Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 6 Jun 1946, p. 7

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Johns, has been elected to the junâ€" jor business staff of the Ilio, Uniâ€" versity of Illinois yearbook. ELECTED TO . .. ILLIO STAFF Miss Lois Bolle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bolle of 626 S. St. day, June 1. Mrs. Straus is the former Betty Jo Baum, daughter of Mrs. L M. Baum of Chicago. The little boy, who has been named James Richard, weighed 9 pounds 5 ounces at birth. On Mor.day, May 27, a son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jorâ€" dan of 50 Waukegan road, Deerâ€" field, at the Highland Park hospiâ€" tal. > Mr. and Mrs. Otis C. House of 543 Central avenue became the parents of a son on Wednesday, May 29, at the Highland Park hosâ€" pital. A baby boy was born on Thursâ€" day, May 30, at the Highland Park hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nickelsen of County Line road, Deerfield. A daughter was born at the Highland Park hospital to Mr. and Mrs. George Frew of 980 Gréen became the parents of a second son on Friday, May 24, at the Miâ€" chael Reese hospital in Chicago. The Strauses, who reside in Glenâ€" coe, are also the parents of a 3%â€" yearâ€"old son, Melvin L. III Mr. and Mrs. Melvin L. Straus of 2315 S. Sheridan are the paternal grandâ€" parents. Mrs. Engberg is the former Mae Evans.. Her parents reside in Waukegan.‘ Mrs. Helen Engberg of the Michigan avenue address is the paternal grandmother. . The late Oscar Engberg is the grandâ€" father. The baby, who has been named Jary Louis, has a brother, Eric Jon, who will be five years old in Sepâ€" tember. 30, at the Highland Park hospital to Mr."and Mrs. Eric Engberg of 640 «Michigan avenue. CLASS OF 1946 â€"â€" Barbara Vyse, Richard Warner, Susan Weary, Chelsia Webster, Sally Wennberg, Loretta Werhane, Ned Wickersham, Robert Williams, â€"Winifred. Wolters, Ted Zabel, Primo Zanni, Paul Zeisler, PICTURES NOT TAKEN â€" John Cederborg, Roy ‘Clavey, Robert Crane, Tony DeSanto, Daniel Doherty, Charles Ebert, Mariâ€" lyn Gerken, Beverly Groesbeck, John Kidd, Joe Kilian, George Kuhns, Mary Livingston, Joseph Lucente, Robert Moran, Foster Parker, James 3uiu,mmmmrm.wm.xmnmm Daniel etter. CLASS OF 1946 â€" Fred Smith, Jerry Smith, Molly Smith, Robert Smith, Helen Sneeden, Carol Mmfli&flr , Diane Stathas, Bernâ€" ard Steacy, Irvin Stephens, Gladys , Ruth 'l'ennomnn,h;xd.lie Tether, Richard Thomson, Pauline Tillman, Robert Timm, Tom Charles Uchtman, John Udell, and Wallace Volwiler. Thursday, J Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Straus Jr. A son arrived on Thursday, May LOOK WHO‘S HERE! ne 6th. 194( removal of the northern Indiansâ€" those of the eastern states â€" of Iilinois, Indiana, and Ohio â€" to Foreman traces the history of the BUSINESS PHRASES IN SIX LANGUAGES compiled by Daâ€" gobert de Levie. ° This book can be used with ease by anyone wishing to write letâ€" ters in English, French, Dutch, German, Spanish or Russian. It contains 400 typical phrases used in business correspondence (inâ€" cluding single words and senâ€" tences). Each phrase is numbered identically in each language and also alphabetically indexed. All the phrases of each language are sepaâ€" rately grouped and organized in related sequence so that each of the six sections can be used for initial reference. SONNEL by Henry Beaumont. . The author gives an organized account of the most important contributions that psychology is making to the problem of dealing with employees. It describes the methods that have brought practiâ€" cal results for leading concerns in this country and stresses some of the reconversion problems of perâ€" somnel â€" such as disabled veterâ€" ans in industry, occupational adâ€" justments, women workers, music in industry and contributions made by the army training system. DIANS by Grant Foreman. Beginning with the first treaty made by our government with the Delaware Indians in 1778, Grant THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PERâ€" Following is a list of new books which may be found in the Highâ€" land Park public library: YOUR CHILD AND THE SUMâ€" MER CAMP by David E. Bergh. For parents who are considering the ‘advisability of sending a son or daughter to camp, this book should prove useful. It shows the many benefits to be derived from a summer camp experience nd‘ hwtheampopenultoprodm‘ these benefits. It gives the things to look for in choosing a suitable camp and a definite idea of fixed costs and extras as well as lists of equipment the camper will need. The book favors the summer camp idea but is objective as to the camps thgmselves. â€"It is the stanâ€" dard for making a wise selection. Jr., of New York, and her sister, Deborsh Binder. David Mikkelâ€" son will be his brother‘s best man. Minneapolis, after July 1 dent of Highland Park. Mary Kelsey Binder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Binder of Minneapolis, formerly of Highland Park will be married Saturday afâ€" terncon, June 8, at the Hennepin Avenue Methodist church to Mr. Vernon Edward Mikkelson Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Mikkelson of Minneapolis. Mr. Mikkelson is on terminal leave after three years‘ .Aun&.::dfivmhhr sisterâ€"inâ€"law, . Carvoll Binder Breakwell (Margaret Esmiz) of 1254 Burton avenue, will return home this week. # En route home from Florida, where they vacationed at Miami, Silver Springs, and Orlando, they visited with friends in Georgia. In Olhldo,fitymthegn;dao{ Mr. Robert Bray, a former resiâ€" Mr. Breakwell, who was recentâ€" ly released from the army, served for three years in the medical corps, two years of that time in MARY BINDER TO WED JUNE 8 will be performed by Dr. Richard After a month‘s vacation which started in the Ozark mountains in Missouri, Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. \ Word was recently received that Arthur Charles Allen, a resident of Highland Park for almost his entire life, passed away suddenly in Chicago on April 17. : ‘He lived for many years at 651 Glenview avenue, â€"and was a veteran of _ He is survived by his widow, Catherine, now living in Kenosha; a daughter, Mrs. Vivian E. Vineer; three sons, Leslie, Jack and Paul, and six grandchildren. Interment was made in Veterans cemetery, Chicago. Former Resident Taken By Death World War L the m-u’hee;lu-'mvw. tally our thinking, our society, our ter the gay affair, we fifteen ‘youngsters‘ formed a club called the ‘15 Club.‘ : Our organization lasted two years, until war clouds over Europe scattered us into the various branches of the service in 1916. 5 MEMBERS OF CLUB count emerges the agent who misâ€" himself and the world heâ€"lives in. It is full of surprises (both pleasâ€" ant and unpleasant), of immense managed Indian affairs; the mediâ€" cine man who called for the reâ€" turn of the Great Spirit to bury and smother the white man under the soil; the homeless Indians who panse of America to .Oklah6maâ€" an illustration of what happens when people are driven from their neighbors. : YOU AND THE UNIVERSE John J. O‘Neill. : casion was the Sherman hotel. Afâ€" "Beautiful day for a ball game," I began. "Yes, it is, at that,"" he agreed. "Reminds me of a day back in 1914 when a bunch of us young Chicagoans got toâ€" gether under a clear sky to visit }&.Mfidehflput(nh ‘ayfmq&cgint-hdin-ofto- day) and see the old Chicago White Stockings in action. ORIGIN OF "15" CLUB "Only a few days before, we fifâ€" committee and decided to give & benefit dinner for the charity of our Elks lodge. lttookphufilt‘ very same night, and after the ball _ Comfortably seated in the smokâ€" j_fiduflc_fi_h;-!i-m’dl- ing out of the Beeth street staâ€" tion, your columnist fished vainly in ‘his pockets for a bit of sulâ€" phur on a ‘ stick. _ The elderly, heavyâ€"set gentlieman sharing the seat, puffing away contentedly on a big black pipe noted the predicaâ€" ment and offered a pack of matchâ€" M&ghcit::..h.bih-npne;.- THE "15" CLUB (Interview with pioneer Highâ€" land Parker.) es. I thanked him, and, striking a It might be of interest to CORN ON THE COLUMN of By "KERNEL"® ALEX MacPHERSON THE PRESS avenue, for no room in the church for politics, and in a democratic system of govâ€" ernment there is no room in poliâ€" Continuing on these lines, the directors insisted that "there is If these systems are to survive, declared â€" the official spokesmen of the worldâ€"embracing Christian Science movement, they must "furnish proof that the ideals for which they stand can be made of practical use in advancing the cul. tural, economic and spiritual welâ€" fare of the race." "This is no time for them to reâ€" sort either to subterfuge or agâ€" gression as a means of extending the political influence of any wcrm' the statement This statement from the Direcâ€" tors was given before thousands of Christian Scientists attending the first peacetime annual meetâ€" ing in five years, many of whom came from countries long shut off from the world by war. They brought with them vital lessons from the troubled years just passed to emphasize the directors‘ contention that "the supreme duty of statesmen and churchmen at this crucial hour is to use every means at their command to preâ€" vent another world conflict and to bind up the unhealed wounds left by the last one." give something more convincing than promises, preachments, and paganistic pageantries to sustain the faith of their fellows, and to provide for a lasting peace. The time has come, the Direcâ€" tors affirmed, when representaâ€" tives of all social and religious systems are being called upon to _ Until all responsible governâ€" ment heads are made to realize that the measure of a nation‘s true greatness is the spiritual stature of its people, rather than its physiâ€" cal resources, there can be no end to the conflict between materially mental forcesâ€" that precipitated World War II, The Christian Sciâ€" ence Board of Directors told the Annual Meeting of The Mother Church, . The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Masâ€" sachusetts, today. First Church of Christ, Scientist, In Boston Kappas came over in a body for the weekâ€"end festivities. On Sunday, open housé was held from 3 to 5 at the chapter house in Urbana. _ Faculty members, who are Sigma Kappa members, or those whose wives are members, were present. The dean of womâ€" en and the assistant dean were in the receiving line. Matthewson and Jack O‘Conner," was the answer, Mrs. Earl M. Boretti of 2318 Lakeside PL, and Mrs. Sherman D. Clough of 2348 Lakeside PL, attended the 40th anniversary celâ€" :E:na!&tmhmmw'fiy ich was held last Saturday and Sunday of last week at the Uniâ€" versity of Illinois. Over 300 women from all parts of the country m the banâ€" quet-ndmm Mrs. Clough was in charge of the banâ€" quet on Saturday which was held at McKinley Foundation in Chamâ€" "And what is your name, Sir? Do you live in Highland Park?" "I‘m William W. Aiston, a Highâ€" land Parker from way back when," he replied, handing me his card. As Fats Waller wisely observed: "One never knows, does one?" The remaining members included FRANK BUCK of Bring ‘em Back Alive fame; the late White Sox president, CHARLES COMISKEY, the Old Roman; JONES, LINNICK & SHAEFFER, who were at that time managers of Woods, McVickâ€" ers and LaSalle theaters; ROBâ€" ERT CANTWELL, the famous criminal lawyer; BEN JEROME, musical composer of such hits as ‘Tea for Two‘; CHARLES WHITE, a wealthy south side banker; CY DEVRY, manager of Lincoln Park zoo and Hollywood zoo for years; HOWARD MATTHEWSON, fathâ€" er of Col. McCormick‘s wife, toâ€" day ; GEORGE â€"MATTHEWSON, western U. S. manager of Bromoâ€" Seltzer Co. of Baltimore; DICK CONDON, manager of the Corona Cigar Co. in Chicago; and JACK O‘CONNER, present day head of g‘gmthcoldbcn shoe stores in FHow many, besides yourself, _:ftb.hflflaenmlfilllifln’ , Sirt" put in. ATTENDED SIGMA KAPPA REUNION know who the members of Club 15 were." I nodded. "Well, the presâ€" ident of our group was ABE Russia, and that special peacetime correspondents have been assigned for the first time to the Far East and Middle East. ___Plans to document the: records of Christian Science wartime acâ€" tivities of the last conflict in a book to be published early in 1947 ing . fourâ€"color advertising «and fourâ€"color feature material, will be installed as part of the equipâ€" ment of the Monitor, possibly this fall, it was reported by the trusâ€" tees of The Christian Science Pubâ€" lishing Society. The trustees also disclosed that the Monitor‘s regular staff correâ€" concurring aid we shall succeed in&hispolifie‘lbuildiqgnom than ‘the builders of Babel; we shall be divided by our little, parâ€" tial local interests. . . . And what is worse, mankind may hereafter fnmthillmtognn&infim‘l.. by human wisdom and leave it to chance, war, and conquest." In the present unsettled ecoâ€" nomic and political picture, the Christian Scientists‘ official govâ€" erning body envisaged conditions fraughtâ€"with the same evil conseâ€" quences as in Franklin‘s day. And they assured the Annual ‘Meeting that "it is just as true now as it was then that without God‘s guidâ€" l‘neeandflulpixitunlnmrt‘o! gathering were the announcements that all major Christian Science periodicals, including The Chrisâ€" tian Science Monitor, attained new high cireulation peaks in the last year, that the volume of Monitor advertising established a new high record of some 20,000 regular conâ€" tributors, and that religious conâ€" Awareness of the basic national need for divine guidancé evoked a . profound statementâ€"from Benâ€" jamin Franklin during the heated Constitutional Convention in Philâ€" adelphia _ which the, directors cited as still appropos in today‘s the church, no government, either national or international, can sucâ€" with many foreign lands since the end of the war. "If those who are today enâ€" gaged in the grave task of building .wldmuntlor&ep-r- pose of establishing permanent uulnniva-lmon.nfi.!u‘l to turn to God for guidance and fail to make spiritual integrity the very foundational stone in their structures, they will have labored in vain." problems. _ Quoting the familiar Scriptural passage, "Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it," Franklin added:“lfirmlybelhvcthin:lnd tics for the church. There is, howâ€" dogmas or an open warfare beâ€" tween armed forces; the results the moral sense of religion." Applying that statement with equal force to national and interâ€" national affairs, the directors added: "It makes little difference whether it be a conflict between !-lifiuliloohciunduwo- 23 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD Other high lights of the annual Age 4 to 15. * Highwood and Ravinia. Cal H. P. 1731 for more inâ€" Vacation Bible School Highland Park, IM. Free to children of all churches HEY, KIDS! MISS OLSON ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF JUNE 16 TO 21â€" 9 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. HIGHLAND HOUSE Luncheons Dinners Every week day thereafter introducâ€" ‘States alone. In the field of relief, clothing valued conservatively at $4,250,â€" 000 has been shipped and distribâ€" uted irrespective of race or creed, nels in at least 13 foreign counâ€" tries, according to the report of the clerk of the Mother Church. In addition, over 550,000 handâ€" knitted garments were said to have been distributed among the armed forces. his entire time to Christian Sciâ€" ence activities, he was associated business in St. Paul, and with the Portland, Oregon, Railway, Light and Power company. He received instruction in the and authorized workers under British and Australian commands abroad. In the field of legislation, a number of provisions favorable to Christian Science were included in state laws, city ordinances and in administrative regulations durâ€" ing 1945, it was reported"by the treme alertness was the theme of this report in protecting "the conâ€" stitutional and God â€" given rights of Christian Scientists" against health and social legislation which would interfere with the practice of their religion. Announcement of the appointâ€" ment of Luther Phillips Cudworth, C. S. B., of Boston, as president of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Bosâ€" of the Christian Science Publishâ€" ing society, a director of Chrisâ€" naval prison, committee on publiâ€" cation for the state of Oregon, and and as First Reader of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Marshâ€" field, Mass. He is a native of Iowa, receivâ€" ing his early education in the pubâ€" lic schools of St. Paul, Minnesota, and later attending Harvard uniâ€" In Great Britain, 135 Christian Btiuc.rde.hn&rthhoo- were established, and 330 alâ€" moners were appointed to dispense relief, it was disclosed. Appointâ€" ment of nearly 500 volunteer warâ€" time workers, from United States armed forces, supplemented the 'ofk 0:.’.>olgichfil' ministers day by the Christian Science board of directors. versity and its college of business Normal class of the Board of Eduâ€" cation in 1934, and since that time Science annually. The vast scope of these activities was covered in another report, showing that 135 paid wartime ministers, 26 chaplains and 495 volunteer wartime workers were engaged at the peak of war activiâ€" ties in Canada and the United 11:30 to 2:00 5:30 to 8 :00

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