Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 4 Jul 1946, p. 6

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To travel, and a vast similitude Coupletâ€"Sonnet A new_born thought that TftS its Thursday, July 4th, 1946 ‘They live or die infinitely alone; O, thoughts of mine! what tensely troubled things C To loose upon the world with wayâ€" thoughts that share . ‘The vast dimensions of our time How shall Iâ€"send you forth, that That you may hold your own â€" _ _ or lead the race? _ Usually I make several pilgrimâ€" ages during the week to the end of our street, which is about half a mile long. There is always someâ€" thing new for me in the rare and beautiful coloring and formation of these California blooms. Some of them are one inch in diameter and composed of hundreds of tiny ently surveyor stakes driven in along the curbing. That meant ;n_tlo: I-tmevidmtuuttheu would be several new houses going up, and what a grand time I was going to brook, served the bridegroom as best man, and Ralph Wagner and Howard Borchardt ushered, A dinner at the Orrington hotel families and brida} party followed the wedding. Two hundred and fifâ€" ty guests attended the reception that evening at the Masonic temâ€" After a southern honeymoon, the young couple will reside in Meier is stationed. _ Hehas been in the service for 3% years and expects to be released in January. Outâ€"ofâ€"town guests besides the bridegroom‘s parents and sister of A. Guhl, John Guhl, and Mr. and Mrs. Phil Elberg, relatives of the bridegroom from St. Charles, I1L., and Miss Ida Brum of Chicago. CONSIDER LOCAL MAN FOR ISLAND GOVERNOR hui, Aisatatce s Ailfoch i css â€"â€" Pb ahcsizea Winchel} announced on his radio program over WENR that George K. Bowden of 95 Ravinia Ct. is the favorite of those being considered for the governorship of Puerto One day I saw what were apparâ€" William Scindleber Jr. of Northâ€" Tne CLUB LORRAINE 346 Waukegan Avenue Deeps and Shallows My Lord‘s Candles The Finest Food in Town ;‘e â€"m" hing\them beâ€" Barâ€"Bâ€"Cue Ribs Our Specialty . Draft Beer at All Times CHICKEN AND STEAK DINNERS DINNER RESERVATIONS TAKEN Present for Your Enjoyment Fish Fry Every Friday Night SERVED BY GINO BELLEI A.W.M. TEL H. P. 5454 were interested in thistle bloom and wild oats, neither of which had any attraction for me, I waslookâ€" ing at the other side of the canâ€" yon where there were more surveyâ€" or‘s stakes higher than the ones I had first seen,. I mentaily gave the surveyor credit for good sense, since it would be much easier to see them over the tops of the unâ€" derbrush than to have to cut a path from ‘one to the other. ing built! I said nothing to the others, for Ihave often been called too practiâ€" cal. Secretly, I was making great plans about how I would watch evâ€" ery building go up and get first hand information as to how build« ing was done in California. On my next trip to the end of the street I went alone. To my amazement, I saw that the surâ€" veyor‘s stakes on the other side of they looked as though they had been painted white. I went back to the house for my field glasses. It was then I discovered that the stakes were really yucca blooms. Yuceas grow from 8 to 12 feet tall, and the upper three feet are m mass of bloom. They are proâ€" tected by law. It‘s fine and imâ€" prisonment for anyone caught picking the bloom or digging the Last week a horse and buggy were seen driving down Central avenue. T es ‘On Sunday, June 30, Miss Mary Catherineâ€"Fink, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fink of 637 W. Park avenue, and Morris F. Hagâ€" ermman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Willis of St. Louis, Mo., were unitâ€" ed in marriage in the rectory of Immaculate Conception church.at 4 o‘clock, . The Rev. Edmund Skoâ€" ner read the service. name : Bruce Johnson, Colleen Kelly, Frederick and Susie Martin and Patty and Kathie McHugh were the party guests on Sunday afternoon of Lynn Carey, daughter of the Walter J. Caréys of 1335 Broadâ€" view avenue. Frederick and Susie are cousins of Lynn‘s from Evansâ€" ton. _ The occasion was Lynn‘s fifth birthday. : MARY FINK MARRIED BIRTHDAY PARTY her in marriage, wore a white dress with chiffon bodice, made with a sweetheart neckline, and full net skirt. Her fingertip veil hung from a crown of seed pearis. She carried a bouquet of white Miss Rosemary Berube, maid of honor, wore a dress similar to the bride‘s, in blue, and carried a casâ€" cade of pink roses. Angelo Caraffi of St. Louis served the bride as best man. ; A few days later I had company They are â€"called "My Lord‘s Peep Sights Isn‘t Bob Turelli R.B.0. MONTICELLO GRADUATE The bride‘s mother wore a dress of yellow print crepe ‘and the bridegroom‘s mother chose a dress of yellow flowered crepe. Both wore corsages of white carnations. The bride‘s grandmother, Mrs. Joé Broddard, wore a pink print dress. merly a sergeant in the marine corps, served for 4 ~years, 3 years of that time everseas, A reception at the Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest, followed. About T5 guests were present, After a honeymoon at the Edgeâ€" water beach hotel in Chicago, Mr. Hagerman and his bride will be at home at 637 Park. pictures of the graduationâ€" and class day exercises at Monticello junior college. Jean Easton was a member of the graduation group. Her parents, the J. Mills Eastons, And sisters, Joan and Judy, and brother, Jack, attended the comâ€" mencement exercises on June 7. The Easton home is at 1320 Judâ€" son avenue. Neetz of 207 Knight avenue, Park Ridge, and Louis John Soefker, son of Mr. and Mrs, Louis H. Soefâ€" ker of 2601 County Line road, on Saturday evening, June 29. The Rev. Siemonson read the service before an altar banked with white flowers. _ â€" AT DE PAUW SUMMER SESSION Enrolled in the summer session at DePauw university is George C. Bichler, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Bichler of 208 Elmwood drive. LOUIS SOEFKER TAKE SA BRIDE St. Andrews Lutheran church in Park Ridge was the scene of the wedding of Miss Bernice Neetz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dressed in white, with a long train and veil, and carrying a bridâ€" ‘al bouquet of white gladioli and stephanotis, the bride was given in marriage by her father. The bride‘s mother was in pale blue print and her corsage was of pink carnations, The mother of the bridegroom wore aqua and her corsage was also of pale pink carâ€" The matron of honor, Mrs. Herâ€" bert Mollenkemp, sister of the bride, wore light green and carâ€" ried a colonial bouquet of gladioli. The bridesmaids were in dresses of peach and pale orchid, net over brocaded silk. They carried fanâ€" shaped bouquets of gladioli. Ray Wildenhagen of Half Day served as best man, and Eldon Soefker, the bridegroom‘s brother, and Robert Neetz, brother of the in Park Ridge. s After a two weeks‘ honeymoon in northern Wisconsin, the young couple will be at home at 2601 County Line road. ATTENDED s GIRLS STATE Nancy Waggett, a Highland Park high school student, daughter of the F. G. Waggets of 325 Marshâ€" man avenue, was the first repreâ€" sentative ever sent by the Highâ€" land Park D. A. R. to Girls State at MacMurray college in Jacksonâ€" ville, IIl. Nancy will be next year‘s president of the C. A. R. A reception was held following the ceremony at the Field House The American Legion sent Theo Zaeske, daughter of the Herman Zmeskes of 714 Ridgewood drive and Betsy O‘Neill was sent as the representative chosen by the Deerâ€" field American Legion. system is actually worked out by the girls and boys. ___Among the three hundred girls who attended this year from the Chicago area, three of that numâ€" ber were sent by the Daughters of the American Revolution. _ On Monday, Governor Green gave a reception from 4 to 5 p.m. for the young people. _ , Selected high school students of Illinois gather each year under the sponsorship of Illinois departâ€" ments of the American Legion auxiliary at Girls and Boys States. The purpose is learning city, counâ€" ty, and state governrmient through In FEATHER CUT 365 Central Ave. Aleyon Theatre Bldg. with a threeâ€"inch B E °C O 0 L for the Summer Te. H. P. 415 . T HE C VACATIONING ALJCE DORICK WEDS * The Rev. James Gleeson heard the exchange of nuptial vows on Saturday, June 29, at 10:30 a.m. when Alice Louise Dorick became the bride of James Neil Doyle at St. James church. The bride is the daughter of the William Dorâ€" Mrs. M. Reuter of 1331 S. Green Bay road is in Rhinelander, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Anschuets of 1852 Broadview avenue are at Elk Lake, Mich., for a three weeks‘ icks of 331 North avenue and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. W. E. Doyle of Galesburg, HI. white PRESS bride of William McKanna at St. James church. Her bouquet was of white orchids and stephanotis, liam P. McKanna, sister of the bride, and another sister, Betty, atâ€" tended as junior bridesmaid. The girls were in white dresses made exactly like, and they carried colâ€" onial bouquets of American Beauâ€" William M. McKenna served as best man, and the ushers were Wilâ€" liam Doyle, brother of the brideâ€" The bride‘s mother chose a light blue crepe dress, complemented by a pink flowered hat and gloves and a corsage of white carnations. The mother of the bridegroom was in black and her corsage was also of white carnations. groom, Lt. Willis Terry III, and John Terry of Galesburg. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice De Bona of 1331 S. Green Bay road spent five days in Kansas City, Mo., visâ€" iting with their son, Maurice Jr., who is stationed in Olathe, Kans., at the naval air base there. A breakfast was held at the Deerpath Inn in Lake Forest for the bridal party and the immediate families, and in the afternoon a reception was held there. Seventyâ€" five guests attended. Mr. Doyle and his bride are on a honeymoon in northern Wisconâ€" BACK Back from a visit to Clarkville, Tenn., are Mr. and Mrs. John C. Fay of 700 Central. They were the guests of Mrs. Fay‘s brotherâ€"inâ€" law and sister, Sgt. and Mrs. Fred Maurice, a dental technician, exâ€" pects to be out of the service in the next few months. On Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Robâ€" ert Cobb of 520 Glencoe avenue returned home from a 5â€"day stay at Mackinac Island. Back home after a two months visit with her sonâ€"inâ€"law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Maleâ€" don of Norman, Okla., is Mrs. Barâ€" bara Sullivan of North First St. © ATTENDANT AT bridesmaid on Saturday afternoon at the Kenosha Episcopal church when her cousin, Miss Erminie Ann Stripe became the bride of convention which was held in Swampscott, Mass., last week. of Glencoe, became the bride of Miss Jean Easton, daughter Mr. and Mrs. J. Mills Easton On Tuesday, Miss Joan Holt and Miss Jane Straub returned home after attending the Pi Phi sorority ing an illusion veil with a seed pearl crown, and carrying a prayer Miss Frances Heckendorf, nitce of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Heckendorf 1320 Judson avenue, attended David Eaton of Chelsea, Mich. ATTENDED CONVENTION Diamonds Reset in Modern Rings Jeweler & Optician 392 Central Ave. H. P. 630 410 Railway Ave. H‘woed 2428 Vegetables â€" Monarch Finer Poods The bride‘s father gave her in Matron of honor was Mrs. Wilâ€" Fine Watch and Jewelry Gowned in white satin and wearâ€" her QUALITY ALWAYS L H. Nemeroff We Deliver of of As it does every year, the Fourth of July is rolling around to provide who made the U. S. what it is toâ€" day, this column is patriotically PIONEERS FOR DEMOCRACY year we have more reason to celeâ€" brate than at any time in our Naâ€" those important few trailâ€"blazers The greatest pioneer spirit of any which concerns us as free Amâ€" ericans was that of an inspired group of American colonists who brought forth our Nation in the year 1787. It was on that starâ€" spangled date that the government of the people, by the people and for the people was made certain andâ€" enduring. Among the outstanding figures who were the pioneers of our deâ€" mocracy, we may recall such perâ€" sonalities as Richard Henry Lee, Thomas _ Jefferson, _ Benjamin Franklin, Patrick Henry, and Naâ€" than Hale. These men, as but a sample . number of many Ameriâ€" cans striving to live as no other people had lived in the history of modern civilization, were pioneers in their field more than any group in other fields, Their very lives depended upon the final result of their venture, No compromise nor partâ€"way success would console them.‘ To the five mentioned patâ€" riots, representative of a multitude their equal in spirit, the course ofâ€" fered no opportunity to turn back. ‘The desite for independence moved these men to become the true pioâ€" neers of America. In the Virginian Revolution, pioâ€" neer Richard Henry Lee first said, Alexander N. Pirie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rogan of 1737 Pleasâ€" ant avenue, on Saturday evening, June 15, at the Glencoe Union church. The Rev. Don Smith and the Rev. Robert Stubbs read the service, Miss Erline Jones of Glencoe, in aqua lace and carrying white daisâ€" ies, attended as maid of honor. Richard Doherty, who flew here from his home in Minneapolis, Minn., served the bridegroom as ward Rogan, brother of the brideâ€" groom, and Robert Erbach of Chiâ€" _ The bride‘s aunt wore an aqua crepe dress and a pink tea rose corsage, The mother of the brideâ€" groom chose a dress of light gray crepe and a corsage â€" of yellow served for three years with the United States army, 18 months of that time in the Pacific theater. He plans to return to Lake Forest college in the fall to continue his studies which were interrupted by A reception followed the cereâ€" mony at the home of the bride‘s luncle in Glencoe. _ Following a wedding trip to Minâ€" ‘meapolis, the young couple will reâ€" side in Glencoe for the summer. __Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Sikorski of 272 Park are Mrs. Frank A. Meier, Sr., mother of the bridegroom, and his sister, Mrs. Gilbert S. Johnson, and daughters, Bonnie and Joâ€"Ann, of Tampa, Fla. Here to attend the Lawrentsâ€" Meier veddi:fihfl. Saturday, they will remain the Sikorskis for l-munr week. _ Mrs. Sikorski is the bride‘s, sister. WEDDING GUESTS CAB COMPANY A former corporal, Mr. Pirie Td, H. P. 898 and 194 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM Twentyâ€"four Hours of COURTEOUS SERVICE Maintained by First Church of Christ, Scientist Highland Park, Minois Will Rent Cars for °A place for quict thought and study, where the Bible, and Christian Science Literature may be read, borrowed, or parchased cCORN ON THE COLUMN HIGHWOOD, ILL. Hours: Week Days 17â€"20 "These United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and inâ€" dependent States." Pioneer Thom. as Jefferson originally deéclared, "All men_are created equal" and pioneer ‘Ben Franklin asserted, "The rulers are the servants, and the people their sovereigns." Thus statesman Lee, philosopher Jéfferâ€" son, and journalist Franklin conâ€" tributed timely thoughts to a pioâ€" neer trend. The fourth of this quintet of Yankee Doodle forerunners to our United States was noted for the art of giving eloquent expression to his words. Pioneerâ€"orator Patâ€" rick Henry hit the nail on the head when he concluded his immortal address with, "I know not as to the course of others, but as for me, give me Liberty or give me death!" _ Last but not least of our princiâ€" pal pioncering patriots was that American soldier whose picture we often see on halfâ€"cent postage stamps. â€" Nathan Hale, as the averâ€" age fighting defender of his Amâ€" erican rights, remarked, "I regret that I have but one life to give for my country!" P gae .. Now in 1946, we fortunate citiâ€" zens enjoying the blessings of libâ€" erty thank our lucky stars and ::.:ges for that pioneer "Spirit of | HELP | For Prompt Service Call H. P. 5804 WINN, 4447 300 North Green Bay Highland Park e Dynamic Wheel Balancing re+ Body & Fender Repairing Auto Painting â€" Blacksmithing 322 N. First Highland Park 77 PARKWAY CURTAIN CLEANERS sPRING HOUSE CLEANING? GLENCOE RELIABLE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING CO. THEATRE 630 Vernon Ave. Highland Park 605 FRL & SAT. July 5â€"6 THU., FRL, SAT., July 1113 (Request Program) Margaret O‘Brien and Edward Coming: "My _ Reputation," "Bells of St. Mary‘s," "Draâ€" 920 am to 530 pm 920 am to 9:00 pm 280 pm to 520 pm John Payne, Maurine O‘Hara » in SUN., MON., TUE., WED., July 7, 8, 9, 10 Joan Fontaine, Mark Stevens in Do Your Curtain "Our Vines Have Tender Grapes" *"From This Day > DO YOU NEED Phone H. P. 178 D A HL S WITH YOUR LET THE in Page 3 17â€"20

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