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Highland Park Press, 28 Jan 1943, p. 3

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nounced to its members and the general “hfi:bm-fl.d basic courses in aid, to be given under the supervision of Mr. "X" (George Scheuchenpflug). A tenâ€"hour course has been arranged, enabling the workers in the protective services to receive their civilian defense credit in first aid in half the time formerly reâ€" Draft Board Lists Names Of Delingquents In order to eliminate pending cases of delinguency in selective service by February 1, Col. Paul G. Armstrong, state director, has ordered a drive to round up every registrant classified as delinquent. ‘The following listed men, registered with selective service board No. 1 in Highland Park are classified as susâ€" pected delinquents. A card and bunco party will be :mdh&eg&‘l‘unal’.}‘.& Highwood on Fri an. ’.hfien&d'mmwlfl- clock. ‘The public is invited to attend. By climinating some of the general information and such irrelevant maâ€" terial as treatment of snakebite, etc., a streamlined course has been prepared particularly suited to the needs of civâ€" ilian defense. While the members of the protective services who have not Any person whose name appears on the list should report immediately to the local board for correction of recâ€" ords. Failure to do so will cause the board to turn the name over to the United States attorney for investigaâ€" week course is open to all Highland Park citizens without charge for inâ€" struction. In case of emergency, any» one may have to fill the post of some member of civilian defense. Alpha Phi Alumni To Hold January Meeting Friday by the committee in charge, which is headed by Mrs, Elmer Carison. Asâ€" The North Shore alumnae of Alpha Phi will gather on Friday, Jan. 29, for a 12:30 o‘clock luncheon at the home of Miss Frances Scheidenheim, 804 Forést avenue, Wilmette. This will be the January business meeting combining all six groups of the fraâ€" ternity, Oak Terrace PT A Sponsors Party Friday Evening sisting her are Mrs. Virgil Lenzini, Mrs. Harold Westergard, Mrs. Albert Mecham, Mrs. Dominic Sherony, Mrs. Victory Welecka, Mrs. Cumming Grant and Mrs. George Kenry. Mrs. â€"Ralph â€" Strader of Evanston will speak about the sewing group which meets every Tuesday from 10 to 4 o‘clock at the Alpha Phi house on the Northwestern university camâ€" pus. This group is sewing on dresses for the Red Cross, for the British Reâ€" lief, and for the Cook County Chilâ€" dren‘s hospital A discussion will also take place about Alpha Phi‘s War Relief fund, which is the purchasing of war relief stamps to buy ‘surgical kits that are sent to the civilian hospitals in Briâ€" tain... As another war measure, Alpha Phi has set aside $250 to be called the War Emergency fund, which is for any Aipha_Phiâ€"member who may be in distress due to the war. The groups are still working on their afghans for the United States Marine hospital in San Francisco, and others are sent to England to be used in bomb shelâ€" ters â€"â€" The .regular . monthly meeting of the P.TA. will be held Tuesday eveâ€" ning, Feb. 2, at 8 o‘clock and will be called "February â€"House." Mrs. Anâ€" drew Wysocky is program chairman. Plans have been made for a patriotic pageant with flowers, flags and songs. Fifth grade mothers will be hostâ€" esses and will serve refreshments. Fifth grade teachers are Miss Anita Whitely and Miss Rose Opus. Mrs. Jesse Carr of Chicago, who is governor of this district, will speak on the war nursing scholarships for which Alpha Phi has provided. Three candidates will be selected to enter Yale university or Western Reserve university as student nurses. Alpha Phi provides tuition, room and board for their schooling. For Victory im. IT TAKES BOTH Civilian Defense News fin n * Highland Tuesday, 7:80 to 10 p.m., Lincoin school, County Has Large War Bond Sales For December work on another evening of the week. Four central locations have been choâ€" sen for the classes, and the hours set at 7:30 to 10 p.m. The schedule is as follows : Monday, T:30 to 10 pm.. Community cenâ€" February first, and the course will be nw-lni-rl-.d!-ad a hours each, given at weekly inâ€" tervals. Each class will be repeated on four evenings of the same week, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, so that anyone who is unâ€" able to attend class on the evening for which he enrolled may make up the "Tink Hioe sabour, Pard Mikik. mateietor A total of $8,531,062 worth of war and victory bonds were purchased by Lake County residents during the past month, it has been announced by James Stiles, Jr., general chairman of the county war savings staff. Enroliments may be made at the Civâ€" ilian Defense office in the city hall, The classes will begin the week of , T:80 to 10 p.m.. Ravinia school, 7 million Americans under arms . . ; 1% million beyond our borders . . . All fightersâ€"all meat eaters . . . As the offensive power of the United Naâ€" tions grows, so grows the need for meat. Meat for example : Since the meat industry went on a war footing in 1941, it has furâ€" nished our armed forces and our allies 4% billion pounds of meatâ€"fresh and canned. This is the equivalent of 19 billion averâ€" age meat meals. More than 1200 American meat packing houses and nearly 1000 sausage makers toâ€" day are doing their utmost to give our own fighters the best diet in the history of warfare; to supply meat to our fighting allies ; and still to give every person not in uniform the nutritional values of meat. Those who are not directly supplying the armed forces and allies are doing their part to supply the home front. Meat Animal Population Secretary Wickard‘s great foodâ€"forâ€"victory program starts at the grass roots, where livestock producers are working night and day, often without adequate help, to break their own already phenomenal records. We have the land, we have the facilities and we have the will to produce. Actually there is in this bounteous land one beef animal for every two persons; about the same number of hogs ; and better than half as many sheep and lambs. _ more on the way, we at home must tighten our beits and spread out meat a little thinâ€" ner, but we can thank our lucky stars we have it to spread out. F)ODtoohnbecanepartofthe“; strategy" of winning this war. AND OUR SECOND YEAR OF THE WAR Brother of Local Man Passes Away John Alexander Grant, 266 Harbor street, Glencoe, a brother of Charles Grant, vice president and cashier of the First National bank of Highland Park, died last Thursday in Wesley :zunlwoic‘u&c- Mr. Grant was employed in the plant enginecring department of the Illincis ell Telephone company in Chicago for the past 32 years. his widow, Freda, two sons, John F. and Thomas W., two other brothers, Leslic of San Gabriel, Calif., and Willâ€" iam of Chicago, and four sisters, Mrs. John Strang, Chicago, Mrs. Carl Hanâ€" sen, North Chicago, Mrs. Oscar Noerâ€" enberg and Mrs. Charles Eaton, Baldâ€" county this month calls for a purchase of $1,000,000. win Park, Calif. Funeral services were held Saturday at the Glencoe Union church. Interâ€" ment was in Lake Forest cemetery. Highland Park showed a total of $98,745.01 in Series E. war savings bonds for last month. Highland Park‘s quota for January is $198,490. Highâ€" land Park placed second in sales for the month of January. Waukegan was first with $272,551.29. George Hartman is the new war having succeeded Ralph Davidson, who has resigned the position. The war savings bond quota for the *Meat provides: Complete highâ€"quality proteins . . . Essentiol B. vitaminsâ€" thiamine, riboflavin, niacin . . . Important mineralsâ€"iron, copper, phosphorus. |% Why is meat Item No. 1 on Uncle Sam‘s food shopping list? Why does the man in training get nearly a pound of meat a day? Why is meat a basic part of every Army ration, even down to pocketâ€"size Field Ration K? ¢ a * _ Meat, to which man always instinctively | has turned, is now recognized by science and by the government as a protective food, containing many of the things which make for health, stamina and vitality.# ;. y To make available these benefits of meat on an unprecedented scale, the meat inâ€" dustry has unleashed the full power of its capacity and skill. )‘fl Here are a few of the highlights: _ One railroad car now does the work of three in the shipment of boneless beef, which provides just as much meat in 60 per cent less space than reâ€" quired by the sides and quarters shipped during World War 1: The new dehydrated beef and pork take up only oneâ€"tenth of the space in ships that would be reâ€" quired by meat in other forms. These amazing new military products, which preserve the good flavor, the character and the good nutrition of meat, also lend themseives readily to air transport. On the meat production lineâ€"a tremendous new surge. /Many new and different kinds of canned meatsâ€"stepped up 120 per centâ€"more than douâ€" bileâ€"over total canned meat production a year ago. pork cooked and canned) is now becoming familiar in the rations of our fighting Russian allies. This is one of many new products created especially for For months, experts from the livestock and meat industry have visited military centers helping to train cooks in the preparation of meat on a large Under the rising scale of offensive effort, the government, the livestock producer, the meat industry, the sausage maker and the meat retailer, are putting forth every effort to make the meat go ‘roundâ€"at home as well as on the fighting fronts. Under necessary restriction orders by the At Chicago Center The following persons from Highâ€" land Park gave their blood at the Red Cross Blood Donor center, § N. Waâ€" bash avenue, Chicago, during h: week: Walter Frank Jr., 330 S. Li den avenue, sixth time donor, and John Bailey, 2366 Lakeside place. Walter Kohn, 939 S. Linden avenue, Haroid Simpson, 320 Central avenue, Arthur Raff, 245 Cedar avenue, third time donor, Arthur Swanson, 375 Orâ€" thard lane, and A. W. Elliott, 1545 Judson avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bachelor, 319 Euclid avenue, Highwood, girl, Jan. 21. Mr. and Mrs. Kenton Johnson, 721 S. Jackson street, Waukegan, girl, Jan, 22. Mr. and Mrs. William Loesch, 247 Hikhwood avenue, Highwood, girl, Jan. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anning, F Sheridan, boy, Jan. 21. Kege Capt. and Mrs. Homer Hunt, Sheridan, boy, Jan. 24. Fort Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schacfer, 303 N. Third avenue, Maywood, girl, Jan. and girl, Jan. 25. Mr. and Mrs. B Hodges, suumiq.h-.g.u fort Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bleimehi, 1158 Wainut street, Deerficld, twins, boy BIRTHS AT THE HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL Mr. and As a guide to preparing available cuts of ment, send for two booklets prepared hy the meat industry. Stepâ€"byâ€"step -.u.WM*&MAM.MO“.“Q~.M“~'&"”.M ‘‘Tushonka‘"‘ Seeking After School Employment High School Girls Mrs, Emily Holim Passes Away After Lingering Il’m To aid in the war effort and to gain experience, a number of high school girls, 16 years and over, hope to obtain positions after school and on Saturday. _ Many of the girls who desire such experience have had commercial coâ€" urses in high school, and some have held jobs during vacations, such . as office work and retail selling. _ Mrs. Emily Holm of 1810 Skokic boulevard died Wednesday Jan. 20, in the Highland Park hospital after a long illness. hu:-d.fluo.lh:s:tu..:‘mâ€"ry of McHanicksburg, a son, William J. of Columbus, O., and a Local employers who would like to secure the help of partâ€"time or Satâ€" urdayâ€" workers should notify Miss Emada Griswold, dean of girls, of the work available and qualifications deâ€" Born in Greenwood, 1884, Mrs. Hoim wn'.:.m brother, Frank Steiner of St. Louis, Funcral services were held Saturâ€" day from the Seguin and Logan Fuâ€" neral home and interment was in Graceland cemetery. meat industry are limited. You as a housewife are already at grips with this problem. You have encountered, and will encounter, many shortages and Itis a couple of fellows named Adolf and Tojo. The Amherican housewife is meeting the problem with understanding and resourceâ€" fuilness. She is ‘"sharing the meat."" She is buckling down to doing tricks with food which she never dreamed of before. |____â€" Make every pound count! AMERICAN® MEAT INSTITUTE, Chicageo She realizes that what we have learned about foods in a period of plenty must not be lost in a period of scarcity and selfâ€"deâ€" nial. She knows that strong, healthy bodies are needed to win this war and to build a better world to live inâ€"that there must be nod blackout of good nutrition. Meat is a mainstay of good nutrition. _ How can you keep meat on the table regularly, as good nutrition demands? â€" _ One way is to learn more cuts of meatâ€" to use the available cuts. Many of these may be new to your tableâ€"but they all have the high nutritional value of meatâ€" and can be deliciously prepared. The bookâ€" lets offered below will help you. F usls Remember, on the battle fronts and the home fronts, meat is a fighting food. This Seal means that all statements regarding noâ€" trition made in this advertisement are acceptable to the Council on Foods and Nutrition of the American Medical Association. Who is to blame for themP? Is it the government? NO. Is it the livestock producer? NO. Is it the meat industry? NO. Is it your meat retailer? NO. deliveries to retailers by the and Beneficiar es ond Deneficiaries be redeemed by the owner. If you are a beneficiary, however, you are not an er only when the original owner dies and proof of death is established. This is .often difficult when the original owner is a soldier serving on a distant battlefield. In the meantime the widow or other dependents may be in urgent peed of funds which they could have War Bond Coâ€"Ownérâ€" _ obtained without delay had they been named as coâ€"Owners.‘ naming of a coâ€"owner would result in disadvantages for the original owner. Such a situation might or!hw owner is inclined to sell the bonds and dissipate the money in the absence of the purchaser of the bonds. This could not happen if the purchaser names a beneficiary because a benefitiary canâ€" not sell the bonds unless death of the are made? When should you des nate a coâ€"owner and when should you designate a beneficiary if you are 2 War Bond owner? purchaser or original owner is lished beyond doubt. ‘These matters must be decided on the basis of careful individual consideraâ€" tions. lnanye:atwd::md,flh iginal owner o Bonds ought to be familiar with the legal implications of his decision. can, of course, always where the ~#

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