Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 10 Sep 1942, p. 4

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Nl'mâ€"'o.-tvodm Detroit that Igor . Sikorsky‘s helicopter, the rocking chair of the fi.hhm&-uflw‘o‘u Detroit facâ€" Dreams to MUSi¢ i 1y is man. War Helicopter is U.'::ufl'r:. parts. The Latest Contribution Imy and navy have been this way and that about the helicopter, but there is no doubt that it is now a war wespon. Its uses are a military secret, but its value in spotting submarines and in reconnaissance are covious. It can take off from any ship deck and it can hover in the air like a humâ€" ming bird while a mechanic swings down under and changes a wheel. Igor Sikorsky is a shy, gentle man who dreams great dreams. tion on, he found it difficult to keep his mind on his dreams and went to Paris to lecture before YMCA audiences on a variety of subjects. Rachmaninoff, the pianist, wanted him to keep on dreaming, and, with other musicians, gathered $100,000 to this end. In the U. S. A., he built the huge Sâ€"35. It was to take Rene Fonck to France, but it crashed on the runway and burned two men to death. Mr. Sikorsky kept on deâ€" signing and building, a pioneer of multiâ€"engined planes, in his 36â€"acre air plant in Connecticut. :3 His dreams are paced to muâ€" sic, Chopin frequently, as music is somehow innate in his genius and inseparable from his aeroâ€" nautical flights into the futureâ€" which he says belongs to the air. Eight hundred classical records are a part of his workâ€" aâ€"day equipment. On his tidy little home farm, he raises cuâ€" _ cumbers and drives his own tractor,. He loves cucumbers, perhaps on account of their nice design. He is plump, bald and hesitant, with a Charlie Chaplin mustache. ..His father was proâ€" fessor of psychology at the Uniâ€" versity of Kiev. ibbean sea and the Gulf of Mexico in 1937. His absorbing life interests ate science and invention. It took him seven years to bring it through and a war to make him change the name from "mercy tank" to "alligator." He apparently inâ€" herited the inventive and construcâ€" tve genius of his grandfather, the late Washington A. Roebling, who not only built the Brooklyn bridge, but spanned Niagara gorge in 1850. Young Roebling has been known as a sportsman, much at sea on his Jorano, on which he led a Anothsoniah exploration of the Carâ€" Consolidated Features.â€"WNU Release l‘l' WOULD BE just like the versaâ€" tile marines to unveil a seaâ€"going truck. ‘That‘s just what they have done, and we‘ve been trying to find s out whether Seaâ€"Going Truck |, was used Just What Doctor in lt‘!’nblepp. raid. Ordered for War "n, navy wasn‘t talkalive about it, but there is sufficient wide open news of this jungle jallopy to justify the conâ€" clusion that it is the most novel and exciting new fighting tool this war has yet produced and sure to score heavily in landing operations to comeâ€"and it appears that they are coming fast. The marines call it their ‘"inâ€" vasion, taxi,‘" and its inventor, Donald Roebling, grandson of the builder of the Brooklyn bridge, calls it the "alligator." Down in Florida, it wis just a "swamp buggy" at first, or a "merâ€" ey tank," developed by Donald Roebling after the hurricane of 1933, to rescue storm vietims garconed in the Everglades. It goes about twice as fast on land as on water. Twentyâ€"five feet long and about as wide as â€" & box car, it can be lowered over the side of a transport or warship, take the water like a duck and, hitting the shore, keep right on mushing along. It can carry a big load of leatherâ€" necks, a military freight car, or plenty of fighting gear. The caterâ€" pillar treads have wide, diagonally placed cleats which serve as fins or paddles in the water, and nobody has to tuck them in or reset them when it reaches land. By LEMUEL F. PARTON Winged 8," begins with the story of a dream. At the age of 24 he was the father of Russian aviation and he was launching cardboard dinosaurs into the air before the Wright brothers flew at Kitty Hawk. He built the first great air clippers and the czar‘s first huge bombers were of his design. With the revoluâ€" It is armed and armored, of course not heavily, but capable of resisting fairly brisk fire. On February 17 of this year, the marines ordered 200 of them at a cost of $3,200,000. They have been in forcedâ€"draft production in a big Detroit auto factory, Down in Florida, it wis just WHO‘S NEWS THIS WEEK What is an "optimist""? You‘re spiritually dead. Too bad! So long. Ah, but if you‘re an optimistâ€"a realâ€" istic optimistâ€"well then I‘m happy for you, Highland Parker. A pessimist‘s thoughts . . . An optimist is he or she who feels that there is always good in people; that there is always a brighter side; that there always is a reason for ~strange happening"â€"wars and the like. And, Highland Parker, an optimist is 4 person who honestly feels that everyâ€" think happens for the best. Or, the optimist is this : He is the person who believes in people. . He doesn‘t condemn 129,999,999 perâ€" sons for the wrong done him by one person. No, he reacts positively to life. Indeed, he says YES to life. Will Rogers was an optimist. He once said he never met a man he didn‘t like. And 1 believe him. Frankly. I‘ve never met a man, woâ€" He began by saying NO, by doubting, by taking the weak, defeatist‘s attitude Thinking a bod future . . . "mangâ€"dog .e x pression. He sulks around, hewhines, he â€"cries; â€"and he tries to make himself more miserable. Say NO to like, Highland Parker. (1 know you won‘t. If you ever had, you would never have been where you are today.) Start disbelieving in persons. Watch popularity . flee. Watch . your â€" friends avoid you. Watch your hopes crash, crumple, and then turn to dust. . > He is what a pessimist is thinking. {(Any readers who are pessimists can doubt . this. Go ahead.. You‘re always doubting things anyway. Poor you.) I met a bitter pessimist this week. Boy, he was a sour one. Tall, gaunt, paleâ€"faced, with mussed tbair, unshined shoes, unpressed pants and a scowling face, this ‘happy‘ acâ€" quaintance. began his conversation by complaining about the weather. man, Or ly, or h "Lousy weather. Dotesn‘t it ever get nice around here?" Those were his opening words. He continued in the same grouchy manner. Why this pessimist actually believes this war will last ten yearsâ€"and while he‘s waiting for it to last that long, he‘s sitting &round, complaining, borâ€" ing, figuring he has a long time to whip the Axis. + He feels that we will never have new tres, cars, progress, developments or a new and a just peace. He believes the future will be chaos. He is thinkâ€" ing a miserable future, and he‘s conâ€" stantly getting that kind of future in hrs thoughts. Too bad. Listen, Highland Parkers . . . Are you a pessimist ? Or, are you‘an optimist? If you‘re a pessimist, I feel sorry for ou, You might as well begin figuring ight now what your buriel fees will better hated CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "Man" . was the nh&;fl of the Lessonâ€"Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, Sepâ€" tember 6. The Golden Text was, "The u::: of a good man are ordered by Lord: and he delighteth in his way (Psaims 37: 23). * You know, Highland Parkers. . . I‘ve often wondered about these doubters, about these disbelievers. I‘ve wondered if they‘ve ever doubted their own doubts. Nope, we can‘t give a pesâ€" simist his Commission if he basn‘t passed the last and most telling test of all: that of doubting what he himself has thought, believed, and uttered. Sometime try this plan of attack on Among the citations which comâ€" rrind the Lessonâ€"Sermon was the ollowing from the Bible: "Know ye th.tthe‘nrdhehcd:hhhefl\n hath made us, and not we ourselves; we are his , and the sheep of his puun!! tmâ€" 100: 8). m;l'h;llfum-&monahmelud&: 0 Simetny" Sdete Ristbonts. Aar ence and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy: "lmmlmmnflhfld- image or idea, even the infinite exâ€" pression of infinite Mind, and imâ€" mortal man is coexistent and coâ€" eternal with that Mind. God, the divine Principle of man, and man in Ood'al{hm-mhnmbh.hu- monious, and eternal. and man are not the same, but in the order of divine Science, God and man coâ€" exist and are cternal. God is the parent Mind, and man is God‘s apiritual offspring" (p. 336). What are you, Highland Parker And 1 1 beleve him, ikly, I‘ve never met a man, woâ€" r child that I‘ve disliked intenseâ€" hated. Granted, I‘ve liked others than some: but still, I‘ve never Optimism vs. Pessimism YOUNG MAN ABOUT by Whitt N. Schuitz TOWN F ing, check him or her. Ask them if they disbelieve what they‘ve just said. If they do, they‘re silly and hopeless pessimists. Nothing can be don. Show them the undertaker‘s shop. You had better deliver them there. They‘ll be there in a short time anyway. When a man stops believing in peoâ€" ple, in life, ni Nature, and in Godâ€" well, he‘s a goner. He‘s no good. He‘s a breathing dead man. Trust and believe . . . Be an optimist . . . ture, and that I still coming. And Try being optimistic. . Try saying YES to life. Try believing in people, in Nature ind in God. It‘s fun, and the contentmentâ€"divi londs are large! me a pessimist starts k him or her. Ask 1 Your electric cords are precious Electric cords are made mostly of rubber and copperâ€"two materials that are much in demand these days ! Check the electric cords in your home, using this guide. Make them last just as long _ as they were designed to last! ‘There are three things that commonly cause your cords to wear out : 1. FRICTION. When disconnecting, don‘t yank on the cord â€" take hold of the piug..Never let a cord beâ€" come twiseed or knotred: When not in use, hang it over two widely separated hooks; so there will be no sharp bend: Never rum cords under carpets; or nail them to the wall or floor. Be sure they.are away from moving parts of appliances: s 2 HEAT. Keep cords away from radiators or steam pipes: Even direct sunlight will shorten the life of the robber im a cord. 3. MOISTBRE Don‘t let clecuic coeds get wet: Even rubberâ€"covered exsensions will in time absorb water. HOW TO MAKE CORDS LAST LONGER PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS will . Residents of West Deerficld townâ€" ship are asked to begin now in searchâ€" mg through their aftics, basements, garages, barns, etc., for all scrap matâ€" crials. It is urgently needed in the war cifort as fifty per cent of all armaâ€" ment is made from scrap metals. Worn out, damaged, broken or rusty items made of iron, steel, copper, lead, zinc, aluminum, and tin (except tin cans) should be placed in containers on the parkways for the cleanâ€"up drive Sept. 14â€"19. R Residents of Deetfield and Bannockâ€" burn are asked to post this list in their bzsements for future reference : License plates, lawn mowers, tools, metal clothes hangers, ornaments, wire {encing, tooth paste containers, pipe, boilers, water and oil tanks, garden implements, metal toys, wheels, auto parts, garbage and ashcans or covers, fire place equipment, meial containers, ware, metal picture frames, ash trays, drain pipes and gutters, metal roofing, window stripping, furnace grates, buckâ€" ets, lighting fixtures, radiators, heatâ€" ing‘and plumbing supplies, metal bedâ€" steads, rods, casters, machinery parts, steel wool, tire chains, pots and pans and children‘s vehicles. waste baskets, incinerators, candlesticks, metal furniture, door and window hardware, sash weights, electrical apâ€" pliances, wire, burlap bags, stoves, stoveâ€"pipe, flat irons, bikes, batteries, wash boards, sinks, iron railings, tableâ€" Holy Day Services At N.S. Congregation Holy day services are planned for the end of this week at the North Shore Congregation Israel in Glencoe, opening with a New Year‘s service on Friday at 8:15 o‘clock. (n New Year morning, Saturday, Sept. 12, there will be a service at 10 o‘clock. Admission to the Holy day services will be by ticket only and each member of the congregation is asked to cooperate by showing his ticket at the door. ‘The religious school at the temple will open on, Sunday morning, Sept. 27, for registration and classes. Both military and nouâ€"military lea~â€"| 2nd 14. Charles | h‘“*fl** Linden ave.; Highlar ”dfiz“i-i ing the Battery Off ning the war, to Dr. Harold| Field Artiliery Scho Spears, superintendent of the Highland] _ Licutenant Block,â€" M“fl%*wfll‘hfln&.:w«lm Washington, D. C., week before last| Bragg, I. C. Belo to participate in a conference called by |‘duty he was emplo the United States office of education | Coffee Broker, C. T. to discuss the high school‘s place in | â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" the national war effort. of the students for The office of education, he indjcates, probably will put on a drive to get the high schools of the country lined up in helping to win the war. Ohe phase cf the drive will consist of onganizing the students indivdually and in groups for war aid work. Another aspect of the plan will consist of the preparation WHERE TO LOOK FOR DAMAGED CORDS WHAT TO DO ABOUT DAMAGED CORDS Telephone Directory Closing very soon. In order to insure‘ accuracy, we check and recheck every name, address and telephone number. before printing. * If you have a telephone, please look at your present listing in the directory to make sure it is ILLINOIS BELL TIELEPHONE COMPANY *® Your new telephone directory goes to press BUY U. £. RONDS AWD STAMPS rs on !Liout. Block Attends War â€" |School at Fort Sill Never ty to push worn cords out of sightâ€"they should be fixred immediately: Unâ€" less you are sure of your repairing skill, call av elecâ€" wician: He can often reâ€"use most of the old cord,and you know the job is done right! of the students for both milit defense work aft*r graduation In anticipation of the request to put the schools on‘a war basis, Dr. Spears is planning to appoint a committee within the next few days to consider what can be done in Highland Park in addition to what is already being done at the high school. C Block «6

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