Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 22 Mar 1951, p. 1

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â€". _One set of facts ramins. The department is unâ€" © derpaid and undermanned. The population and the ' _ area of Highland Park demands a larger department. To get a larger department â€" to say nothing of keeping the department we have, adequate salaries are essenâ€" s tial. We are not likely to lose the older men on the < force. They are trapped by the pension to which they * have contributed for many years, and which they would lose should they leave the force for a betterâ€" paying job. We don‘t like to think of Highland Park â€"_â€"â€"â€" _ â€"as being madeâ€"up of people wihU_@otd take that sort f of advantage of men who are performing so essential * â€"a service. % â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"The Higblant Park Presgs |:>== Called into the service are James B. Jones, 1701 Greenwood, reguâ€" \lar employee, and substitutes Robâ€" ert L. Bell, Highwood; Ernest H. Bischoff, 630 Onwentsia; Frank Hennig, 616 Vine; Robert J. Knudson, 629 Skokie; Dan Martin, 200 N. Green Bay, and Albert Mecham, Jr., 1341 East St. | James B. Jones, who served with the U. S. Navy during World w-z‘ II, is now stationed at Pearl Harâ€" In the Fire Department, two of the personnel have been called to Farnsworth, Great Lakes, a pilot in World Warâ€"II, who accounted for many enemy planes, and Ray Mann, one of the I-nlfufly,mfl.w:“ Ft. Worth, Texas, with the rank of Mâ€"Sergeant. Force have also been called into the service: Edward J. Moroney, Jr., 572 Glenview, and Delroy W. Haggie, 231 N. Second st. Moronâ€" his credit, is stationed at Austin, Texas. Haggie, who served with the Navy during World War II, is ey, remembered during World War II, as a pilot, with the downâ€" ing of several enemy planes to in Highland Park. Service. His wife and 12â€"yearâ€"old Help is badly needed ‘at the Highland Park postoffice, on acâ€" count of the inroads made on its Draft Board Makes Inroads On Ranks Of City Employees Even so, that club is not effective against newer members of the force, who can weigh the future adâ€" vantages of a small pension against the present advanâ€" tages of a job with a pay scale adjusted to present conditions. Who wants to spend another 15 years or so earning a small wage to get a pension which still may not be enough to live on ? Further, what desirable new members of "the department would be attracted by a low pay scale for long hours, dangerous work (it is dangerous; even in Highland Park) and half pay after 20 years? â€" â€" The people of Highland Park are going to have to decide for themselves whether they want an adeâ€" g;ut(iie departmen%lf they don‘t, the boys wlr:i) joingd e de ent 10 years ago or more certainly made an uni%‘rtrgate choice of jobs. . t e mies If it is true that city finances will not provide for more money under present tax rates, the new council will have to get approval for an increase before they can grant the raises. In this eventâ€"they‘d do well to make sure they can get such approval before making any promises. , > â€" It is wellâ€"known that the administration has given as a reason for the lack of any pay raises during the ast two years, the statement that the city simply Easn’t got the money. They have pointed to the defeat of the referendum to raise the tax rate as the reason for the lack of funds. It is being rumored (now that the election is drawing near) that money might have been found had the administration not been so angerâ€" ed over the referendum défeat. Perhaps this talk has some basis of truth ; perhaps it is all "sour grapes." Candidates will do well to investigate before deciding and making public their decigions. However, we don‘t believe that any candidate would be doing himself, the departments, or the city any particular favor by making a statement that he was "for" more pay for more policemen, or even making a pledge to increase both the manpower and the pay scale. Few of the many possible issues in the coming city election has theâ€"potential appeal, we believe, inâ€" herent in the subject of an adequate pay scale for an adequate police departmentâ€"fire department, too, for that matter. Vol. 40; No. 4 Up To Now By Bill Thomas tin, Texas, Thomas, 16, :aho easting longing glances the historic corps, and MaryElien, at home, has similar ideas. Her twin and another sister is Mrs. Patricia Sgt. Ray Mann, Jr., who has already served two years with the Marines, is now a member of the U.&Ah(!om-hfiolodinA,.- Mann, who served with the Marâ€" ines, with the rank of sergeant, during World ‘War II, left Decâ€" ember 2nd, and is stationed at Leâ€" Jewne, N. Carolina. A son, James, a private first class in the Marine corp, is stationed at El Toro, ist, will play two groups of numâ€" hn.'l"h.othrxutifihmphyâ€" ed together for about 15 years, and have given many programs on the North Shore.. pinaist and Jessie Buchtel, violinâ€" the Ciiu.v Woman‘s Symphony, * program of wide apâ€" Mhubulrnfin;:‘rltb March 28 meeting of the Highland Park Music club by Mrs. C. Longâ€" ford Felske. Mrs. Arthur Marâ€" quette, 109 Lakeview terrace, will be hostess for the occasion. One of the club‘s most versatile and talented musicians, Miss Olga lhll‘r.w.vflldn‘.m of Italian songs and another group of English songs, accompanied by Music Club Plans w3 of wide Highland Park, Ilinois, A Paper for Highland Parkers ® Published by Highland Parkers greatly needed to make the quota. The help of everyone is vital and necessary in order to reach the Highland Park goal. Soâ€"big and littleâ€" everyone is urged to give . . . to give now and to give _ Mr. John Swanson, Jr. has been ‘.dded to the workers in District _ At the present writing the drive has reached the halfâ€"way mark. Sixty percent of the Special Gift donations have been received. This sixty percent represents seventy percent of the Special Gifts quota, demonstrating the response from the consistently large subscribers many have not yet sent in their CCOCCBC!, SCHn ACtNeT, W. H. Thomas, R. C. Bliemehi, Grace G. Coale, David Cox, Clinton Fritsch, John A. Ronning, Fred Tucker, Miss Lorraine Peterson and Mr. Richard Van Arsdale. . Kennicott, chairman of the camâ€" ‘paign, announces the appointment of the last district. Every district is now complete with a chairman ‘lnd_nmhrnehbloek.’ Dhtricthâ€"Chh‘,In.L C.hm-.wmâ€"â€".m Arthur L. Bell, Arthur R. Bletsch, K. P. Conarchy, Lioyd L. Fielder, Frank Lund, Gayle B. Mattingly, Completing List Of Red Cross Workers The Red Cross drive continues with the diligent workers solicitâ€" ’ Comparatively speaking, Easter cards are probably the most reâ€" ‘cent of all our Easter customs. ‘Holy Land scenes are the most popular illustrations on Easter cards, but in recent years lightâ€" ‘hurhd greetings with surprisingâ€" Sunday falls on March 25 this year, the earliest it‘s arrived since 1940. And church calendars reâ€" veal that Easter won‘t come beâ€" fore March 25 again during the 20th Century! ly _ animated _ Easter_ bunnies, chicks, ducklings etc. have capâ€" tured America‘s fancy. These whimsical little creatures are porâ€" trayed as gaily announcing: "It‘s Spring! It‘s Easter!"‘ France, alt church belis were beâ€" HMeved ‘to make a pilgrimage to Rome, and the" townspeople stayed indoors so as not to see their flight. To â€"this day, France‘s church bells are not rung from Good Friday until Easter Sunday. ?Enter Traditions . On Palm Sunday, in Spain, naâ€" tives formerly hung the palm they received at chutch alongside their homes, believing the palms served For years, in England, the day before Lent was observed by eatâ€" ing pancakes. Britishers still reâ€" fer to it as Pancake Tuesday. as lightning rods. On Holy Thursâ€" day, in certain parts of Mexico, children drive the devil out of town. by creating a terrific din with rattles. : _On_ Good ‘Friday, sz mea®$=> The Passion Play, presented every tenth year since 1634 at Oberamâ€" mergau, is the best‘ known of Easter pageants. The American Passion Play was inaugurated at Bloomington, IIl. in 1923. Simiâ€" lar religious spectacles are also performed in South Dakota and Oklahoma. Mardi Gras and the Passion Plays, obviously are comâ€" pounded of Biblical history and tradition. + Mardi Gras, for example, literâ€" ally means "Fat Tuesday". JIt‘s the French name for Shrove Tuesâ€" day, symbolizing the passing of meat. The time and place of the first Mardi Gras celebration has not begn definitely established. Three southern cities have long waged a friendly battle for the distinction of having staged the first Mardi Gras in North Ameriâ€" caâ€"Biloxi, Mississippi, Mobile, Alabama, and New Orleans, Louisâ€" ianaâ€"the latter setting the standâ€" ards by which Mardi Gras pageants are compared. _ Easter customsâ€"and celebrations are so closely woven into the patâ€" tern of American life that we sclâ€" dom question where they came fromâ€"or when they began. Some origins cannot be determined, and conflicting stories are told about others. Most Eastertide events are related to Biblical recollections of the life of Jesus Christ. But, in many instances, tradition, legend, superstition or irreverent invenâ€" tion have seeped into the Easter season. i T[le‘ reason? Sii:ply that Easter Press Information Service interfered with the laws of nature He did it that people might have more and more evidence of His ever, "_mr He would “’ id " fall as God would be His raising of Himself from the dead. "They the resurrection morning. Himself (Jesus) the Conqueoring King; yes, He wrung the sting from death in the final round and took the victory from the grave; getting up on Sunday morning, Easter as we know it, saying "All Power Both in Heaven and in Earth is Mine." With this victory in mina we should be encouraged even in the midst of our many battles in life and keep on fighting until the day bdmlndfino'(ln)fi; from the dead so shall we rise in for the three days and three nights in the Tomb in order to prove When we.think of Easter many thoughts enter our thinking. It is a season when nature is unfolding herself after many cold days and nights, but she (nature) tells us that she has been able to weather the storm â€"and rise again in her beauty. But more especially we think of Jesus and of his many battles on earth and then of his most dreadful battle with Death and how He at his own will surâ€" ‘"What is it that seems a stone between us and the resurrection morning? f "It is the belief of mind in matâ€" ter. We can only come into the spiritual resurrection by quitting the old consciousness of Soul in "In the new religion the teachâ€" ing is, ‘He‘is not here; Truth is not in matter; He is risen; Truth has become more to us,â€"more true, more spiritual‘. ‘"We must lay aside consciousness, and then perceive Truth, and say with Mary, ‘Rabboni!â€"Master® ". from (Miscellaneous Writings, page 179) _‘ by Mary Baker Eddy Referring to the significance of Emgeor, Macy ;'.;mn, y tlis Dis Coverer" and Four@erâ€"of â€"Christian. Science, spoke, on a certain occaâ€" sion, in part as follows: . ; There are, fimrq{dre, eternal rewards for effort put forth to achieve a noble character in this life. Such should be an encourageâ€" ment to us; that we aim to so live that our" lifé will be worth living hereafter. Teneertentit in the resurrection®of Jesus which affirmed what He said: "Because I live, ye shall live also." Easter is to remind us that man is more than body; more than brains. A few years. ago I was privileged ta\ visit a place near Cook County Hospital where the bodies of unclaimed people were brought. Stored in barrels. conâ€" taining chemicals, were brains wof dozens of people. I never had the surgeon‘s privilege of viewing l‘)t’ins\ of living persons, but I suspect they would not look much different from those which I saw. I suspect further, that by observâ€" ingâ€"the material brains of a perâ€" son one could not detect whether the individual were a good matheâ€" matician, mechanic or artist. There is something unseen, invisible, and yet very real about humans which cannot be detected by the human eye, and makes them the personâ€" alities theyâ€"are. 4 Indeed, © the Christian faith views life in that very manner. There is an unseen, immortal quality â€"to human existence. For Christians <this has been verified & BETHANY CHURCH [ Rer. Lester H. Laubenstein 1 "The inescapable fact for every human is this: he must die." So states D. Gcorgia Harkness in a very blunt way and adds: "Man tries to make it a purely physical fact but other~impulses refuse to accept such." OFFER EASTER SUNDAY MESSAGE FIRST â€"CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST â€" HIGHLAND PARK BAPTIST Thursday, Mar. 22, 1951 the times He unguenchable enthusiasm, undeâ€" terred even by the danger, often incurred, of losing their own lives. Now what gave them such limitâ€" less courage and energy! One thing alone: the conviction that their Lord was alive, that thereâ€" fmlhe-uomunm«l,-‘ that they too, when their early lives would reach their terminaâ€" There is no greater hope in the world than this, that in following that is fairer than day." "‘fld.mdhnhnphdut.n into despair. They might â€" then profitably call to mind the situaâ€" tion of the first christian â€"disciâ€" ples. They had been charged with the task of bringing about the kingdom of God among men. No doubt they, too, saw the‘ superstiâ€" tion, cruelty, and other evils that held the human race in thralldom. But they went to their work with Noble souls, when facing the "I am the Resurrection and the Life,, . . . words of Jesus . . . are still a mecessary basis for worldâ€" iiinprovemeut to others. We need ‘to ‘arise out of" s!>ep=nt morals. | We, need to rise a“ye the earthy Testiny of a grave. A living Christ .who can confer spiritual Life proâ€" ffers moral growth, A divine Lord still active in this world offers to helpâ€"His people across the grave to a lofty and enduring Destiny. ""He which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise up us also by "Jesus." 2 Cor. 4.14. \ This is the message and chalâ€" ;Imootlutn:(}odlmyon enough to die for you. Will you live for Him? breaks down your opposition, not with force, but with a gift of love, His only begotten son. When you err through careless forgetfulness He confronts you with Easter, with the Reserrection experience, with the fact that "God sent not you and suffers for you. WESLEY METHODIST CHURCH If the message of Easter could be put in a very few words they would have to express the manner in which God deals with His erring children. As a loving father He does not destroy you, He does not even.punish you as you deserve, but He identifiecs Himself with "I shall arise!" From what? Shall we ‘arise out of‘ the myth of the traditional ~Easter? Resurâ€" rection comes through Science for some. Or else, they expect renewal through Education. "Set aside the Biblical resurrection‘‘. "Replace it with faith in the work of the labâ€" oratory and ‘trust to the knowledge of the classroom." "That will bring theâ€"â€"better things". _ Christ is God. There 3s no comâ€" promise with truth, Pious platiâ€" tudes are as empty as the ‘soundâ€" ing brass or the tinkling symbol‘ of which St. Paul speaks, To say ‘Christâ€"was a great man, but . . .‘ is to deny Him and His message completely. 6 & will destroy this temple and in ithree days 1 will build it up again,‘ He said. It would not be someone elso who would raise Him from the dead, as He had done with Lazarus. ‘I will rise again,‘ was His proclamation to the world of man. So the Feast of the Resurrecâ€" tion, the culmination of the reâ€" demption of man, is the glorious day for those truly faithful to God, those who have accepted His Son without réservation and exâ€" emplify their acceptance by imiâ€" tating His life, keeping His comâ€" mandments, ‘keeping themselves unspotted by this world‘ ". North Shore Railway Requests Abandonment â€" Bus Rehearings ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH REDEEMER EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN: CHURCH Rev. H. K. Platzer their witness which were contrary to such Interstate Commission reâ€" quirements. The Company points out that whflo‘fiom“-qh within its legal rights to pick out fic testimony to exclusion ofi«u-olyofn':ud,uh without authority in law to acâ€" cept as a basis of its\ order testiâ€" Mififlhhwufi.” _ _Failure to give proper considâ€" eration to the findings of the Commission‘s own Chief of Acâ€" counts and Finances is charged. His investigation of the Shore Line lasted from July 1, 1948 to December 31, 1948 and in the pursuit of his duties this official flfi.mnlfi?flam of men to study the books and mwdnof&flflvqu.e..g hm““‘.m.“.n'. resented by bills rendered to the railway company by the Commisâ€" Company of some $20,000.08 for Company of some $20,000.00 for special clerks, new forms of tickâ€" ets for the investigation period and new means of ticket accountâ€" ing for change of crews at Howard Street ignores the evidence and there is nothing in the record justifying the inference left by the Commisâ€" sion that the loss from change of crews is something for which the railway is responsible and is in a position to change. The Commission has failed to consider and give proper importâ€" ance to the fact that the branch lineâ€"considered separately and as a branch line, is being operated at a great loss and that operations under such conditions constituâ€" tes an unnecessary burden upon that the Commission was th-t!honflwineompufingdo- preciation had observed rules and regulations of the Interstate Comâ€" merce Commission and the Illinois Conhimwn,i-mhnoqt- In asking the regulatory body to vacate its conclusions in the bus order it is charged that substanâ€" tial evidence of record has been disregarded and that the Commisâ€" sion was improperly influenced it predicating its ~ordér upon the whims and desires of certain perâ€" sons and groups of persons; that the Commission has failed to recâ€". ognize, accept and carry out the responsibilities to the public imâ€" posed upon it byâ€"law; has refused to the public a means of improving its transportation facilities . and ‘has failed to carry out its obligaâ€" tion of fostering and aiding proper transportation service to the mt itary and naval forces of the country. ; The carrier cites nearly a hunâ€" dred reasons why the Commisâ€" sion should rescind its orders and grant rehearings> Artong the grounds advanced by the Comâ€" _ Rehearings were requested on the grounds that the Commission‘s !order prohib‘lting discontinuance of the Shore Line "places an unâ€" due burden upon inter‘state comâ€" merce and confiscnbeifpetitione}-’l property and assets without due process of law contrary ‘to the State and Federal Constitutions; is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence; is unsupported by substantial evidence; is arbitrary and capricious; is erroneous; is contrary to the law and is preâ€" dicated upon fallacious theories and concepts of the law." * The North Shore Line today (Tuesday, Marchâ€"20) filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission in Springfield petitions for reconâ€" sideration of orders of February 21, denying the request of the railway to abandon its Shove Line Route and the application of a subsidiary company for operation of buses between Chicago and Waukegan. . Orders Arbitraryâ€" And Unlawful Says Commission‘s The opinion of the Commission a copy; $1.50 a year on page 5)

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