a "Ih ta + A bert Souther, having comâ€" ple preâ€"flight training â€" at Sant#i A Calif., is now taking a 10â€" course in primary flight at , Calif., geronautical acadâ€" emy. mong his â€" instructors is a I. Bong, famed for his of 27 Jap planes downed. abl | Italy. He is now with an lengineering battalion in and St. rence Leuer, daughter of Mrs. Leuer, 587 Homewood Ave. become a member of tke WA . Miss Leuer is a young wo training and experience, recei . her education atâ€" Northâ€" . University and University of igan, and pas several yeays of wiment work to her credit. She report on August 24 *%o Hunth$ college, New York City, to € r tiaining. £% L eil J. Nichols is now wearâ€" ing gilver wings of the Army air forcdibhaving graduated. from: the flexiMi®k gunnery school in Harlinâ€" gon, He is the son of ‘i and C. B. Nichols, 1000 Wad -v_. . Ra is in %04 ith an mth'ï¬m unit. (Me has been 0 for four Sir," 1 snapped, in answer to fongk: _ ; > £ °. . > / ‘you ever had any line exâ€" peri * Have you ever bawled the livi ylights out of someone?" he getting madder by the secâ€" he TAlby surprise, he got up! f hen he stood up straight, he over this corporal. The guy was eet four inches.: And I‘m abo ie Pyle‘s size. °N ? 1 thought. ' The _ was watching . . . I $Minced over my shoulder. lbml was watching me. Militaryâ€"like, I explained to the tal 1 ;. that he: shouldn‘t lie do n the job when he was supâ€" p b be working. (As if he didn® know that!) f , under â€" no circumstances, should he lie down right in front of post Mipadquarters â€" and the genâ€" HigWand Parker? colo Ta James II of Scotland g | the: ball: around with one of in that year. f *ve been trying to lick the 3 Â¥ 38 has two soldier sons in ipean area: S/Sgt. John, \since Dec. 7, 194%, took lt‘olln‘dmatéAkfg, 8iâ€" tened, sleepyâ€"eyed. ‘ 4 my breath I told him the yot right to work. walked away, relieved. â€" year ago, he has been staâ€" ‘until â€"recently at . Great i else, I‘ve received complete, <physical exâ€" from this Army. i when I enlisted. one when I arrived at Fort Sir." , you will} now. See that ing out there in front of rters building* He‘s not i to be there, is he?" v , go out there and tell him ake him stand, come to atâ€" and then tell him off!" > Sit," Â¥% said, leaving, a bit iiud to add "please‘".â€"but ot military enough, you Bbe Cronkite, Central Ave., i ‘I got one when I left &d.n three days later. / examined hours later when \at my new headquarters in ‘The Nation‘s Service Ao the soldier. â€" s just about asleep. ‘ p," I yelled, in my toughâ€" of these 487 years, / . your game ‘this summer, m. Lorimer, USMC, is now at Camp Lajeune, New C. Returning from overâ€" knpow when the first golf rawa and Saipan, is obâ€" , USMC, a twin brother, the campaigns of Guadâ€" 1457, the historians reâ€" Field, AAF Training Te SikP! * . ~ * _ (Special to the Highland Park Press) ol 08 it L d l f s oion Re e mt a e meiels fg. d mplastt l‘M IN THE #98)4, y Chicago. And‘ : I was transâ€" ferred to the Air: a short time later, I got another one. i Al‘ some more:. . t $2.4 When I arrived at the Stevens hotel, they gave another reâ€" ch’rct. f y hen I requeste erseas duty. ‘ (That : was m ago.) * And I got another physical,. _ | Then I applied f9r officer‘s canâ€" didate school and, yep, I took anâ€" other physical exam, After I pasgsed the OCS board 13 months ago, I the OCS board 13 took another, this â€" cepted candidate. hdthyho..j Then I left the had a physical exan wood. 'Pvt.‘Wil?iam Bjotk, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Bjerk, 242 Sard, Hizhwood,‘ï¬s . rece his basi¢ training in infantry| t Camp Croft, $. Carolina. | * £. There are three‘!|lieutenants in the Hérbert R. Smith family, 614 8. Linden. Lt. Louis¢} Marine corps women‘s reserve, in town reâ€" cently for a brief vigit. She is staâ€" tioned at Camp Lajgune, N.C. Her husband, Johnâ€" es â€"Phillips, OCS, is stationed New Orleans, Lt. Alan R. Smith, USN, is staâ€" tioned at the . .. naval . base. Lt. Denton Smith, U. S. army, sigâ€" nal corps, is ¢d in the South Pacific area. He is veteran of 15 months‘ service in England. turned to the army airfield base at Muskogee, Qkla., r a short visit to his wife and ts, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. , 180 Homeâ€" at Bruning, Nebr., 1 ie dond goag s Pnsd ty | rpoi on ; Abai passed all of ‘em. | When L arrived at Chanute Field, I had another. ,beimh:n & week or so, I took . This was a ncuhtmrhdic kup for all OCS candidates. ey give us a physical ovï¬ry req months to see if we‘re in shape to be officers, And I am. | I‘ve had fourt OCS physicals already. I‘m expectantly waiting my : Sgt. Elmer Bert gunner on a Bâ€"24 tioned at an wir ha Narchie meem.Le'u Railway Highwood, clerk in the Army field Since I‘ve been at this post, I‘ve had almost a dozenphysicals. The doc:ars tell ime I‘m in good shape. And that‘ p me. ; _: They surely look this Army. a After I‘ve helped clean the laâ€" trines and barracks, and I‘ve taken physical training, tten several inches of copy for camp newspaâ€" per, and inte a colonel just back from France, 1 get to wonderâ€" ing about us Americans. â€" « Pvt. Al Bertucci, Rusband of Mrs. Alfred Bartuccl, 84 Highwood, who is stationed Camp Croft, 8. C., is recovering an operaâ€" tion at the, post héspital | Their parents are Mr. ahnd Mrs. A. Berâ€" tucei, 345| Highwood Ave:, Highâ€" yeoman on convey thip in the Paâ€" cific area. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nereim, 247 Céntral We ipon;d much smore time going to church |during lifetime than we do murdering, let‘s say. :/. But . . . have ypu ever seen a sermon quoted in full on page 1 of of any daily n e :. + o. / ::| 3 ; But you‘ve seen a murder story spread all over page 1, haven‘t you? And then there‘js baseball and 'Arsleeptzyod negro came along and sat down before a classification glerks * ~} ;. > $ & space in t go before a c thtion board the other day to de e if they were doing duties co te : with their ‘ training in and out of the "What is your pt*ent,duty,†the soldierâ€"clerk asked. | â€" Wondering| . . In a lifetime I‘m ¢ertain we spend more â€" time singing!; than playing the eoloro(! lad ro;“ed Â¥ Some of the soldiers here had to Apye. sband, Johnâ€" Charles Phillips, °8, is stationed in New Orleans, s I Lt. Alan R. Smith, USN, is staâ€" med at the . on. naval â€" base. . Denton Smith, U. S. army, sigâ€" 1 corps, is ¢d in the South cific area. He is veteran of months‘ oerd;c England. _ weme » Sgt. Donald M has ‘reâ€" med to the army base at his wife and p: Mr. and s. J. E. : , 180 Homeâ€" Nod.«"> * 224 1. g Robert Nereim, y% 2/e USN, serving at pnmun: e/:M’l But what â€" "Well, it‘s going! on sick call," Whik alcte i ayant 470 ted k. to be officer ougt OCS ph ctantly wait n at this pos en physicals ll ime I‘m i P me. ok | us : + q‘ ;# fl £" 4 o veng . tzi, 19, turret mber, is staâ€" lieutenants in family, 614 8. Marine corps in town reâ€" it. . She is staâ€" une, N.C. Her e in. England. usband of Mrs. 34 Highwood, ; : Camp Croft, the Lord, I‘ve ter us well in p ‘;Z;' xiy% Brow? T s Py 1/¢, ‘]USN, son .of the R. § ; | Belle, is stationed ai . | where he is receiving ‘las a radio t:‘micilm USN, is u.vg’ mut coast for sea | duty. Cpl. Betty. ~ ‘Pyt. Howard W. W aircraft unit at Cn:fl is spending a furlo ents, Mr. and Mrs.: 834 So. Linden. Mrs. Florence Mrs. â€"Alvin J,bhnnoir serving in the armed widely differe Pfc. Harold, :Iech-:i corps, stationed for on a half in New Mexido, attend school again Louisiana. ] | Goi'don, now 3l,t Fortress, has been cific area since Nov. 1 Pfe. Arnold, of th+ try, is now. miom Landing after ay, successful in upturim my fort. i f] | Aviation electrician rating of John S. Davi completed the secon Navy training at Ja¢ This 18â€"yearâ€"old just basic training at F His brother, Bill, 22, Seabees, 19 months cific, is the husbani Hendrickson and fa aged one year, wh seen. The two %oy- i and Mrs. Wm. C. Da Ave., Highwood.‘ Fred Schlabowske, 3/c, USN, speht a week at his home at B?b.rt s: g“!dl. The three Johnson from Th SQflHmbum‘pnboflod 1 onion sliced 1 tsp. sale 2 cups stewed § _ _~ 1 Ib. sausage meat *up.peppc l‘mm | 1 thsp. shortening . 3 thsps. bread crumbs M-â€";’;j:wmfluhsudm;ï¬ghdyinidmaï¬Ã©lw shortening. Place layer of limla beans and tomatoes (which have been mixed together and seasoned with saltand pepper ) in a greased casserole, add slices of pepper, onion and a layer of sausage cakes, Repeat this sequence until casserole ms,;:m.ï¬.mmwm.m.mmmmv If necessary, scale the steaks. Remove â€"any small bones in the tapeting ends of “mmtum&ï¬uh:pmmï¬ï¬ï¬ platter ( b.:i'n. n Y a0 , & for 20 min., or until the fish close to the center bone flakes easily, but is still ALSO PRIPAREI THI FoLLOWiNG satice: | 8 ‘ Melt 2 theps, in a sancepan; stir in flour, sait, and ‘....""& h, white stiting commidy, anil smoods and m"""" to low heat for 2 mmww" 3ur in Eayonnthe snd Temon jaice, and serve at once. fish is done, remove; arrange the hot rice, to which 34 c. butrer Jn front. Pour sauce over top of steaks. Serves 4A to 6. > ~\‘ * | LIC r y K €¥# PUBLI (about 1 6 theps. bu 1%4 shaps. %, tsp. salt 3 1â€"1b. sailn 54 cups hy Axy. ‘New Recruits" for tasty St ic servite #/omtemaketa‘ ‘ | _ helps you solve wartime meal problems / SALMON RICE PLATTER â€"° _ _ steaks (1%4"thick) . | _ 1 cup milk : cooked white rice xou,b?nn f cups uncooked) 1 cup mayonnaise or margarine ~ _1 to 114 thsp. lemon juice f {00 //\ M cup minced parsiey of of Florence r of Skipper, he has never e sons of Mr. , 881 Euclid s mate will be when he has phase of his nville,‘ Fla, completed his t, Idaho, PO3/c, of the gunner‘s mate ew days last lelllil-n 1/ C, Brands, 217 Great Lakes, c training c ‘in the cAir er a year and plans soon to at a base in _ the So. Paâ€" 5, 1942. 4 Army infanâ€" 1 in France. his outfit was : a whole eneâ€" 597 Vine, forces, are in of the world. acquaintance ‘[ James Kilâ€" signal corps. 1, of an antiâ€" boys, sons of with his parâ€" loward Will, , on a Flying iPÂ¥ TANGY LIMA CASSEROLE 640 Homeâ€" Wt e ts . Th l with ‘the |driving of automobiles, enâ€" gaged tl e attention of Parkers |â€" some of them â€" week.. Residents were critical of the driving of Highland Park.cab drivâ€" ers in particular, and residents of Crofton Ave. were unfavorably imâ€" pressed with driving in general as practiced on their street. . For w critics, the cabbies had a s argument. Conceding that some of their number may vio> late, !roTn time to time, ‘ciï¬_p‘r speed or stop sign regulations . (usually, they say, at the urgent behest of their passengers) they, pointed to the fact that while their cabs cover somewhere in the neighborhood of 2,000 miles a day in and about Highland Park, 10 cabs, averaging 200 miles each, accidents, even mi# nor ones, involving taxis are a rarâ€" ity. :/.\ y : ‘They say that it is easy enough for.thor‘poduwb};n’_toz stand . and watch a cab go by and estimate his speed at 15 to 80. miles over what it actually is,: or to note that the cab didn‘t come to a complete standâ€" still before pro¢eeding through a t t ir chips t n, but they put the hi s :?-pt:ï¬ihï¬sï¬cp. They ma wrong, but t argument sounds reasonable. .. â€" & Crofton Ave. residents were not particularly satisfied with the poâ€" lice service their short street has been getting. R’,&pd against their dissatisfaction is the fact that Highâ€" land Park has mtny many miles of streets and not enough officers to station ‘one at all ‘hours on all through streets, to say nothing of the short ones. i +They mightâ€" find one answer to Tâ€"5 Edgar Bortolotti, 184 North Ave., Highwood, has returned to Camp Livingston, La., after a furâ€" lough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Bortolotti. wood, en route to the west coast. CE comrany or NORTHERN ILI hor ie w their complaint in & in Deere Park, t ts, faced with a similar m, | theirâ€" own watchman. 8 | Of course they are entitled to city poli¢ gervâ€" officers, even if th ble in a town which as heavily to the: : CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST §ee, Saturdays ofl‘:w .u-lx‘a‘.:b §$:30 pam. where tht Bibl@es flmm s of Mary Baker Eddy L myi:nge d, borrowed, or purchased CcOUNTRY CLUB formerly a private club Now daily } 4 Deerfleld, 1 ‘ : /. + Chicago P$Wh_ hall 6530 or Deerfield 595 cnum*lir GOLF AT ITS BESsT I j BRIERGATE |â€" Play Golfars! Authorized "Coming Attraction" in your postâ€" warlkitchen . . . a timeâ€"saving > : m’qdoml: range o One of thes your dreams of a cool, time schifdu q"hmvuxuw â€"yesr affer year the cost of your modern new range will be gleasi ‘i;v&mï¬â€˜m iog"â€"you‘ll\want one of these modern ranges YOU ABE CORDIALLY INVITED To USE THE ".v‘p qy * t“t.‘.‘:."f.‘ ' fo INOIS A K 39 PR of wm“wdthnh- er residents of Lake county , (at least not engaging any unwelcome attention) was the operation of the gambling joint, which flied Highâ€" wood when the heat got hot, for the presumapbly cooler elhwu prevailâ€" ing west of Deerfield. Well, as lqong as everyone is satisfied , . . . i 4Â¥3 *â€"_â€" Thursday, July 27, 1944 Fuc <x uks s oi s, flggï¬i'ï¬ %\ 4 you will like bese dis A+ dJ NesP ioh ki s T t r uit w