Page Let‘s Look At Highland Park . . . . With our attention constantly focused on the global picture and the national scene, we often forget about our own town, and the beauty that‘s all around us right here on these crisp Fall days. . .. We criticise the way our soâ€"called internationallyâ€" minded diplomats are juggling the peace. _ _ Yet we overlook the good job Highland Park‘s leaders are doing. ... I them. In brief, we‘re wondering if we appreciate this fine town of ours? . ... Like Dave Floyd‘s football squad this year, for example. The lads lost a real heartâ€"breaker last Saturday but still they‘re in a threeâ€"way tie with mighty New Trier and Oak Park .. .. We‘ll just glance around and see all the good things that are Highland Park . . . . d og POLICE FORCE . . . And then there‘s our local police force. * Understaffed? Yes, But doing a splendid job despite obstacles . . . . And our fire department, What a fine job they‘re doing! And one station, Ravinia‘s, (growing more and more importâ€" ant as this section gets larger daily), not even operating! (And, as an aside, someone told us the other day that so long as the Ravinia fire station isn‘t being used, why not do a bit of reâ€" modéling and make it into an apartment for some vets?) We‘ll be relying on our fireâ€" men more and more from now on as we twist thermostats to hotter temperatures during dry days. Together our coâ€"chairman, F. Sheahen (a fine worker, by the way:) and the writer called on 60 different business houses. Each is progressing. Each is doing its own job well. Each is serving you every day, Mr. and Mrs. Highland Parker. And â€"each merchant gave genâ€" crously to help to make our town better:.â€". â€";~. While walking around town. we saw the reâ€"modeling being done at Fell‘s We saw the alert and courteous clerks at Garnett‘s giving service with a smile . . . . We saw workmen busily comâ€" pleting the handsome new Stevens Trinity Choir Members Plan Barbecue And Entered as second ¢lass matter March 1, 1#11, at the Post Office at Mighiand Park, Hilnots ue C LCOOKS OVER TOWN Leaders "Red" and Fred Fell asked this column to help the Community Chest recentlyâ€"and we were happy to do so, t It was while we were walking around Highland Park, and not just driving through, that we beâ€" gan _ to â€" seeâ€"really seelâ€"this handsome town of ours . . . . the Highland Parker To Attend Press School All public relations cha AN AIR OF PROSPERITY ne M tort h ther flice Sure, it has faults. But we‘ll let others dig for Subscription rates: $1.50 per year; 5 Everywhere we.went, friendliâ€"} kind j ss grrected us . .. . | rener Everywhere in our town there | theh that air of prosperity, that posiâ€" | not â€"f e outlook on what can and wnll‘ Un Memb urch ; cClay. We The THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS Y 14 public relations chairmen i enth District, including Mrs itlook on wh wight future aw Jim Jones and all the ardâ€"workers at our post eiting your mail out and exularly and promptly . .. Prinity Episcopal Church ub will inaugrurate winter s with a social evening hecue supper tonight, Octâ€" at thie home of Miss Jean it H (SPECIAL To THS HIGHLAND PARK PMSSS) will meet prosp« Mr. Georg id choirma WHITT NORTHMORE SCHULTZ mud Let‘s Take a Look at Trinity We saw our town‘s barbers chatting with youngsters while goodâ€"looking crew cuts were comâ€" pleted ... . . _ We saw our street department men hard at work, painting cross walks for safety . . . BANK . . We saw local bank executives talking to those interested in loans. We saw tellers, wide smiles on their cheerful faces, greeting depositors . . . . And we took another good look at that handsome new Chandler store . . .. We saw our wellâ€"trained drugâ€" gists preparing prescriptions . . . We saw our able doctors and dentists hustling about, making their calls, encouraging, helping. And we stopped by Larson‘s to pick up several of those scores of highly readable magazines always on hand in this quaint old store. . . WORK AND HAPPINESS We looked over the goodâ€"lookâ€" ing apartment building, The Terâ€" races, and wondered what other town along Chicago‘s North Shore, the size of Ravinia, could boast of such a large, wellâ€"constructed and wellâ€"maintained building . . . GRATIFYING ... Everyone we met was working . . . and enjoying his work . . .. We looked in on the gift shops, each filled with original gifts for the many giftâ€"giving days ahead. Yep, Highland Parkers, it was gratifying and, enlightening to take off a few hours during the week to get to know Highland Park better . . . . In fact, we were so interested in our tour that we forgot about our new and vigilant friends, the parking meters. We had put enough pennies in during one stop to last about one hour. % We were gone well over an hour before remembering ye olde meter and we rushed back to see if a ticket was on our car. But, none was there. We glanced at the meter. The frightening red "VIOLAâ€" TION" flag was not up, but way down, 60 minutes down, for some kind person, whom we don‘t know, wencrously .placed more coins in the«hungty meter for us so we‘d We stopped in at our library which seems to get better and more beautiful each day . . . We looked in at the neat city hall and watched able workers doing their Jobs effectively .. . . We went to Ravinia‘s business section and noted how things are prospering there, too . . . The Prefab House: Is It Good Or Bad? Highland Park, like many other Chicago suburbs, faces the probâ€" lem _ of _ postwar â€" homeâ€"building methods, On a center pass from City Engineer Philip Cole, the city‘s Building Advisory Commitâ€" tee this week pondered whether to punt, run or toss a lateral to the City Council ‘OB, [ RC000M CCC â€"200050*! ~ Be after hiding all. the calenâ€" [ION" flag was not up, but way dars, the growers contrived a set lown, 60 minutes down, for some of curtains, made of black cloth ind person, whom we don‘t knO®,.| ;, be drawn over the young pllll'l' rencrously . placed more coins in an hour or two before sunset and hemtnnuty poter for 0s so We4|kept tightly dark until an hour Only in Highland Park would | 'â€"]'-‘;::.n‘::;'(::‘r}?:,:u‘:‘yhg:ï¬ for uch a friendly thing happen . . */ it. Pompons and the big fluffy mommumenrtremmmmmsmmtucs=* | mums Shat ~used to Dbloom ~£OF \ifred Simandl who is district | Thanksgiving are on sale now as ‘hnirman, are awaiting the openâ€"| wifts for Sweetest Day, October ng of the All Day Press School to| 16. The theme of this© day is mc held at Federation ~Headquar= * *Make â€"Someone ~Happy.**~â€"â€"â€"â€" Mrs. Fre \venue, p Lighland I wen invite hi 10 a By 10 West Washington Street, ro, on October 20, beginning d C. Henning, 577 Park ress chairman for the ‘ark Woman‘s Club, has d to attend. Before the war and during the expansion of defense plants, hastâ€" ily built communities of ugly, idenâ€" tieal houses sprang up in many industrial communities, often by preassembled methods. The buildâ€" ers of postwar factoryâ€"made houses assert that such "junk" cannot compete in the highâ€"priced comâ€" petitive market now, and that only the goodâ€"looking and durable types of structures survive in the field. They ï¬)im to automobiles as an example of appearance as a goal of massâ€"produced goods. methes "dhaim is nds to imay it leads to flimsy structures and ‘U-ntiml row housâ€" ing. Owtlers of prefabs in Deerâ€" field and elsewhere declare that wellâ€"made prefab panels and roofs are safer, stronger and better inâ€" sulated than conventional houses. Row housing, they blame on the conventional builder. Highland Park‘s prefab spokesman, Everett Millard, who is asking the city for permits to build here, says his Gunnison homes are the best anâ€" swer to tow Housing, sinee they ean be built on individual, seatterâ€" ed lots with massâ€"production econâ€" omy. Officially, a city building eode can pay no heed to the beauty of any type of architecture. It aims only at structural, fire and saniâ€" tary safety, the city fathers say. Other critics suggest prefabs should be segregated in separate communities, rather than mingled with _ conventional dwellings in areas of high real estate values. The answer to this, advocates beâ€" lieve, is that wellâ€"designed manuâ€" factured homes are as good or better than other houses, and should be chosen by owners on a competitive basis of value, instead of forming separate areas of idenâ€" tical appearance. And so the arguments go. What will Highland Park decide? This week, citizens watched with interâ€" est to see what will come out of the huddle in which Bertram Webâ€" er, Norman Schlossman, Walter Durbahn and Philip Cole are callâ€" ing signals for future building plays. While some members regretfully haul away their boats to winter | storage, others are busy setting up | stoves and planning decorations for offâ€"season parties. Last weekâ€" end _ Commodore Avery Jones piloted: the club‘s motor safety raft on a final tour to bring in the racing buoys. A few owners Trinity Women To Meet Monday, Oct. 18 The next meeting of Trinity Guild and Woman‘s Auxiliary will be held in the Parish House of Trinity Episcopal Church on Monâ€" day, October 18. This will be the regular business meeting starting at 10:00 a.m. Luncheon will be served at 12:30 p.m. "So You Can‘t Fool Nature?" Several types of pompon mums, those dainty button and daisyâ€"like blossoms, have always held off blooming until Thanksgiving, but the growers have tricked them inâ€" to flowering for Sweetest Day, October 16. "We needed these pompons to complement our roses, carnations, orchids and gardenias in rememberances for Sweetest Day," stated a spokesman for the Allied Florists‘ Association. At least one member of Dame Nature‘s colorful family has met its comeupance at the hands of the florists. The flower growers have slipped one over on the ladies of the Carduaceaeâ€"chryâ€" santhemums, to you. The mum waits for the long nights and late mornings of late fall, when the sun sets early and rises late, growing principally at night. Sailors Plan Last Picnic Of "Summer" Casting a glance at the gray, autumnal waters of Lake Michiâ€" wan early this week, the North Shore Yacht Club‘s officers deâ€" croed a final smorgasbord picnic { r Friday night" The party will also the club‘s annual meeting 1 clection of officers for next THE PRESS allowed theif boats to linger the beach, bflnLo take : vantage ef the tow watmh Sundays of Indian summer, clatâ€" ing it‘s the most delightful sailing weather of the entire yearâ€"when it happens. Mrs. Gilbert Hallawell is supâ€" ervising preparations for Friday night‘s supper. A business meeting mm aiick t t aat prin t A These lugn:fl.lflchoou commitâ€" North Shore Train Hits Car: None Hurt Misunderstanding between . a North Shore motorman and the driver of a car resulted in damage to the ri’ht side of the car, last Friday afternoon at Central aveâ€" tee hes the ex the ch voyage r‘}f‘ 12 M W K 1 s + r\@% * \D\yâ€"\ \r\('} _A 2B is 4J HE) i\{? t?> %;L/f‘ uk c3Â¥ ~yalA 2/ heads and other members of executive committee to take elub‘s helm for next. year‘s Operators, linemen, installers, office workers . . . more skilled people of all kinds . . . are moving up to the teleâ€" phone lines to bring you more and better service. More than 13,750 have joined the Hlinois Bell team since Vâ€"J Day. With improved. training methods, they‘re ready for "active duty" in much less time than it used to take. FROM 9 to 11 :30 TICKETS $1.00 Each â€" PRIZES â€" _ BEST ORIGINAL COSTUME BEST MAN‘S COSTUME â€" BEST WOMAN‘S COSTUME BIGGEST TELEPHONE "TEAM" & 4& \ï¬â€™%\{ 22 h( ;:'a ‘E: [ 4 \ 4 ;"g‘/“ ‘ c } * 4 ‘ y k § ; | “‘\ . ; 14, 'Q' * â€" Moose Lodge J SATURDAY, NOVEMBERIG6 ILLINOIS BELL TELEPNHoONE company NOW SERVING YOU 1 a i [: a t\ 3 i4 2 +A I oY D ï¬ J,Q\ | 13,750 NEW EMPLOYEES IN THREE YEARS PAYROLL UP $65,000,000 IMPROVED METHODS CUT TRAINING TIME MASQUERADE BENEFIT D A N C E nud, According to George Tice, “,).movtwclm‘otnch in time, the motorman staâ€" ted that he thought the ear would stop. Mr. Tice wis uninjured. PRESS WANT ADS GET RESULTS [Deerficld Landscape Garden Service Complete Landscape Service » BLACK DIRT . HAYSHAKER‘S ORCHESTRA Witten Hall Sponsored By Free Estimates Tel. Deerficld 749â€"& 3 KN(‘ ' %\) NJ > \;*/ T 7 \/'\I\Jz} it‘®; S\“./é Addition of all these employees has boosted Illinois Bell‘s "family" to 43,700 people and increased our annual payroll to $134,000,000, a $65,000,000 rise in three years! That‘s a lot of people and a lot of money. It takes plenty of both to provide you with the kind of service you‘ve told us you want and need â€" -ndwhhinpro-boyuihflll-wl Thursday, Oct. 14, 1948 Young Methodists To Picnic At Woodstock ‘The Methodist Youth Fellowâ€" ship of the Wesley Methodist church at Highwood will attend a subâ€"district picnic on Sunday at Woodstock, October 17 at 1:80 bicycles priced at $39.95. 562 Waukegan Ave. Highwood CerviSales&Service Tol. H. P. 1197 Â¥uâ€"~Cu Â¥ \ \, Y 1NX <V'N > «K use (\ _A [ §3