Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 11 Mar 1943, p. 6

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'llrwlmumu. n in hmd 5 he uh cooperating s trian plan can call Mrs. Mildred Haesâ€" sler, treasurer of the class, or any member ofâ€"the group. The fund starâ€" started at the last -edht,olehn with a small check received by a memâ€" ber for an article appearing in March *Writers‘ Journal," a New York pubâ€" Te Glamce colegeraiery, Clan tpe gel and Jane Mayer, authors of "Inâ€" CEBCCITETS. ln.D-.llIe&-yolek to serve R grb-"emfl:-:. for July 28 set to 31 in Evanston. Plans are being made h.“n“&eflmm sponsor a prize open to all writers at the Conference. A Deerficld company which cleans and mothproofs in homes as all North Shore towns. ‘The group may be joined any time by interested listeners. & members are coming from as far members. The of meeting every uler wotk in proving rammtnihe i luncheon meeting of the North Shore an' i -:'.'a customary, anyone i is invited to attend class preceding by wlh single admission. A hot is provided by the "Y" and class members bring their own sandwiches Lee Lukes has been the editor of :"'l‘leVuuh.MAdnhM'lin magazine is hand set and hand bound; that is, she does the printing, so Miss Lukes is a craftsman as well as editor. March 11 is a regular class session with Rowena Bennett reading the work she receives each time from class M Hea." * Chicago Editor which such wellâ€"known writers as Auâ€" gust Derieth and Louis Zara contrib ute, will be the guest speaker at the cagp‘s own little literary magazine to Lte Lukes, editor of "Decade," Chiâ€" My Tiny little jobs . . . MIDDLE SIZED JOBS . .. GREAT BIG JOBS! . .. we handle x ALL KINDS ALL KINDS of: P RI NT ING What you will scarcely miss our soldiers die without. Give Anyone leaving the United States and passing through Mexico en route to another country will be allowed to carry U.S. currency, in any denomiâ€" In order to supplement the Mexican decrees, the United States has proâ€" hibited exportation of currency other than coins and twoâ€"dollar bills into Mexico and has ruled that such currency brought into this country must be surrendered to customs auâ€" thorities and turned over to the Federâ€" al Reserve banks. * Checks, drafts, traveler‘s checks, and other credit instruments will not be affected by the recent rulings. â€" Persons failing to turn in United States currency will be treated as enemies of Mexico within the meanâ€" ing of the law dealing with trading with the enemy and enemy property. money turned in was legitamately acquired and free of any association with the axis. The moves were taken to help preâ€" vent disposition within the Western Hemisphere of currency looted by the United States currency, with the exception of twoâ€"dollar bills and coins, Mbhhnh‘oluuh result of coâ€"operative steps by the government of the two countries, according to a bulletin from the Chiâ€" cago Motor club. Restrictions Put On UV. l.S.Cun-ey THE HICHLAND PARK PRESS Telephone 557 LAUREL AVENUE -l=”-.a- he made Morehure c 6 hwet dn e inss | â€" â€"â€"Temuy Rmos anp Berrv Low (NBC) § omm pou. ies 5 mten Aer n beer (You sg moking ar my ont af ons ape: i All right then, give me a niclde. . ,___.___ «sllas Canres Suwow (HBC) 1‘ 5 man o reguiar bebiee, *‘ 00"1!“%,!'!&" 0‘! me with knives! _ _ _ _ Oh, that‘s terrible! Phet mhse‘k go bad, bus one Hitle o es minan tars ahise "mine, =-=':.':""'Z.".::;'*q 1 used nothing but young cows. e of &‘Ma z.niu â€"Kazs Sussu Hove (CBS) â€"Corves Tims (NBC) Mrs. Alan Kidd‘s Mother is Dead Tuesday, Mar. 2, in the Highland Park hospital after an iliness of five weeks. Plans are being made for the erecâ€" tion of a service men‘s homor roll billboard in Highwood. Anyone who has a son, brother or friend in the armed forces is asked to call the Highâ€" wood City hall and leave his name with the city clerk. _ Mrs. Cornelia Springer Bradiey, 71, of Wilmette, mother of Mrs. Alan R. The Lady of Vikings will hold a binâ€" go party at the Masonic temple Friâ€" day evening, Mar 26, at 8 o‘clock. A short business meeting will precede the party. There will be refreshments and door prizes. Lady Vikings To Hold Bingo Party Service Men‘s Honor Roll To Be Erected in Highwood Christian Science services were held at the Little Church of the Flowers iP-FmeuLumllanorhlprk.Gln- Mrs. Stoltz had resided in California for the past four years. She lived in Chicago and Highland Park before Word has arrived from Mrs. Willâ€" iam Becker of Highland Park, who has been in Glendale, Calif., visiting her twin sister, Mrs. Alice Buell Stoâ€" Itz, that Mrs. Stoltz passed away on March 2. Mrs. Becker Dies In California Twin Sister of Canning the Victory Garden surplus will be the subject of ‘Mrs. Leech‘s taik. She will discuss bacteriology of foods and certain scientific facts of sterilization necessary for successful canning and the common methods of canning, which include open kettle, boil_i( water bath, oven and pressure Mr. and Mrs. Bert Leech will speak on Victory Gardens. Mr. Leech will discuss the program of last year, including the.mistakes and successes of the gardeners. He will trace the beginning of a Victory Garden, telling how to secure the plot to be used, planning the varieties of vegetables to be planted, the planting of seeds and transplanting of seedlings, weeding and cultivating. Questions will be ansâ€" wered at the close of the talk. â€" Joseph B. Garnett will open the meeting with a short talk on "The Problems of the Merchant Due to the War." He will discuss ceiling prices and curtailing of deliveries. talks on Victory Gardens and the merâ€" chants‘ problems during the war at a meeting Friday evening, Mar. 19, at 7:45 o‘clock. Joseph B. Garnett To Address Eim Place PTA _ ie a Jark of sll trades and out YÂ¥ Her all swollen | L7 "L , Sss face apt (oft swotien hy kaoe Mr Ved her face returned to normal and he gave her up â€"Buans awo Ausz» (CBS) the uhert 11 the Bifod. My sister Bessie stung by a and it b:uu â€"~A uanlbl*d I‘ve the last gal ie baty carrige that 1 Pooght __And how is the little baby coming car and drive it away. _ _ _ _ rmu.u-uw oâ€"but don‘t haye to worry, Daddy. lzihln-auâ€"bu.' â€"Corses Timz (NBC) The Elm Place P.T.A. will hear ‘They hear the same slap every Well, what can 1 do for you? My girl got married. Married? darkâ€"how do Mrs. Bradiey was the widow of Frank Bradley, former vice president of the Chicago Railway Supply comâ€" pany. Another davghter, Mrs. Netson Wickes of Wilmette, also survives. Funeral services were held Thursday in Graceland cemetery chapel, Chicaâ€" Mr. Rosenberg would like to orâ€" ganize a unit like the oldâ€"time vaudeâ€" ville show, which would include singâ€" ers, tap dancers, magicians, ventriloâ€" quists, etc. Those who are interested in‘ joining such a group, in order to help build up the morale of our armed forces, may contact Mr. Rosenberg at his home, Glencoe 124. . ic;l;ool Heads ress Rofllry Meting March 8 R.R.Prb-dDr.HMS':: school superintendents, spoke at ke day‘s meeting of the Highland Park Rotary club.â€" They led a discussion regarding postâ€"war world problems. For several months, Irwin L. Rosâ€" enberg of 124 Dell place, Glencoe, has been entertaining the boys at the Highland Park U.S.0. with the musiâ€" cal saw, and is now interested in building up an entertainment unit made up of North Shore talent to enâ€" tertain at the various U.S.0. centers around the North Shore.â€" Glencoe Man Seeks Entertainers For USO Clubs The tax due should be paid in cash at the collector‘s office, by check ammblcb'Cozchro‘b ternal Revenue." In the case of payâ€" ment in cash, the taxpayer should in every instance require and the colâ€" lector should furnish a receipt. In the case of payments made by check or check or the money order receipt is usually a sufficient receipt. First Instaliment Of Income T ax : Due March 15 The tax must be paid to the collecâ€" tor of internal revenue for the district in which the taxpayer‘s return is reâ€" quired to be filedâ€"that is, to the colâ€" lector for the district in which is loâ€" cated the txpayer‘s legal residence or principal place of business, or if he has l:‘l-nllui‘eucu principal place of business in the United mwmmau«m revenue at Baitimore, Maryland. Taxes due on a return filed for the calendar year 1942 may be paid in full u&cfi-ohhmdh.- turn on or before 15, 1943. . â€" The tax may, at the option of the taxpayer, be paid in four equal inâ€" stallments instead of in a single payâ€" ment, in which case the first installâ€" ment is to be paid on or before March 15, the second on or before June 15, the third on or before September 15, and the fourth on or before Decemâ€" ber 15. 1943. If the taxpayer elects to pay his tax in four instaliments, each of the four installments must be equal in amount, but any installment may be paid, at the election of the taxpayer, prior to the time prescribed for its payment. If an installment is not paid in full on or before the date fixed for its payment, the whole amount of the tax remaining unpaid is required to be paid upon notice and demand from the collector. facts about the oil situation are dis. undl!noldkl&-.!un- tary of Interior and Petroleum Coâ€"ordinator for National Defense, in the April issue of Cosmopolitan "With the coming of warm weather, our primary duty will be to fill our storage tanks with fuel eflwmhnndsduxtvh. ter, duty will be even more imperative than it was last summer. The use of gasoline save for the Mcnutflurron es is out for some time to come!" Mr. kh-le.n lucid explanation of the oil and its importance to the U: Nations hf:ommt lobal conflict. mgncn possible Nmmmlr?zhun: S ereeneaie arady evaporation of % to end the war soon, and I advise anyone else to do so." He cautions Americans to a continued tightness in the situation, "l‘bzhtco:n“'fllhand upon for more more hm-ndtcrmm says Mr. Ickes, "not only in North ;â€"%- ing like Titans against the m is that have not t in t: not far m future. This . lekes, "not in North ""!'hlirlenld-nb.mw ;.’Mm:t I eannot," w dud.no&ndfl" by ,-:..,..,:._........,‘2_2;‘.‘ Warns Itkes Speige!, 2300 S. Green Bay road Adcle M. Whitficld, 908 Marion aveâ€" nue; Robert Bussard, 7 Beech lane ; Charles T. Eedale, 159 Ravine drive . Maria Deixier, 248 Oakiland avenve ; Clarence Goclzer, 1233 S. St. Johns avenue ; Kenneth Goldt, 1200 Burton avenue; Charlisle Thacker 1948 Broadview, third time donor ; Harold W â€"0%'” Flora avenue ; Fred C. land Park gave their blood at the Red Cross Blood Donor service, 5 N: Wabash avenue, Chicago, during the Joel Starrels, 723 S. Sheridan road ; Harry Anderson, 234 Central avenue ; Donate Blood At Chicago Red Cross past standingly turn to God, not only vuh.o:hlmvuo-,lnvl& guidance in all their affairs. In :“-a.. fe olhnz-h‘h( or fear eon-d:-mlsvuhm"- ness impartial, everâ€"available him into the ship (Johr 6:21), "immediately the ship was at the ho wes nniining oo erim ipsrniive was an divine law available to all was proved on another occasion, whenr Peter started to walk on the water. Jesus refused to recognize mmamm th-twhmthawnul. the divine law is ceaselessly in operal un d n win es * mel inuey, not superanty can be met y, rally, but through the divinely natural unfoldment of the spiriâ€" mmuum y 'w--*;mmw-m :::'led to mm: countless others, is on the field today. Those who look to Him will receive His guidance. . . . _ Let us therefore joytully acâ€" knowledge that the overflowing abundance of ideas will continuâ€" Fubrpes. Aricbasiminte i. MB 5.c 50 BB 2 hold him walking on the water; essential are not actually needed. Alfl'ill:‘uthnmh ness, and a revised outlook upon human need, unfolding to relieve the human extremity ? Solving of the problem of insufficiency shows the equally practical soluâ€" tion for the related problem of transportation, through reliance upon divine guidance. Belief in the possibility of lack engenders fear of it, which results llllthup-rlcmolml:d. Jesus always commanded situation when â€" insufficiency _ confronted him. His unwavering understandâ€" ing of God‘s allness prevented his Wuuchum;m conldnellhcrlur-orupefl- ence it.. In the presence of such understanding, evidence of lack faded from the experience of those about him, and in its place God‘s abundant provision apâ€" peared. When he was faced with apparent food shortage, he fed fivet{lonundn!en_._vhen only a few hand, proving there The following â€"The Ohristian Science Moniter. out of the difficulty bave already presented themselves: first, such rationing of these commodities as to ensure of and to provent sellish boarding, secondly, discovery and manufseâ€" ture of acceptable substitutes; and lastly, awakening to the fact sense," writes Mary Baker Eddy in "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" (p. 532). War is unquestionably an error of maâ€" terial sense, a belief in more than one Mind. Is it not fear, then, that misleads mortals to expect a lack of necessities and proceeds to manifest this accepted sense of scarcity? True, some avenues of blocked as to cause a lack Phe â€" Psuimist expressed confiâ€" dence in the fact that "the earth is the Lord‘s, and the fuiness Ukl'eul”.zt.lu 24:1). Jesus‘ thought action expressed an unfailing sense of abundance in every situation. Obviously, he knew the source of sepply was not matter but Spirit. Today "the earth is the Lord‘s," and His fulâ€" ness has not changed. Frightened -ru:.mhflahh..hluo- supply as material, may gond is forever unlimited. g heavenly Father, divine Love. are running low. Can it be possible that God has not enough of good to go around? No, for as the father in Jesus‘ parable said to the elder son remaining at home (Luke 15:31), "Son, thou art ever with me, and all that 1 have is thine." se M venly Father is nmtw All that .1 have is thine." C "Fear was the first manifestsâ€" Ideas. Cannot Be Ratrioned O ONE needfear the lack imâ€" plied by rationing unless he can be convinced that the Thursdoy, March 11, 1943 ° a lack of cerâ€" Yet three ways at

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