Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 12 Jan 1950, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Communications intended for publication must be written on one side of the paper only, and be signed with the name and address of the writer.) Subscription rates: $1.50 per year; 5 cents per single copy. $3.00 per. year outside of Jake. County, llinois. 1 1 Issaed Thursday of each week by the Highland Park Press, 516 at Highland Park, Illinois. THE HIGHLANDâ€"PARK PRESS .. Entered as second class matter March 1, 1911, at the Post Office + The weekly workshops: of the North Shore Creaitve Writers for the 1920 season are now underâ€" NI, Telephone:. Highland ~Park Novels, Poems, Short Stories Underway At Writers‘ Club > Laurel avenue, â€"Highland Park, â€"~ _ But if they want to bedeaders, they‘d better train nowâ€"not just so H.P.H.S. can win basketball games but so‘they can win at this rugged game of life. It still is . . _â€"and it‘s about time certain youngâ€" sters realize that if they‘re planning to be bums, they‘re doing fine dissipating. | > â€" â€" F3 "All this talk of the welfare state remindsâ€"me of the army.. The Army is typical of the welfare state. You don‘t make much money ; you eat three meals a dayâ€"not necessarily good, but wholesome. You have someone doing your thinking for you and telling you WELFARE STATE ... . es e apsins oo ue$d _ Chatting with a fellowâ€"World War H w last week he said: . % $ IT‘S COLD THERE .. .> Last week it was 40@‘&3 below zero â€"‘in Hell, Norwavy‘! nometgenets : is R.~B. Olson, Editor. | 345 begn in bed for months and doctors have been oing their best to comfort him.â€" C Last week an AP newsman asked O‘Leary about his trouble. § : O‘Leary smiled and said: f $ "They‘l stop soon." _ . _ / 4 Title of "Optimist of the Year", in our opinion, goes to that patient young man, Jack O‘Leary, of Los: Angeles who has been hiccupping continuously for the past 18 months. _ ; f* â€" (At last count he‘s hiccupped 157,680 times.) ~ Now there‘s only 69 more days left . . . . and then each Amprican citizen will have paid his federal taxes days out of each year to pay his taxes. â€" _ _It‘s costly livingâ€"in_qur great nation . . . but I surely think it‘s worth it! ~ S $ A REAL OPTIMIST .; .. 4s | 20’“0 «sreciar vo usls moncanp for the Well, 12 days have slipped by in the new year. . .. Yes, that‘s correct, each American now warks 81 ! By â€" WHITTâ€" NORTHMORE SCHULTZ . way at the Highland Park YWCA. The group willâ€"meet every Monâ€" day from 1 until 3, through May { 8, for informal and personalized / instruction under the direction of / Marjorie Peters, literary fnledt scout_for Farrar, Strauss, New York ;publishers.‘, . ~ * There are. eight novels now . underway in the group, as well as <‘a number of short stories and poetns. â€" Mrs. William D. Milard, Jr., ~of _ Broadview â€" avenue, â€" is ; among the Highland Park women | whose work is being submitted ‘ for criticism. CE seetetary, at Highland Park 2006. may be secured from Mrs. James resumed this season, Jane Eklund, the author of "The Only Gift", a "first novel" about a North Shore family, motuy published, . was the guwest Mg at the Decemâ€" ber luncheon." f * ! cialists in various fields, will be The monthly luncheons, / with prominent guest speakers, speâ€" Further informat#®i#W»>@boutthe â€" Mrs_ TRan has attained fame a~ a talented speaker and appeared | on radio programs such as Town Heefing/of the Air. She is aL%o‘ noted asâ€"az contributor to the Christian Science Monitor, the Yale Review, Survey, The Nation, Current History, Survey Graphic and the New Republic. * Gilmore G. Kahnweiler, ‘Chairâ€" man of the Forum, stated “[irk- ets for thé‘l§30~5l series have ’lotod. " . . . Like many ‘othex, "Rn-ian exiles, who have early made America their country and have become absorbed ’n their adopted land‘s culture and civic life, Mrs. Dean is neither viruâ€" lently antiâ€"Soviet nor a fellowâ€" traveler . . . It i;"imposlible to find a better com;finruide (than her book) to the intricacies of the" Soviet system and policies." Phone your BUICK dealerfer a LOTS OF L1UGGAGE SPACE, plas a highâ€"foshion rearâ€"end treatment, graces hmwhfi-fihltnuhumu Mhh““d“-&“‘lâ€"h.‘m* sia: Menace or Promise" (1947), the Saturday Review of Viterature 8:15 , P.M. Wednesday,~ January 18, at North Shore Congregation Israel" in Glencoe. ~*Mrs. Dean is Research Director for the Foreign Policy Associaâ€" tion. Although she has written on many European countries, she writes and speaks more on Russia than anyother one country. She Russia , coming to ‘the United States at the time of the Russian Revolution. ul spent ber first 14 years of life in In Glencoe Temple Warld" will be: the subject of Vera Micheles Dean‘s lecture beâ€" typical Buick taper is now found in all Buick fenders. â€" No. we just couldn‘t hold back" the whole big Buick line for 1950. :fh:fn: too goodâ€"lookingâ€"too much fun _ to driveâ€"too jamâ€"packed with steppedâ€"up, > higherâ€"compression, readyâ€"toâ€"ramble powerâ€"to be kept under caver. = So maybc'you'vc already seen some 1950 Buicks on the highway. _ 2 Maybe you‘ve noticed the extra "git up‘ and travel" they haveâ€"glimpsed the wide," models)â€"noted, approvingly, that the "aIP cadIcE Fon FIFTY H.P. 4800 ~ aybe you‘ve even heard some things... Kleeburg Buick, Inc. ing on her book, "Rusâ€" THE â€"PRESS 304 Green Ray Road DANGEROUS pewine whew | worgieq lndiv’lual, partnerships, corporations BARACANI OFFICE SERVICE . n _ k. That Dynaflow Drive, for instanceâ€" standard on RoapmastEr models, opâ€" tionat on allg(hersâ€"‘nowcom $# _ 20% less than on 1949 models. % t . 3 y Abévé all, maybe you‘ve heard of exciting néws on price... ; That there are more than a dozenâ€"andâ€"aâ€" half models to choose from. That there are three power plants in the Buick line â€"all of higher compression, all stepped up in power. That all models are big and roomy inside â€"some. rear seats are better than a foot wider than before!â€"yet in every instance, shorter overâ€"all, so easier to handle, park INCOME TAX SERVICE Open Evenings â€" 7:00 to 9:00 PHONE: H. P. 967 5 rvinstance â€"â€" _ That in the full lineâ€"SpEciaL, Super and tie cvzry ;':m"“k' ‘ROADMASTER seriesâ€"there is a Buick to mer to handle, park: fit practically every budget above the very lowest! i eas p . P rroreq sbove is the 1950 SuPER 4â€"door you‘ve heard of ‘ Sedan,oneofthcn:xjmckbodylypel E... C . _ for 1950. At your Buick dealer‘s are more e, for instanceâ€" © 3¢tual models, the s;pryon sTErR models, Opâ€" _ Hadn‘t you better see himâ€"right nowâ€" | othersâ€"now costs andsecifyon,too,doh‘tfi_ndBui:k“w in on 1949 models. _ choice for 1987 wnaTevck OOR PRCERNEE _ , _ _ ~â€"" 0 un DANGEROUS Popr Road ueHTs Amo mo much SPEED rom wmout Omnarne Highwood, 1II. 110 S. First Street fone in HENRY 1. TAVIOR;â€"Asc Network, every MHoad CE #Standard on ROADM 5o eptomi at exte m%â€"mu* Thursday, Jan. 12, | almost all been sold. Anyone wishâ€" ing to reserve tickets should write. to the Forum, c/o North Shore Congregation Israel, Glencoe, imâ€" mediately. Applications will be BUY SAVINGS BONDS . _ NOW! .The Forum is a joint project of the Sisterhood and Men‘s=Club of the Congregation. c Telegraph Delivery ‘Service North Shore Florist FOR EVERY OCCASION Landscape Service 290 Greenwood Avenue Glencée, Illinois FL OWE RS JOS. KOLBECK\ . â€"â€" Phone Glencoe 6 0 9

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy