Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 18 May 1944, p. 2

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#7 # ul 4 ... .. 5l ) P olthes $ Father" and "OQklahoma." It‘s reading} Soon to join the seryice is Frank It‘s NOY | "dog tags" and fbooks like “%le Robe,", "Goodbye, | Robert Guido, son of r{(t. and Mrs. iden : bar | Mr. Chips," and "Gone with the| Sam Guido, 208 North Ave, Highâ€" It‘s in with | Wind." It‘s . in tails to Star.I wood. Young Guido, : Mk:ht 'fi' rs turning the |do t high, the top third of the grad lass ligh wn low for‘a ‘ "inâ€" " bother ‘It‘s the smell of|at St. George high school, Evanston, stead omdhr jand a quarter. gardenias. [ 3 _ .. |majored in Eflthlh.. Séienge and ~ JtÂ¥ no M troop trains, GI Joes,| Yep. | t Muth.en.mm. excels in,‘ Latin ag and hg about whether there| Just a lot of little things. Spanish, and owns several troph ‘ will be a acks cleanup so you[l But that‘s what I joined the Army| in intramural iootbl}f and baseball. | won‘t get #lle pass you‘ve been wait~| for, ‘cause 1 want all those things and| Ben J. Guido, radioman 1~c, USN, ing for. t [ heaven too, I guess. â€"| ‘a brother, has been for more: thza_ 18 t { s | : months in the Southwest Pacific ) f " area. We | j« & L VC C It‘s ing teased about your new ""“""m new girl; your new suit. â€"_ t | : It‘s NOY jwearing "dog tags" and It‘s in n c s with # wn low for : : :" for.‘a i2 stead omdhr land a quarter. Two I Junior lifl~$u Awarded Expert Rifle Rating its travaung in with I Wind." It‘s . ing in tails to Starâ€" lights %’;M't ‘"inâ€" [ collar bother you. ‘It‘s the smell of stead of a jand a quarter. gardenias. [ + ~It‘s no more troop trains, GI Joes,| Yep. | and worryt‘g about whether there| Just a lot of little things. wilt be a Matricks: cleanim, in usn‘t _ Th hnd oe revs nea ren n uy o y t ts might be! It‘s no strikes, nobody getting the bum‘s rush, no women wearing ghch._ud,)uwh. on bars, and It‘s NO strikes . . . It‘s spreading butter on 'ffm'" s0 nl&chzqao'aeawe.qitom including , crusts, is covered. It‘s NOT 'neiqlp'n;” pictures in every periqdical. | It‘s reading about new .homes) being built, happy marriages, lots of children. .. And it‘s the time when, you can have your car w and [greased fo_vadolpr. And it‘s the time, too, _ Yep, and it‘s having pic ala mode. And it‘s ‘not heatring "Dot't you know theré‘s 4 war going on ?" Aflh’sb‘fi.'a&dwdflw?,g a filling station and saying, " ‘er up ‘with ethyl, Ed." ’i'¢ It‘s spreading butter on thick . . sef enlisted to pr my fl!(l).f ::'l: the memy.fi;‘“fih&. for freedom{ and democracy. L : word like "democracy" is too.bm‘d for me. f f 18 »â€"â€" CHANUTE FIELD, AAFC, May (If‘s ”‘ JOHN O ThankÂ¥ Fin Associa â€" TMW tE Arhy ow | 14 T heNation‘s Service| > > Shoe Se to For #Â¥ ep any ?’§ Bs (re Your Patronage dÂ¥ Uh 3 These Ex; young boys are memâ€" bers : of Park High School Junior Rifle Club and have achieved their rating firing under the superâ€" vision of C. J. Winkley, instructor, who is in ¢ of the range. be passed before a shooter even beâ€" comes eligible to compete for the Expert rnti?g & Next and final aim for these boys is the Distit hed Riffleman qualiâ€" fication. [ e * _ It‘s seeing shows like "Life: with Father" and :%:thhoma." It‘s reading books like "The Robe,". "Goodbye, Mr. Chips," and "Gone with the It‘s a peeluw‘ nose in the summer; cup of hot chocolate in the winter. t‘s hayrides and sleighrides. It‘s aring fresh apples crunch as you ite into them. { P | It‘s eating popcorn with real butter it. ‘ It‘s seeing good shows . . . ots of "hellos" and few "goodbyes." It‘s meeting new people. It‘s ‘conâ€" iding in friends. It‘s swimming and laying <tennis and getting sunâ€" urned so badly that you can‘t sleep ong of the meadowlark; the odor { a summer rain. y | Yes . . . and democracy is saying "s going to church . . . It‘s going to church with Dad and om early Sunday morning. wearing gray flannel suits â€"â€" | Dysing SAN it‘s more than that, too, Tel, H. P. 1774 NC t to 6 tal s o ol B4 ank Sgt. Neil Ronzani, is also stationed m‘m Among. the Highland| Parkers now known to be stationed in New Guinea are Pyt. Richard Ro: son of Mr: and Mrs. Charles Rorzani, 438 No. First St, and Cpl. J. Moore, son of and Mrs. oore, 193 cu:?l Ave. (Cpl.| Moore of the Army air forces ,is a weéather observer connection with the air offensive against eneuy-ocmzp:ed Europe. $ &t’ G‘"‘Q' & ‘l’m te of the local high school and of Loyola University. His training was received at â€"Chanute Field, and on June 1 he will have been in the service for two $â€"Sgt. Thomas E. ity, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D |Garrity,. 1615 Deerficld Road, and crew chief of a Pfi. stationed re in Engâ€" land, has been a the Bronze Star, presented by Col. Kinor Maimâ€" James A. Smith, >of Alex S. Smith, 278 Beech SL..O'; one of the high school seniors is receiving his basic zg‘iniw at t Lakes, at the end of which he expects to reâ€" ceive a short furlough." ‘be overseas, and Pyt. . Emmett is studying at Truax Field, Madison, Wis. Chief Specialist Glenworth Cowart, USN, husband of the former Jean Moroney and father of a 10â€" months‘â€"old daughtet, is stationed in Hawaii. , San l The Edward Moroneys, 753 Glenâ€" view Ave., have three sons and one sonâ€"inâ€"law in the armed forces. Pat E, a graduate of the ‘43 class of the local high school, is now receiving his basic training in the U. 8. Marine corps at San Diego, Calif. Lt. Edâ€" ward, Jr., U. S. Army, is thought to At the successful completion of these courses ‘the candidates* wil be commissioned as ensigns. the Vâ€"12 course are William Riley, Kenneth Bennett, Norman ‘Hirsch, Robertâ€"Echroeder ‘and Albert Buckâ€" master, _ :/ | | Among the seniors at the local h!bb ischool who have been| sworn in by ‘the Navy for special training, to be called after the June graduation ¢xâ€" ercises are the following : | Richard McDaniel and. William Hutchison for the Vâ€"5 Course. For en ns e TsE Capt. Ruewitch, stationed in Engâ€" land, is second in command of the Base Intelligence Section. A graduâ€" ate of the University of Michigan, with the degree of A.B., he was enâ€" gaged in journalism and salesmanâ€" ship in civil life. Robert 3. Ruewitch, son of Mrs. Selma F. Ruewitch, 340 Moraine Rd., was promoted recently from the sank of 1st Lieutenant to that of Captain A graduate of Princeton, 1936, and of Yale Law, 1939, Major Wood enâ€" tered the service in August, 1941, He is a graduate of Randoliph and Kelly Fields and was commissioned a pilot in August, 1942. f [w‘cans, ia., youug Copt received fRigh praise from Cmdr. Paul E. Gilâ€" lespic, the station‘s commanding offiâ€" Ens, William:"Bill" Cope spent two days‘ liberty last week at the home of his mother, Mrs. Ruth Cope,ozg Vine Ave. | Ens. Cope is now stationed at Grosse Ile, Mich, as instructor of aviation cadets. .A private pilot beâ€" fore the war, and an honor student at the nation‘s only Naval college for primary fight instructors at New , in recognition df services in ¢ i es\ ul P scb 4 SEX 3X *\ ¢ isla eth Moore, Moore of the ather observer le of Richard, THL PRES& An honorary . membership in |the Brazilian Air Forces, with the *goiden wings") presented to him by | the the Brazilian Minister of the A$ in the presence of Gerneral Gome# of the Brazilian Air Force, Admiral Inâ€" grem qf the U.â€" S. Navy,â€"the air. base personnel and his shipmates. ‘This was distinction |accorded ief Petty ‘Officer Jack |Witten at| the compl of his firgt assignment in South erica, for ices red while King in conjunction with the Brazilian Air Force. _ | _ Jack is the son of Mrs. M the late Harvey Witten, 620 Central Ave,, |the (husband ‘of the former Vera McCreadie, and the father of Robert, aged "one month, born ; Jack was in Brazil. Recently e on a | twoâ€"weeks‘leave, C. 0. Wi has returned to the east and / there will go to America on a new assignment. | | Probably, in reading his Kipling, Alex néver expected to witness s of~ the . exciting scenes descrbed,â€" for im‘{cnce a fight between a bra and a mongoose,. But that was one of ‘the| highlights ‘of his recent ‘¢xâ€" periences. And, a la Kipling, the monâ€" goose won. old C.P.0O. Jack Witten . Is Decorated By the . Brazilian Government ‘The sun, he continues, is hotâ€" even iI: the shade. . Three Turkish towels fre necessary to take care â€" £ the perkpiration. Mosquitos are terâ€" rible. For recreation one may n m rtâ€"wave broadcasts of gamesâ€"â€"which come through at 3 Througk' the courtesy ‘of the Cross, ‘he, with some buddies J eâ€" cently, toured a nearby city. 1 Alex.‘L&he grandson of Mrs. A. McPherson, 360 Park Ave., has eviâ€" dently been going places. When last heard from he was in North Afri and no\c, arriving in India, he f the firs} letters received in a hoa amitin: him, in a bunch. His letter is dated May 7. d "In this place the sun rises in the west and sets in the east," writes Alexa: McPherson, attached to the U;S. Medical corps, somewhere in India, "and that‘s no phooey!" He does not explain the cause of nt:o‘nish'ing phenomenon. l Pvt. John Groff, husband ‘ of et: former Laurel Walker, is sta with the Army Signal dom at m Crowder, He is expected presently, on furlough.! In civil life he was an employee of the Beli Telâ€" ephone Co. i India A Stmu‘g‘ nge Land Writes Al McPherson Another son of the John Walkers, David is now receiving his basic trainâ€" ing at Great Lakes. His wife and two s childten live in Kenosha Pyt, E. Walker, USMC, 'fi of Mr. and Mrs. John Walker, No. St. Johns, who is completing his basic training at San Diego, Calif., has received his marksmanship rati and is leader of his squad.: Walker, iwhose wife and two small sons live at the above local address, was rly ~ a linei?ln for the Public Service Co. | § Wash. ‘The dies have two other sonfly and a sonâ€"inâ€"law in th& service. Rog: er, USN, recently been promoted to the k of Bugleâ€"master 3/¢c. He is stationed in the Pacific area. _ , It. Vincent J., of the Air Corps, whose wife, the former Jane Schneidâ€" ¢r, is with him at Saling, Kansas, is identified with the newng-Z% > «â€"8/Sgt. | James A." Jacobs, U. i Army, husbandâ€" of the former Rutl Peddle, is stationedâ€" at Spokane, (A/C Peddie, of Butier Uniâ€" versity, apolis, m home by the illness| of his father, is spending a $â€"day furlough with tm parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph | Peddle, 6;? Homew Ave. § | | BOWMAN â€"MILK _ 14 |__AT ITS BESyy e ie c darc ObFelnLH 900 Aare hR S canieye SEng onl jtnamt : ?ifi “ , featt tSX 75 uesd d oAAA i‘i‘{ ts ts “/1‘.% i. "“’”‘5‘5‘?‘1&4’*‘*&4 Â¥ado. s " E i a h o at once!" ‘This is the appes gf £Edâ€" ward J..Carter, president of ‘Rus: sian War Relief. R ¢ Highland Park is responding 4o this appeal with its fisual generosity.. The four | local 'nE..nM | > the Highland Park high school unife ‘the leadership of fi.‘. Linkk, ‘‘the Victory corps, Ten million Russians have. died. Forty million more have lost alk their possessions, ‘The enemy destraction of homes, farm (buildings and facâ€" tories in this titanic struggle} begâ€" gars . description. . Americans | may well shudder as the Arctict cold closes down relentlessly on the unâ€" fortunate Russian people, seai ‘hing in vain for what were ,fi their: homes, struggling to build sheilters against the approaching wintef,; s "For twentyâ€"seven months,‘ | at mmt of life, the Ri ans" emy. «We cannot let tho n have Open Y our Hearts Your Closets to Ou Needy Russian AU Lt, Dering, 27, attended Taft s#hool ard Princeton University, earnia) his wings at Corpus Christi, Tex. fle is a Navy pilot, and last Novembe} was awarded the‘ Navy and Marine: q* medal for the rescue of a drownin woman, off the coast of Florida, is the son of Mrs. Chrystal Knhtso of Chicago. + LoA â€" 4 Mrs, Dering is staying with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Jerogie .P. Bowes," 176 Laure! Ave. ~ \.*l > â€" : _An extensive starch is being th: to locate Lt. Philip Dering, husband of the former Nancyâ€"Leigh $, who has been reported: as sing after a reconnaissance flight ovd} the Aleutians. ; "}%%~~." | Lt. Philip R. Dering â€" Reported Missing in J Flight Over Aleutian The Cawleys have three sons three â€"daughters. | A daughter,. Marguerite Weifuss, a 4 ter, Miss Peggie Haggic, and fant umfl:fi:‘:&uq Mich., ‘were ent for the on Thursday of last week, at Second St., whereâ€"they have ever since their marriage. natives of Ireland... s A quiet family dinner mar the Sist milestone in the married) life of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick F. CaWley, Patritck Cawleys Marri!dSl #yun â€" The political high jinks that imc company the administration of a town that depends jupon the : from tavern licenses for a large wbrâ€" tion of its revenug lare easily underâ€" :ltll\dlbie.' There are two extremei in any such town; those who dirld despite the extra revenue, like to see the taverns eliminated, ‘or at Wast held down . under rigorous, almiost tyrannical supervision, | and *Rkose who feel that theyiloult': nc@ur» aged because: of the revenue they produce. In between these two | xâ€" tremes lies the large majority of, he citizens who aré not particularly/inâ€" terested in patronizing the tavern nor in closing them. "Live and, let live, but keep it clean," is their Botâ€" to. : Thus it is that when an adginâ€" istrative official takes office, he find the two, extremes pulling at Rim wellâ€"known playground for other idents of the North Shore. The other Highwood is a city. which the real residents of the | haye little to do, so far as suppo: its acitvities are med. It Highwood of some d taveri ile both ‘the &vid followers } ithe ) vagaries inherent in Highwo and the of ~4 North Shore at Jarge were waitif this week with degrees of: tei for Highwood‘s Friday ‘nig c meeting, the ordinary citig of Highwood was wondering ag ‘ as he has wondered many times.$ fore, why it is that| only the A creditable aspects of life in Highwat receive widespread ipress chroni lig The answer is, of ¢ourse, that t f! are really two Highwoods. <TH & is the comparatively., littie kno Highwood, of wd:kept homes,{, large percentage of which have. : sons and daughters] into the arr forces. This Highwpod supports § USOs that are hard‘ to «qual ah where, : it" supports | fine schools, in churches. . And, unfortunately 4 . as unspectacular as it is praiseworth: clothes to the respective CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM |â€" where. the Bible and #1} the writings of Mary Baker Eddy Avthorized NAE TL Ved e capa 1;;‘ ricans | may Arctic‘t |cold on t n~ . e"flce their: l@ ers montih:: ) a¢ ang: ing f de A *hu ad h :; °8, s | milsing t { the l“t .-'. atnidk his x. ein mbeP was rine storp dro#ning pridd, 4 | itson 4-; her ovih AP. * : s tirl 1 Uies ive! died. t all their ; * * Thursdoy, Moy 18, 1944 Ul% ) NoOW M e ulc s Rien Pak haaph t l Lc igt us 92 3&‘.;; e zghi?:; ‘fi{.‘kfié Th ho to . C "'{?ir'v“; . / nfi{%fig"er:wev jrte. Mrs. YÂ¥ INVITED To USE THE ast] =Y© C os; | some se | made If= m igy | Offict xâ€"] _ Thi Carl Paridiso, from Great Lakes, favored the guests with songs, and the door prize of a telephone call home. was won by Tom. Leughlin, Amy,ofl(edfbtl.l(lu.‘uu.?h Noorlun+was the lucky mother to a pot of flowers. f it se3 . About 65 guests were present last Sunday at the Mothers‘ Day breakâ€" fast given at.the Highland Park USO. An appetizing meal wes served by members"of the GSO and a commitâ€" tee of Service Mothers, under the di~ redlon of Mrs. J. O. Schmidiey.® > 1 Breakf ast Served On Mother‘s Day At Highland Parka{JSO ie fmowing TinRovet r. Wro ker, Mrs. David M. Suttle, Mrs. George H. Brown, Mrs. Irving N. Joseph and Mrs. George S. Lyman. 23. Other organizations individâ€" "k'khinuohbmyh:nm cbthiutothemtmof&efl“b- land ‘ Park USO â€" on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, May 24, 25 and 26, where it will be picked up and taken to the Evanston Church St. Station, packed in bales and sent on to Seattle. From there are journey to ships, ; on Monday and Tuesday, May 22 and _ «Sonay Tufts ~ "GOVERNMENT GIRL" wood as a sort of modern version of the Barbary coast of early Frisco fame, It‘s just a little town with big problems, trying its best, fumblingly sometimes, to solve them. * FRL & SAT. May 26, 27 Kay Kyger, Marilyn Maxwell® Things have happened in Highwood tbaubquldn':(hnhp:u,‘.m ably. they will happen again. Nevâ€" ertheless it is unfair to regard Highâ€" ‘mfifnflmhu-lh_lfl'“..m. \ itively rare necessity. No tavern town in the United States can be m«muumfi:‘u;.. number complaints : service~ mmlogh‘!hveboum (prfoodor&i-kot&h:ehg“ wise fleeced out of their money.. WMMtfith& wood.. It is true that the watchful ¢ye of the military is responsible for some of this virtue, but it has been made with the full approval and coâ€" operation of both the citizenry and Officilhpf’em P GLENCOE SUN., MON,, TUE., May 21, 2, 2 Olivia Deflnvsh-d 4 THU, FRL, SAT., May 18, 18, 3 John Wayne, Martha Scolt in : Highwoodâ€"has reduced | friction between celebrating soldiers and citâ€" izenry, to a remarkably low : point. m is rare., Disorderly conduct, 1 than that of the minor sort which will be found wherever anyone imbibes, is at at minimum. People do get drunk in Highwood as they do anywhere else where liquor is sold, but a combination of official tact \ Then his plaint is twoâ€"foldâ€"not g, ly that the Highwood first menâ€" ed in this piece gets no récogniâ€" tion, but that the better side of the â€" As a matter of fact, cooperation between military .and <civilian police * _8% fs Ab whileâ€"those in the middle intercede only in the occasional matter of a storm _ sewer, stréet â€" pa\ or some | like improveneat.'?,k goes along,trying to be as fair as he can to both sides and everything yeems fine until something happens that makes the public print in a big way . Then he wishes that he had never run for office. : 9P "OLD OKLAHOMA®* , THU,, “'“‘ "TRADE WINDS®" . SCIENTIST 5s to 5:30 pam. Park committee in Cl §

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