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Highland Park Press, 25 Apr 1946, p. 3

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A patient ox, so the fables run, Approaching his stall, when day Intent upon a wellâ€"earned feas But in his manger lay a beast With snapping eyes and vicious "Friend," said the ox, in haste to “lâ€"i.;‘;n’nnfin‘yhuh. No doubt you‘re tired as all creaâ€" But we can best this situation : If you move over a mite, I feel ° You still can rest â€" I‘ll have my Said the dog, with a twist of his cruel jaw: "Possession is nine points of the Now pull your freigh really get tough!" _ fwm ‘The ox, urged on by hunger‘s Approached, to face those vicious But I can‘t eat it â€" and neither Begrudging other what you can‘t ts ...." "The answer," snaried the dog, "is His great, brown, gentle eyes were Oh, how he wished that cur were He rightly judged that teeth like Could tear and rend his tender At last he hungrily turned away, With a backward glance at the lusâ€" Now I ask you â€" is there anything Or ornerier â€" than a dogâ€"inâ€"theâ€" High School Faculty For Next Year Thursday, April 25, 1946 the pelllfnnel of the Highland Park high school faculty for next year. Miss Margaret Appleton, registrar, has resigned, in order to accept a position in the Lake Forest city hall, and Miss Elizabeth Blaul, voâ€" cational guidance director, will asâ€" sume some of her duties, A new member will be engaged to check attendance. * Edward Burwell, who has been connected with the Navy school at Northwestern, will take over vocaâ€" tional guidance, which has been in charge of Vernon Heins, and Mr. Heins will have charge of student council which has been handled by Principal E. _A. Wolters for the Lester Kelly and Al Danakas, who filled positions in the physical education department, left vacant by the military servic«@ of Mark Panther and: George Grover, will now be replaced by the regular inâ€" structors, who have been released from the Navy. Lester Libakken has returned from duty in the Army and will replace Leslie Bishop in the history department. There is a vacancy in the new homemaking and nursery ‘departâ€" ment, and also one in the physical education department, left vacant by the resignation of Miss Drueâ€" shalla. Erwin Stuart, head of shop, has also announced his resâ€" ignation to take place next year. past 19 years. At Lincoln School On Tuesday, May 7, at 1:30, a card party and style show will be charge of the event. Children of theâ€"Liticoln school will act as models for a style show presented at the Lincoln sche Mrs. G. W. Ross Jr. and Mrs. shop. Dessert will be served. SI:‘Ld.Sm Saturday, April 27 Highiand Park Woman‘s club on Saturday, April 27. Dancing will begin at 9 o‘clock and couples are asked to come forâ€" "Sonny" Gray and his orchestra will provide the music. have no use for the scratchy The Swing club will have their Deeps and Shallows The Dirty Dawg! â€"HIGHLAND LASSIE. regard for hunger‘s on hay â€" it‘s will at the ises . . . yet it glided away silentâ€" ly, and oh, how swiftly, leaving beâ€" hind many . unfinished > duties, dumping them into the lap of toâ€" day. % Today: When the last stroke of midnight fades it begins its hasty flight toward eternity, slipping one second at a time toward its goal. Accepting the unfinished duties of yesterday, the allotment of time longer. Bringing with it hopes, or maybe disappointments . . . and yet . . . we wouldn‘t want to be without it Tomorrow: That promising toâ€" morrow . . . but no different from But . . . there is always tomorrow. Treeâ€"Mother, watching over me I love your care and constancy As courage waxes . . . wanes; The hours are slow, the .days are That I have heard you sing | _ To ‘tender newâ€"born leaves that To one who lies abed, Yet a refrain of haunting song Is floating round my head; It is your whispered lullaby Forgetting our own arrogance In bygone days, when scorn topped We marvel at the vehemence Of flaming youth‘s intolerence. To Navy Man â€" Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Einbecker, 325 Park avenue, Highland Park, announce the engagement of their daughter, Ensign ‘Margaret Einâ€" becker of the WAVEs, to Ensign Kenneth D. Soule, USNR, son of Mrs. Harrison D. Soule of Whitâ€" " « lo-n -I __ Mr. and Mrs. John L Udell, 102 Ensign Einbecker is stationed in the physical therapy departâ€" ment of the Naval hospital, Long terminal leave after four years in The wed will place Gladysâ€" Udell Is ". Sheridan, announce the marâ€" riage of their daughter, Gladys, to Mr. Harry Mooty, of Starke, Floriâ€" Of District 107 The wedding took place in the church in Gainesville, Fia., with Mr. and Mrs. Milton St. Peter of Gainesville, formerly of Highland Park, as attendants. ert as principal of Elm Place and nounced by the Board of Educaâ€" tion of district 107. Candidates Mr. Reichert, who came to Highâ€" hathlMl,'nfil*b principal for five years of Cumâ€" berland school at Whitefish Bay, At Lincoln Schanl n i. us l [ Wer CCHP 0, mP 7:80, the Physical Education deâ€" partment of Lineoln «chool, under the direction of Mr. Vineent Viesâ€" bicke, will present a program demâ€" onstrating typical class activitics given during the year in grades 3 "feceding the program the anâ€" l-lb*--uh-lhhl. d.vlhlh..-dfl-.h-: year will be elected. The retirine YÂ¥esterday: Chuck full of promâ€" Yesterday . . Today . . . Tomorâ€" Upon your breast each Spring! The resignation of E. C. Reichâ€" Yesterday, Today, Flaming Youth Treeâ€"Mother ‘Tomorrow â€"A.W.M. â€"A.C.O R.B.0. ‘Tommy Bartlett, "The Housewives‘ -ile-i-t'.t{;t‘:..‘byui grade; relays, grade; tumâ€" bling and stunts, by 5th grade; military tactics and marching, by 6th grade; volleyball by 7th grade, and square dancing by the 8th groups in terms of skills, demands upon strength and endurance, soâ€" cial adjustment and standards. Approximately 170 students will Jewish Women Plan event of the season of the North Shore committee, National Council of Jewish Women. _ Wednesday, May 8, is the date, and the place is ‘Country Fare, Dundee road at Skokie highway, Glencoe. . Lunchâ€" eon will be served at 12:30. Pinâ€"up Boy," currently heard over CBS and NBC radio networks, will select the winner of a glamorous original model of a real spring bonnet from Saks 5th Avenie. will be featured as the closing The program scheduled will be most entertaining and original. Fletcher Butler will <entertain during luncheon with pianc and song presented in his own inimitaâ€" ble manner. the prizeâ€"winning book,; "The Street," by Ann Petrie. This fine program merits good attendance and it is the hope of Mrs. . Milton Tigerman, North Shore chairman, and her commitâ€" tee, ‘that Council members and friends will join in making this a gala afternoon. "George and Margaret" Comedy Presented May 3 The Highland Park Community players will present the hilarious comedy, "George and Margaret," Reservations can be made thru Mrs. M. Rosenthal, 261 Vine aveâ€" nue, Highland Park. by Gerald Savory, on March 3 and 4 in Elm Place grammar school auditorium. â€" The production is beâ€" ing directed by Mr. Robert Hoffâ€" man, assisted by Rose Marks, and the stage manager is Joel Fox. (Members of the cast are as fol. In charge of tickets is Ben Bruce, assisted by Thora Hodge, Kay Kieding and Rose Marks. Thore Johnson is in charge of box office, and Dione McFailand of ushers. In charge of makeup are Dorothy Dunham and Roland Wirâ€" ty; costumes, Marian Hafner; scenery designing, Pat Burke and Kay Kieding, Flynn and Roâ€" land Wirtz; properties, Mrs. Wm. Stauffer, Ruthie Gould and Milâ€" dred Hendrickson. Miriam. Hafner, _ Vernon Fox, Ray Periman, Betty Willins, Dan Burke, _ Harold Schimmelpfeng, Margot Mower. Week‘s Activities of Highland Park USO, April 29 to May 5 Monday, April 29 C Dance instruction, â€" Mrs. Lucy Smith. Square dance, Dudley Dewey, caller. f *Favorite record" dance, played by Miss Mildred Walther. Juke box dance. Refreshments served by Musâ€" art club of Highland Park. sds "“"'lâ€"â€"' Dance given Miss Bétâ€" ty Hare in charge." _ Refreshments servevd by Mrs. Willard Dunham. . Sonny Gray‘s band. M-‘,’_‘ Java club served by theâ€"Mothâ€" ers‘ club of the YWCA, Mrs St. Johns in charge. Friday, May 3â€" , Saturday, May 4â€" Kentucky derby dance. Don Hickman‘s band. _ Refréshments served by Mrs. E. Sunday, May 5â€" Nereim‘s group. The program is planned to show ucsday, April 30â€" Juke box dance. . 5 Juke box dance. GSO meeting. Stunt night. contract bridge tourâ€" it. T HE PRESS Haven. ‘This baok, completed at the close of World ‘War II, gives the history and development of automatic arms.. It lists and describes all the military automatic arms â€" riâ€" fles, pistols, light and heavy r.aâ€" chine guns, submachine gurs, and the 40 mm. autematic cannon used Automatic Weapons of the World, by Melvin M. Johnson Jr., captain USMCR (inactive), and Charles T. Nations. This is a complete revisâ€" ion of the earlier book, Automatic Arms, by the same authors. . It has been expanded to nearly double the size and brought up to the minâ€" by both the Axis and the United Grounds for Living, edited by Richard B. Farnum and Van Wie Ingham, is for those of you who want to enjoy outdoor li,:\:g. It does not assume that you are faâ€" miliar with the Latin name of spinâ€" ach â€" in fact, it suspects that you do not know too much about horâ€" ticultural techniques and so does not hesitate to give simple direcâ€" tions about fundamentals and to include pertinent ilustrations. Inâ€" cluded are instructions for plantâ€" ings around your home, what trees to grow and how to care for them; the care of roses, chrysanthemums, and gladioli; vegetable gardening; and the construction of outdoor fireplaces, trellises and fences. It is a live and letâ€"live approach to outdoor living for those who enâ€" joy soaking up sunshine? * In this book, Mr. Meredith has brought to light more than one hundred and twenty of Brady‘s faâ€" mous ‘Civil War photographs that have never before been published. He has also reproduced almost two hundred of Brady‘s portrait phoâ€" graphs of famous men and women of the Civil War period and later â€"Lincoln, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Lee, Grant, Jenny Lind, Clara Barâ€" ton, Walt Whitman, P. T. Barnum, and many others. Brady was one Mr. â€" Lincoln‘s Camera Man, Mathew B. Brady, by Roy Medeâ€" of the pioneer photographers of‘ America. â€" He won many prizes for his work and became interna> tionally famous. During the Civil War he was the "official photcgraâ€" pher" of the Union army. For the general reader the book is a comâ€" plete pictorial and textual history of American life from the 1840‘s to the 1880‘s. It should be of especial interest to both amateur ‘n{l professional pFotographers. Twentieth Century Checkers, by Kenneth M. Grover and Tommie Wiswell, contains many exaimples of ‘hypermodcrn checkers, review, ed and elaborated upon by two of the outstanding American players of today. Mr. Wiswell is the world‘s No. 1 problemist and one of the top ten players in America. Mr. Grover .ranks No. 2 in the United States and has never been defeated in match play. For those who want to learn the ‘whys and wherefores‘ of modern scientific checkers this book is a must. The Saints That Moved The World, by Rene Fulopâ€"Miller, â€" is designed for modern readers. The author believes that human great. ness should be restated in a way that every reader, whether Protâ€" estant, Catholic, Jew, or even Agâ€" ‘nouie. can appreciate and enjoy. }'l'ln book consists of five parts, each one concerned vrimarily with one major saint. Rather than beâ€" ing five separate essays the book, taken together, emerges as a comâ€" posite picture of perfect humanity, as the life of each saint succeeded in perfecting one aspect of the Character of Christ: St. Anthony, the Saint of Renunciation; St. Auâ€" gustine, the Saint of Intellect; St. Francie, the Saint of Love; St. Igâ€" natius, the Saint of Wil Power; Y. W. C. A. C, Sunday, April 28â€" Thursday, May 2â€" x 12:30 p.m. Creative Writers picnic luncheon at the home of Mrs. Rowena Bennett," Warrensâ€" U. $ VICTORY BONDS New books for circulation 7:80 pm. Art class. Call the Y forâ€"directions. C_:l.p.l. Friendship club potâ€" THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM Maintained by First Church of Christ, Scientist Saint Theresa, the Saint of A place for quist and study, where the Bible, -‘mmâ€"yh read, borrowed, or purchased & Hours: 43 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD Week Days Highland Park, Minois mittee that the Sanitary district stretches from the Cook county line north to the Wiscorsin State line, and inland for a distance of 2% to 3 miles. It therefore covâ€" ers the lake front but does not service the western sections of the county. t « ‘The district is governed by a board of five men appointed by the Lake county judge. The only purpose of the Sanitary district is to provide proper sewage disposal for the area. Each municipality must deliver its ‘sewage to the plants, of which there are 12 in gcnfion. the largest being . in aukegan. _ The municipalities must build and repair the sewers. Lay Health Committee The duty of the Sanitary district in Lake county was explained by Mrs. V. Wm. Briddle at a meeting of the lay health committee of the League of Women Voters, held April 2, at 290 Marshman road in ‘Those sections, as in some westâ€" ern parts of Highland Park, where sewers are not installed, are not serviced by the Sanitary district Information regarding sewage disâ€" posal in these sections will be givâ€" en at a laterâ€" meeting. Highland Park. The state, under the division of sanitary engincering, of the State must, according to law, supervise plans for construction of all pubâ€" lic sewage disposa} plants. . It also invites all builders of septic tanks to get advice concerning their proper construction. Department of Public Health, Sanitarian, Mr. Philbin, at Dist. No. 2, Woodstock, was recently in vited to inspect a septic tank at a rural school in our health district, because 36 of the 38 children in atâ€" tendance were ill with an intestinal infection. He found . that the school sewage, instead of finding its way to the septic tank, was leaking directly into the school waâ€" ter supply. Information regarding this servâ€" ice.can be secured by addressing the State Board of Health, Divisâ€" ion â€" of â€" Sanitary Engineering, Springfield, or your own district health office at Woodstock. _ ~. Mrs. Clarence Balke, of ‘ the county board of supervisors, exâ€" plained the Mosquito Abatement district. This district is also govâ€" erned by a board appointed by the county judge. About $8,900 is appropriated annually by . the board for its operations, which beâ€" gin with the first warm weather and continue throughout the sumâ€" mer. â€" The work is a temporary exâ€" pedient and consists of an ciling process used in mosquito breeding places. Very little can ‘be spent under the present budget for drainâ€" age, which when undertaken on a more ambitious scale, will yvield a longer time control. 1 Mrs. Balke‘s talk on the county hospital will be given at the meetâ€" ing in the fall. s s ‘There will be no other meeting of the committee during April. The trip to inspect the sanitary disposal plant has been postponed â€" until further announcement. The next meeting will be on May 14 at 1:15, at 290 Marshman road, Highland. Park. 4410 Railway Ave. _ M‘wood 2426 QUALITY ALWAYS ; Fresh Poultry â€" Meats â€" Fish Vegetables â€" Monarch Finer Foods We Deliver « Mrs. Briddle informed the comâ€" 9:80 am to 5:80 pm 9:80 am to 9:00 pm £:80 pm to 520 pm RELIABLE LAUNDRY AND DBY CLEANNG co. / Phone H. P. 178 Two years ago the Eichlers celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. _ Her husband is a carpenter in Highland Park. Mrs. Eichler was a charter member of the Redeemer Lutheran church and an active member of the Reâ€" deemer Guild society. :oi She was born in Germany and came to this country in 1872 with® her late parents, Mir. and Mrs. Henry Ohlwein. They lived in Chicago until moving to Highâ€" land Park in 1886. Her father had a milk business in Highland death. Rites Tuesday for Mrs. Edward Eichler Mrs. Edward J. Eichler, 75, of 241 North Second, Highland Park, died last night in the Wighland Park hospital after a long illness. She was a wellâ€"known resident of this city. Funeral services will be held toâ€" day (Thursday) at 2 p.m. at the Redeemer Lutheran â€" church with the Rev. H. K. Platzer officiating. Burial wil} be in the Northshore Garden â€" of ~â€"Memories cemetery. Besides her husband, Mrs. Eichâ€" ler is survived by two sons, Harry E., and Leonard M.; one sister, Anâ€" na Ohlwein, and one grandchild, all of Highland Park. Two brothâ€" ers and a sister preceded â€"her in "North Shore‘s GLENCOE THEATRE _ 630 Vernon Ave. * Highland Park 605 FRIL & SAT., Apr. Joel McCrea, Maurcen O‘Hara For a Courteous Routeman Kiddie Show Sat. Morn. Apr. 27 Open 9:30 a.m. Show starts 10. 15 color cartoons, all tickets 25¢ SUN., MON., TUE. Apr. 28â€"30 Alice Faye, Dana Andrews â€" WED.to SAT. .. May 1 to 4 Noel Coward‘s ~ maid," "Doll Face," "A Walk in the Sun," "Spiral Staircase," "Sanâ€" Antonio." Coming: ‘"Dairy of a,Chamberâ€" ALCYON _ CLEANERS Most Modern "FALLEN ANGEL" "BUFFALO BILL" Rex Harrison Constance Cummings Attentive Cleaners Highland Park Service 125 Page 3

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