attended â€" the â€" community Thanksgiving dinner at Hotel Moraine Onâ€"theâ€"Lake at 6:30 Monday night. The first annual community dinner‘ was sponsored by the Kiwanis club. Officers of the IMlini Club of Chiâ€" cago are: Devereux L. Bowly, presiâ€" dent; Gerald J. Koerner, vice presiâ€" dent and general chairman of the event; William T. McNeill, treasurer, and William A. Marsteller, secretary. Tickets for the affair may be had by contacting Russell J. Turney, 39 South La Salle street, telephone Franklin 2411. Assisting the Illini Club of Chicago with arrangements for the affair are the Chicago Illinae Club headed by Mrs. W. I. Brockson, Oak Park, presiâ€" dent; Dr. M. K. Hine, president of the U. of I. Dental Alumni Association; Frank Maher, president of the Chicago Pharmacy Alumni Association; and Dr. M. H. Streicher, secretary of the U. of I. Medical School alumni. Prominent Chicago alumni of the University who will serve as members of the reception committee include: Robert Z. Hickman, Waiter C. Stutâ€" man, Thomas Cemy, Edward L. Berleâ€" man, Allan E. Bulley, James M. Cleary, Chester R. Davis, Frank. A. Rokusek, Richard G. Finn, Russell J. Turney, Waldo B. Ames, Scott Greene, Robert F. Carr, Raiph Chapman, Hatâ€" old E. "Red" Grange, George Halas, Benjamin Wham, Bernard A. Schroeâ€" der, and Deneen A. Watson. IWlinois Alumni Will Celebrate ‘Chicago Homecoming‘ The dinner will be informal and for the first time in several years the afâ€" fuir will be open to wives of guests and members. the only main line through service from Chicago to the resort cities of El Paso, Tucson, Phoenix and Paim Springs en route to Los Angeles. George Woods, River Forest, will be the toastmaster for the banquet. i nsas * streamâ€" lined speed and lusuryâ€"between Chicagoand Tucsonâ€"Phoeniz. Extra fare, allâ€"Pullman, allâ€" private rooms. Diner. Buffet Loungeâ€"Obâ€" servation Car. Stewardessâ€"Nurse Service. Departures every second day beginning December 15. GOLDEN STATE LUIMITEDâ€"for distinâ€" guished comfort â€"daily between Chicago and Los M:rl-s Obserâ€" vation Car. Standard Pullmans. Tourist Pullman westbound. Diner. DeluxeChairCars. ClubLoungeCar. FolJowing the Illincisâ€"Northwestern football game to be held at Dyche Stadium, Evanston, on November 22, alumni of the University of Illinois 7 CTaegs Hamroneg" Ahitmge a at 6:30 pm. that night in the Grand Rallroom at the Edgewater Beach Hoâ€" tel. This is the forticth annual celeâ€" bration of this kind sponsored by the lilini Club of Chicago. Governor Dwight H. Green wilb be the principal speaker of the evening. Guests of homor will include Presiâ€" dents Franklin B. Smyder of Northâ€" western University and Arthur Cutts Willard of the University of Tllinois, the football teams and athletic departâ€" ment staffs of both schools headed by Coaches Robert Zuppke and Lynn Waldorf. CALIFORNIANâ€"for fusxurious economy â€"daily between Chicago and Los Angeles. Tourist Pullmans and de luxe Chair Cars. Special Chair Car for womenand children. Stewardessâ€" Nurse Service. Economy Meals in Diner. Tourist Pullman to and from San Diego. Send travel information to Kingdom of C Allâ€"Expense California Tours D Travel on Credit L1 a2 i is on ts oaieg, T9. arcizss Biga, Chicnss, . Go ROCK ISLAND ROTARY CLUB LIONS CLUB i uiniren. Srennidars The Highland Park PRESS Pvt. Herbert Zimmer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zimmer, North End Ct, has returned to Camp Barclay, Tex., after a fifteen day furlough spent here. H. 8. Basketball Season Opens Both Highland Park highâ€" school basketball teams play their first home games of the season this Saturday, November 22, with Arlington Heights. The first game starts at 7:30 p. m. Mr. Werebelow coaches the varsity team and Mr. Stunkel coaches the froshâ€"soph. The Commercial Club is reported to have been responsible for the founding of the military post at Fort Sheridan. The club, founded in 1877 in Chicago, wanted an army post closer to the city than Fort Laramie, Wyoming, or Fort Riley, Kansas. Taking action upon the only speech Marshall Field ever made to the club, the members purâ€" chased 632 acres on the North Shore and presented it to the government of the United States in 1886. Since that time Fort Sheridan has growh to be one of the leading Army training staâ€" tions in the interior of the United States. : Most of the living members were active in the last war. Two of these were General Robert E. Wood, presâ€" ent head of Sears, Roebuck and Comâ€" pany, and General Charles G. Dawes, former vice president of the United States. The members who are now in their late "40‘s" or carly "50‘s" were all junior officers in the last war. A. Bafd of the Navy Department; Donald M. Nelson, Director of Priâ€" orities, and Frederick A. Preston, Chief of the Chicago Ordnance Disâ€" trict. The membership of the Commercial Club reads like the "Who‘s Who uf American Business." Its active memâ€" bership is represented in the present national emergency by such famous personages as Brigadier General Charles Haffner Jr., 58th Field Artilâ€" lery Brigade, 33rd Division; Frank Knox, Secretary of the Navy; Ralph Chicago Commercial Club Sees 40th CA Brigade in Action The guests were driven to the Post in government trucks from the Old Eim Country club and taken for an inspection tour of field kitchens, batâ€" tery day rooms, and personal field equipment. At 6:00 p.m. the club memâ€" bers were served dinner at the Recruit Reception Center with enlisted men of that unit. At 7:30 p. m. an antiâ€"aircraft firing demonstration took place at Gordon Johnston Field. Soldiers fired .50 caliâ€" antiâ€"aircraft guns at a sleeve target towed by an airplane. The 40th Coast Artillery (Antiâ€"Airâ€" craft) Brigade of Fort Sheridan, IIL., presented a demonstration Wednesday cvening, November 12, 1941 for the Commercial Club of Chicago. The Commercial Club is an organization composed of prominent Chicago busiâ€" ness men, the majority of whom have, ut sometime, been members of the armed forces of the nation. Licutenant Ralph Blanchard was in charge of the zw(orthem‘donm post. VAN GUILDER MOTORS, Inc. 125 N. St Johns Ave. 1 ~DODGE EASY PAYMENT TERMS Miss Joy Browlee has returned home from a three week vacation on the west coast. Mrs. H. T. AMamson and Gordon Adamson, 301 Egandale road are in New York. tions, and he also bas a tough beard. Spencer Tracy yells wiseâ€" cracks at everybody while he‘s in the lgrber‘s chair. Bob Young makes a few remarks about his ridâ€" ing horses. Jimmy Stewart sits and says nothing. AH this informaâ€" tion from Jim Adamson, major domo of Metro‘s barber shop, who began snipping locks and news from movie stars way back in the days of Incevilleâ€"he‘s been at it for 2% decades, and has his own Hollywood Who‘s Who. ‘Robert Taylor has an exceptionâ€" ally tough beard, and while he‘s beâ€" ing shaved talks about show horses, like his Arabian stallion; Clark Gable chats about guns and fish and venison, under the same condiâ€" He recently scored in "A Girl, a : Guy and a Gob" and "Parachute ‘ Battalion." sn.md.mmm‘ as Orson Welles‘ first wife in "Citiâ€" , zen Kane," the picture that‘s bon‘ amhxbondtomfinnpkh:neu-| hchhlommynflnumdm: resses. 1 A new romantic duo makes its debut in RKO‘s comedy, "Obliging Young Lady," in the persons of Edâ€" mond O‘Brien and Ruth Warrick. By VIRGINIA VALE _ _ (Released by Western Newspaper Union ) NO‘!‘eontent'ifihvb‘- very promising film caâ€" reer, Susan Hayward has turned actors‘ agent. Dining at a New Orleans hotel, she was impressed by the young singer and trumpet player with Chuck Foster‘s band; he stopped the show at every firtonnance.Sowhenhem over to meet her she quesâ€" tioned him. Why wasn‘t he in films? Nobody‘d asked him to be. Where did he come from? Los Anâ€" geles, but he‘d never been able to get near a film studio there! So Susan placed him under conâ€" tract, and arranged for his‘ Hollyâ€" wood debut at a cafe there. His name? Ray Robbins, profession ally; in real life, it‘s Foster. Fidel Ghini Heads Sportsman‘s Club Lutheran Ladies to Hold Annual Bazaar The Ladies Aid Society of the Reâ€" deemer Lutheran church will hold its annual bazaar December 4 in the asâ€" sembly room of the church. Doors will open at 10 a. m. Various handiâ€" work will ‘be on sale as Chritsmas Chicago Show Will Break Past Records Fidel Ghini was elected president of the Highwood Sportsman‘s club at an election held Saturday. Other officers are Frank Caretta, vice president; Harold Snavely, secretary; Robert Robert Saieilli, treasurer and Jerome Bartoldo, sergeant at arms. The club has 35 members. gifts. until vited her film debut in There will also be a big increase of swine exhibits, with six of the eight breeds in this division showing large advances over 1940, and the total is the highest in many years. The draft horse entry of approximately 400 head, and the sheep entry of nearly 1000 is the one you‘re familiar with unâ€" der the title of ‘‘The Guardsman." An allâ€"time record entry for the three breeds of beef cattle, that are the main.source of supply »f the naâ€" tion‘s finest meats, has been registered by the leading breeders and feeders of this country and Canada, says B. H. Heide, secretaryâ€"manager of the Exâ€" ve head, compares closely with the showâ€" ing in these two departments at the 1940 exposition. about *‘The Chocolate Soldier" was partly wrong; Metro‘s picture by that name includes only music from A final tally of entries for the inâ€" dividual live stock classes of the 1941 and Horse Show, to be held at the Chicago Stock Yards November 29 to December 6, discloses a huge increase in the total number of animals listed over a year ago, the management reâ€" in the total over a year ports. Madeline Lee, who‘s "Genevleve Blue" on the "Amos and Andy" broadcasts, has found herself turnâ€" ing into a hat designer. She enâ€" tered a hat designing class on a dare, found that she not only liked it but was good at it; now she makes all her own bats, and her friends besiege her to turn out little pum»p bers for them. ODDS AND ENDSâ€"RKO has &M’alm’dfiro]nmm for church sequences in "Joan of Paris," According to official entry. figures in 12 of that will be featured higher than for the treeds at the 1940 show Lockwood, one of the big stars of his time. His widow died recently, after having been a member of Paramount‘s makeâ€"up department for nine years. Today‘s movie stars are more foresighted financially than were those oldâ€"timers. For exâ€" ampleâ€"Joel McCrea is listed by the government not as an actor (though he‘s been making pictures for 11 years) but as a good producer, thanks to the annual profit of apâ€" proximately $5,000 which he makes from his ranch. perts can‘t tell them apart. Miss Cooper has worked in ‘"‘Unholy Partâ€" ners" and ‘"The Shadow of the Thin Man"; she‘s now appearing in "Mr. and Mrs. North," and is slated for been released, yet she‘s already had People whose memoties go way, way back will remember Harold Thursdoy, November 20, 1941 We‘re Lunch will be served from 11:30 1:00 o‘clock. The public is inâ€" to officials of the show, in 12 of the 26 breeds featured this year are for the corresponding Faith, makes

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