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                    <text>Photo

Deerfield
F

Grammar

School

Student

by

James

Kilcoyne

Council

The Deerfield Student Council includes pupils representing all eight grades.
Left to right, first row: Roger Antes,

Marlene Easton, secretary; Barbara Scott, president; ‘“Mike”’
Clark, vice president; George
Batt, Randall Vanderbeek,

Janet

James

Joseph

Antes,

Audrey

Hoffmann,

Allen,

Alice

DuVerney,

Peter Massa Arthur Drechsel.

Caryl

Segert,

Second

row:

Robert Sievert, Susan Jacob, Barbara Allen, Dorothy Nichols,

Thavieday, Mae 22,1947

Hayner, Charmaine
Absent

were Sharon

Jennine Wolf and Gordon

Daniels.
Boelter, James

Collins, Allen Wolf,

Rollman.

5. Per Copy

�For the first time
‘in 25 years...

—

the hospital
asks your help,

so it can be ready
to help YOU
whenever YOU

need

hospital help!

~ WHEN YOUR NEIGHBOR CALLS
MAKE A 3-YEAR CONTRIBUTION
TO THE HOSPITAL BUILDING FUND

|

�Volume

22, Number

8

Bus Service
For Deerfield
Begins Sunday
Illinois

The

approved

has

a

of

certificate

Highland

tion for the

commission

Commerce

Coach

be formally issued next week.
Norman Elsy, owner of the
land

;
'

lines

Coach

in

was

operaand
will

High-

Deerfield

for

north-south

the

For Entire Community, May 30

Tells of Plans

to

on

attend

this

one-hour

program

Thompson.

Harold

Root Jr. is pro-

gram chairman for the day.
As has been the custom for more
than 40 years, a parade will be held
and

children

of

the

will

decorate

soldiers.

All

the

graves

children

are

route

to and from the high school which
Shore -electric
parallels the ‘North
line’s tracks in Highland Park was
denied.

Busses will be housed in the Pokorny Reliable Garage, and information may be obtained there.
Mr. Elsy~ stated on Tuesday that
and
-bus service between Deerfield
Highland Park would begin on Sunday, and that two brand new buses
had been obtained to maintain halfhourly service.
(See Page 10 for schedule)

asked to bring home-grown flowers
for the graves.
The Program
The program:
9 a.m. Service at Deerfield Greeumnbe
school. .
Attention by bugler, Jack Gagne.
Posting of colors.
Invocation by the Rev. Father C. O.
Sullivan of Holy Cross church, former navy chaplain.
Brief talk by Amvets’ commander,
Lewis Thompson.
Introduction
of Amvets’
Auxiliary
president, Mrs. Roy Sternberg.
Presentation
of flag to school by
American Legion.
Presentation
of
poster
prizes
by
Legion Auxiliary president, Mrs. L.
R. Behrens.
Speaker, Captain Grogan of the 5th
Army Headquarters.
Parade Order of Marching
The parade will form as follows:

Women
Will
Tag
The annual Poppy Day tagging will
of Mrs.
the leadership
be under
Charles C. Kapschull Sr. of Spruce
May

Color bearers and color guard.
Commanders Earl Hurt and Lewis

26.

Legion Auxiliary members are being assisted by many women in the
community and will meet the early
trains and be at the main crossings.

Funeral

services

were

Satur-

‘day in Oak Park for William C. Wing
and burial was in Forest Home, with
Masonic rites. Mr. Wing passed away
several months ago in California. His
widow. Mrs. Wing, arrived here from
the west on Friday, and is staying

with his sister, Mrs.

Highland Park High school
American Legion.
Amvets.
American Legion auxiliary.
Amvets auxiliary.
Roy Scouts.
Girl Scouts.
Air Scouts.
Cub Scouts.

Thomp-

band.

A. W.

carnival.

Putman

Teach in LeMars, la.
Rev. Francis Boelter has resigned
as minister of the Bethlehem church
effective on June 1. He has accepted
a teaching position at Western Union
college, LeMars, Ia., where he will
be assistant professor
of religion.
In addition to his teaching, he will
have counseling duties.
The
Rev. Francis
Boelter,
who
came to Bethlehem church last\ September to fill the vacancy left by the
resignation of the Rev. Willis E.
Plapp, was working for his master’s
degree at Northwestern university.
The state church conference is being held this week at which time
ministers are assidhed to the various
churches and Deerfield’s church will
- notified this weekend of the name
of the Rev. Mr. Boelter’s successor.
The Boelters will be leaving Deerfield within the next two weeks and
his farewell sermon will be delivered
Sunday, June 1.
;

| Musical Comedy at
Glenview Air Base
“Master
edy,

Brownies.

held

15-16-17—Legion

son.

wd

Final Rites Held for
William C. Wing
,

8 p.m. Holy Cross Family movie
night.
MONDAY, May 26—
6 a.m. Poppy Tag Day.
8 p.m. Legion Post meeting.
10th
Dist. Comm. Archie Bowen, speaker.
WEDNESDAY, May 28—
8 p.m. “Game Night” benefit party
at Bannockburn school gymnasium.
THURSDAY, May 29—
12:15 p.m. Rotary Club luncheon.
FRIDAY, May 30—
9 a.m. Memorial Day celebration
at Deerfield school for entire communtiy.
Future Events:.
July 11-12-13 — Firemen-Amvets

Leaving ‘June 1; Will

Published

Monday,

FRIDAY, May 23— .

Rev. Francis Boelter

Legion

on

THURSDAY, May 22—
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7 p.m, Chamber of Commerce.

August

The annual appropriation ordinance
for the Deerfield-Bannockburn Fire
Protection district is published.
in
this week’s Review.
Anthony F. Nosek is president of
this board, Conrad Uchtman, secretary, and John R. Notz, trustee. Attorney for the board of trustees is
George McGaughey of Waukegan.

street

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

carnival.

Deerfield-Bannockburn
Fire Protection District

Appropriation

School Board 4

be-

fore going out for the day.
Commanders
of the two veteran
groups
are Earl Hurt
and Lewis

for
arrangements
making
Tuesday
bus stops at the main intersections
of the village, and discussed the parking spaces with Trustee Eric Banfield of the road and bridge committee and with Chief of Police Percy
McLaughlin.
Part of the Highland Coach line’s
petition

Deerfield

Deerfield Legionnaires and Amvets
will hold a joint Memorial Day celebration on Friday, May 30, at the
Deerfield Grammar school, beginning
at 9 a.m. The time has been set very
early so that residents will be able

lines to

operate buses between Deerfield
Park. The certificate
Highland

Legionnaires &amp; Amvets Plan
Joint Memorial Day Program

All

Others.

The line of march will be from the
Deerfield Grammar school, west on
Deerfield road to Waukegan
road,
then south to the Deerfield cemetery.
Program at Cemetery
At the cemetery the following program is planned:
Paraders
Posting
Placing

arrive.

i

of flags on veterans’
of flowers on graves.
7
$
a
% coat aie

}

Sm

ed

-

Bea
_
ae
¥

}
DA ns

will

tomorrow
airbase by
there. Lt.
tion to the

of
be

Love”,

a musical

presented

com-

tonight

and

evening at the Glenview
men and women stationed
Kinsley extends an invitapublic to attend.

Dedication of wreath for Deerfield World
War II dead, by Amvets.
Speaker, Warren Wright, Storekeeper, 1/c,
of Glenview airbase.
Benediction by the Rev. Hugo Leinberger,
pastor of St. Paul’s church, former navy
chaplain.

ees

—

mar oraher

tenet

tone.

At a joint meeting of the Deerfield
Grammar school board of education —
and the PTA
last Friday evening, —
Vernon J. Giss,
president
of the
schoo] board, presented a detailed and
comprehensive report of the school
finances, present and future.
William MacFadzian, of the firm of Everly, McFadzian,
and
Rose, play
ground consultants, showed ee
of the proposed playgrounds for the
Deerfield school, and explained the ee
plat. Superintendent W. E. Sheehan
compared today’s needs with 20 years, a
the PTA, presided at the meeting and
the business of election and annual
summary were capably handled. Mrs. —

Lewis

Hayner

was re-elected

vice-

—

president and Mrs. Benjamin Widoff
was elected secretary to succeed Mrs.

E. E. Cazel.
Buy Playground Apparatus
Proceeds of the
very
successful
“Fashions and Fun” night are to be
used for the purchase of playground |
equipment for the primary-age children. Appointed on the committee for —

this purchase

are

Mrs.

Frank

Fra-

ble, W. E. Sheehan, and Mrs. Robert
G. Heupel.
Employ Playground Planners
Mrs. Lewis Hayner, program chairman,
introduced
William
MacFadzian, playground consultant and plan-—
ner of Glencoe, who presented the
general development plan of Deerfield’s school playground, but because
of the high costs today, only survey
work, drainage and grading, are to

be done

immediately.

Large

turf

|

|

areas such as the baseball diamond
and soft ball courts will be put into
early use as there is comparatively —
little need for expensive equipment |
at the beginning.
The wet-weather playground and
apparatus areas are to be used largely _

by
will

sible

the

younger

children

be

developed

at

time.

Should

section will

be

the

it be

made

and

these

earliest

pos-

possible,

into

a

tennis —

courts, which can be used during the
vacation period, also.
Through Federal aid, the funds for.
proper planning of the playground —

have been made available and will not
come out of the bond issue revenue.
Financial Explanation

Vernon

J. Giss,

president

of

|

the

board, presented
the
statement of
school finances, including the two res
cent bond issues.
Two years ago a $20,000 bond issue
was approved. $16,000 was spent for
acquiring a portion of land adjoining
|
the school to the east and south. The —
land, after litigation, was purchased ~~
for $20 a front foot; court costs were
$1,700; survey, $250; and the balance

was

applied

toward

partial

interior

—

redecoration of the school. ~
The $30,000 bond issue approved
last year will be spent thus: $15,000
for the purchase of the remainder of —
(Continued on Page 24)
7%

�Thursday, May 22, 1947

MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

5

May

22,

THE

Vol.

1947

22,

No.

HAROLD

L.

PEET

Deerfield Forum

FAMILY

Teachers Need Housing;
Who Will Rent to Them?

8

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
Chestnut St., Deerfield,. Illinois

745

Ruth

Pettis,

To

the Editor:
Two
members
of the Deerfield
Grammar school faculty, who like the
village and
the school enough to

Editor

Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday
Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate— $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park, Dlinois
Telephone H.P.
4500

year

want

homes

A

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Tllinois Press
Association
‘Entered as second-class matter Novem.
office at Deerpost
ber 27, 1944, at the
of March
Act
the
under
Illinois,
field,
8, 1879.”

Helen

by

Collins,

Summer
Flayground
Softball League and
Equipment
Co-ordinators’
Salary
_ Winter Activities
Skating Rink
Holiday Parties for
All Groups
Miscellaneous

of

Expenditures

225.00
467.53
1,150.30
86.82
15.70

members.

Summer Program Outlined
Wiilliam Sheehan announced that
the soft ball league had been organized to include high school boys and
up. The first meeting of the soft ball
league was scheduled for May 12 in
Jewett Park, but unfortunately rain
prevented any games being played.
The softball league will meet every
from

now

Wednesdays,
Jewett

and

Park

with sand
Bases,
plied for
boys may
daytime.
It was
summer

on,

on

Friday

which

is being

Mondays,

nights

in

prepared

and dirt for this purpose.
ball, and bats will be supthis activity. The younger
use the field during the
also

announced

program

that

this

for the yotinger

chil-

dren will include outdoor volley ball,
indoor baseball to be played outdoors,
badminton,

field

trips,

and

the

pos-

sibility of swimming in one of the
nearby pools or at the beach. » Mr.
Sheehan said that the actual dates
for the program will be released after
he finds out what projects interest
the children most, as he does not
want

to

dictate

a

program

but

find

out how the children react and guide
the program accordingly.
_ Deerfield mothers are invited to
write and give their ideas and suggestions for this summer program.

_ These
up

letters

part

at present.

home

would

teacher, but the

be

adequate

second

would

education

for

owners

who

have

The school board feels quite btond
of its staff and would like to retain
these teachers, both because of their
teaching record and their desirability
as citizens of the village.

treasurer,

Mrs. Harry Thomson of Saunders
road was named secretary at a recent
meeting of this committee to replace
Mrs. Fred Marx who has resigned
because of the pressure of other civic
activities. Mrs. Marx’s fine work during and after, the formation of the
Deerfield
Recreation
committee
is
gratefully appreciated by all the com-

week

a

intendent.

$1,945.35

mittee

become

houses to rent, to get in touch with
them or with W. E. Sheehan, super-

that some $5,000 had been collected
from individuals and organizations in
Deerfield to further the purpose of
community recreation.
Of the $4,230 budgeted up to October 1, 1948, $1,925 was disbursed up
to May
1. The comparison of the
budget and expenditures follows:
Budget

and

require a minimum. of six rooms. The
housing situation being such as it is,
an appeal is being made by the board |

Financial Statement
the last meeting of the DeerRecreation Committee, it was

reported

remain

small

for one

Recreation Committee Reports
Finances &amp; Summer Schedule
At
field

to

of the community are tooking for
homes to rent. Current sale prices
are too high for the purchase of

will aid in the setting

of the schedule. Address your let-

Photo

by

James

Kilcoyne

Deerfield

To the left of the fireplace, seated, are Richard and Mrs. Peet
(holding Blue Persian cat). Robert is standing. To the right of the
fireplace are Mr. Peet and daughter, Sally. Connie, the airedale,
snoozes in the foreground.
Another

very

presented

interesting

today—the

family

Harold

is

L. Peets

of South Waukegan road, living in
the former C. B. Easton house, and
neighbors of the R. E. Jordans who
were introduced on May 15. Mr. and Mrs. Peet and their three
children, Bob, age 18, Dick, age 16,
and Sally, age 14, moved to Deerfield
from Glenview about six years ago,
purchasing tke former C. B. Easton
house from Mrs. Margaret Warner.
All

three

children

are

now

students

at Highland Park High school. Bob
is entering Northwestern university
in the

fall.

The Victorian furniture owned by
the Easton family was sold from this
house almost 30 years ago at a fraction of the original cost, in an oldfashioned
auction
sale.
Mrs. Peet’s

hobby is the Victorian period and she
has refurnished the house with many

burn

Reinking
Grade

of

school,

the

essay

“America’s
Contribution to Permanent Peace” was awarded first prize
in the Tenth Distfict in the annually
sponsored essay contest of the American Legion auxiliary, read this essay
at a meeting of the 10th District on
May 14 at Grayslake.
Karen was
accompanied

by

her

parents,

Mr.

is called “Ardendale”
in airedale breeding.
column

in a recent

ideas.
home

are interested
Bob Becker’s

edition of the Chi-

cago
Sunday Tribune contained a
picture
of several of Mrs.
Peet’s
airedales.
Mr. Peet is employed at Sears’
Irving Park store as operating superintendent. He was reared in Woodstock,

Ill,

and

was

graduated

from

the University of Illinois in 1925.
Mrs.
Peet’s
home
was
also in
Woodstock. She is the former Ardis
Buckley and attended the ‘Chicago
Academy
of Fine Arts and Snow
Froelich School of Industrial Art.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Peet take an
active interest in the civic affairs of

the community.

The Tripp Grade school commence-

Bannock-

whose

of that era, so in keep-

Tripp School Commencement
To Be Held Tuesday Evening

Karen Reinking Reads
Her Prize Winning Essay
Karen

lovely pieces

ing with the original owner’s
Mr. and Mrs. Peet, whose

and

Mrs. B. F. Reinking.
Deerfield unit was represented at
this meeting by a group of delegates.
ters to William Sheehan, Recreation
Program, Deerfield, IIl.
Willard J. Loarie,
Publicity Chairman
Recreation Committee

Deerfield School
Has New Secretary
Mrs. Harold Root Jr. is the new
secretary at the Deerfield Grammar
school, Mrs. Root succeeds Mrs. E.
W. Girton who has resigned. —

ment

exercises

evening

at

avenue,

west

E.

will

the
of

Barrette

be

held

school

of

on

Tuesday

Milwaukee

Deerfield.

Mrs.

C.

Warrington

road

is

teacher.

The four graduates are Marcelina
Baca, Margaret Joan Mylott, James
Smith and James Schlesser.
Ushering will be Merle Wolf, Patty
Long, Mary Didier, and Sue Stiller.
Board
members
are Walter Wolf,
Oliver Wolf, and Charles Farner.
The

Invocation,
Holy

Rev.

Cross

Program

James

V.

Murphy,

church.

Salutatory,

Marcelina

Highlights,

Margaret

Baca.
Joan

Mylott.

Class Will, James Smith.
Address, Rev. James V. Murphy.
Soloist, Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture.
Presentation
of
Diplomas,
Walter
Wolf.
Salute to Flag, James Schessler.
Accompanist, Cecil E. Barrette.

Board

Grammar

School

of Education

District

109

Rev. Martin L. Thomas
Visits Presbyterian Church
Rev. Martin Luther Thomas, who
was minister of the Deerfield Presbyterian church from September, 1920
to August, 1924, and is now a navy
chaplain, was the guest of Rev. and
‘Mrs. B. E. Vanderbeek at the Presbyterian Manse on Sunday.
The Rev. Mr. Thomas assisted with
the Sunday morning services in the
church of which he was the minister,
while the
new
edifice
was
being
erected.

Rotarians Hear Talk
By Chicago Attorney
Raymond B. Morris, practicing attorney in Chicago, who was educated
in both Canada and the United States,
and who has kept in very close touch
with Canadian affairs, spoke to the
Deerfield-Northbrook club Thursday,
his

subject

being

“Canada”.

He covered all of the provinces,
going back many years, and the fact
that over 80% of the Canadian people
lived within 200 miles of the border.
He discussed industry and farming,
and the French influence in the Province of Quebec.
:
He summed up by pointing out that
while we were two nations, we were
as close to one as could possibly be,
and that the United States and Canada had arrived at the point of mutual
understanding and friendship and the
solution of problems from discussions
across the table, which was the ambition of the United Nations in world
affairs.

Gene

Nelson

Celebrates

Fifteenth Birthday
Gene

Nelson,

Nelsons,

who

son
is

of

named

the
for

Harold
Gene

Tunney, celebrated his 15th birthday
anniversary on Friday, May 16. Here
A Day in Chicago
for the day were Gene’s grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Matthias Hoffmann | Mr. and Mrs. William M. Nelson of
of Waukegan road were Sunday din- ; Park Ridge and Mrs. Harold Nelson’s
ner guests of Mrs. Hoffmann’s par- niece, Mrs. Charles Shelton of Rio
ents, Mr. and Mrs, Richard Straub in de Janiero, Brazil, a former student
Suicnie. a
Bt Stephens. gallege, Mo.
mists

�| Malncn

von pS

“Kid Pie
Warvied

in

Binndckhorn

Viadon

VE

Fe og are

The

Glenview

Mr. and Mrs. Armin von der Linden
are now residing at 730 North St.
John’s avenue, Highland Park. Their
marriage took place April 19 in Im-

‘Makes the Wake’

May

breakfast

Garden

club

of the

was_

held

Wake

last Wednesday at the home of the
retiring president, Mrs. W. L. Keady.

Werner,

Judith

niece

bride,

the

of

in a full length dress of pink taffeta,
carried a bouquet similar to the maid
of

honor’s,

the

and

groom’s

nephew,

Paul Wenzel of Chicago, was the
ring bearer.
Erich von der Linden served his
brother as best man. Ushering were
Fred Biitzow, brother of the bride,
and Gerhard von
of the groom.

der

Linden,

brother

Henry M. Bernard Jr. of Deerfield,
soloist, sang “Be Still, My Soul” and
“The Lord’s Prayer”.
Following a two weeks’ honeymoon
at Niagara Falls, N.Y., Mr. and Mrs.
von der Linden are now at home in
Highland Park.

Columbus Symphony Signs
Rose Marie Barrett
Miss

Rose

Marie

Barrett

will

play

her

solo

will

re-

at

Kil-

bourn Hall in Rochester on Friday
evening. For three Saturdays (2 p.m.
Central Daylight Time) she is playing
on
a_ nation-wide
radio
program
“Orchestra of the Nations”.

Baptismal Services
For Infant Cousins
Rev. Hugo Leinberger of St. Paul’s
church officiated at the baptism of
infant cousins last Sunday.
Carol Jean Kapschull, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Kapschull
Jr. (Jean
Goodman),
had
as her
sponsors
Barbara
Kapschull
and
Richard Goodman.
Linda Vern Rectenwald, ‘daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Rectenwald
Mh (LaVerne
Goodman),
had as_
her

- sponsors Gertrude Goodman
ad

¢

amm 7 Mga

Engagement

.

home

Soll

TS KK

Sika

and Earl

on

_ The

Clty

Sunday.

wedding

November

_

22

in

:

will

take

place

Trinity

on

Episcopal

—

church, Highland Park, followed by a
reception at Exmoor Country club.
Miss Gooder, a graduate of Royce-

more

school in Evanston, is

a mem- |

ber of the Service club. Her fiance, |
who was graduated from Lake Forest |
academy, served with the navy Seabees in Africa and Europe during the
war.

Recent Arrivals
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce B. Brown of ©
Brierhill road have named their first
child Bruce Barth Brown Jr.
He ©
arrived April 21 at the Evanston hos- |
pital and is the second grandchild of
the William Garfield Browns, also of
_
Brierhill road.
Maternal grandpar-_
ents are Mr. and
Mrs.
Frank
J.
Stephan of Berwyn.

v

‘Aeond td Sohvans

Mr. and Mrs. James G. Russell of
Rosemary Terrace announce the engagement of their daughter, Florence
Russell Kamminga, to Louis S. Rainer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Rainer of Savannah, Ga.
No date
has been set for the wedding.

Vows

,

wind

Amendt, son of Mr. and Mrs. William

Gordon Louis Misch arrived at the ©
Highland Park hospital on Friday,
May 16. He is the first child of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis A. Misch of 1124 —
Forest avenue.
His paternal grand-

Amendt of Cary, IIl., will be married
Saturday morning, May 31, in the
Holy Cross Catholic church.

cago and the maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. James W. Shore of

Miss Mary C. Behrens, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Behrens of
River Woods road, and William §&amp;.

mother is Mrs. Jennie Misch of Chi-

_

Kansas City.

Bannockburn Mothers’
Club To Have Benefit

FACULTY

Party for the School
On Wednesday, May 28, at 8 p.m.
there will be a benefit party at the
Bannockburn Grade school gymnasium.
Given by the mothers of the
lower grade children, tt will be “Game
Night” with table tennis, card games,
Mrs.

N. Y., in June, and has signed her
contract to be a member of the Columbus, Ohio, Symphony Orchestra.
Miss Barrett, who has majored in
viol,

isin
ner-

D.

engagement of their younger daugh- —
ter, Betsy Jean, to Edgar Daniel
Crilly, son of the Edgar Crillysof
Winnetka, at a cocktail party in their

I have listened intently and believe I
Members arranged bridge luncheon
have heard
tables, including cloth, dishes, silver, | A comforting sleepytime song
and floral arrangement, which were When the last crimson rays of the sun
all so artistic that it was difficult to
disap pear
decide which were the winners. Prizes
And twilight comes creeping along.
were awarded to Mrs. Robert Farquhar, first; Mrs. Friedel S. Fuller, Miscellaneous Shower
second; and Mrs. Gordon Glaescher, Given for Shirley Scott
sister of Mrs. Farquhar, third. Three
Miss
Shirley
Scott, whose
marOthers tied for honorable mention.
New officers for the coming year riage to Lyle Jacobs will be an event
are Mrs. Harry Wright, president; of June 7 in St. Paul’s church was
Mrs. A. J. McMaster, vice president; the guest of honor at a miscellaneous
shower on Friday evening at the
Mrs.
Charles
Allen, secretary;
and
home of Mrs. Robert Highline gér
Mrs. H. B. Graffis, treasurer.

Park Ridge.

Edgar

Mr. and Mrs: Seth M. Gooder of
West Deerfield road announced the

TEA

Robert

chairman

of

Sullivan

is

general

arrangements.

The

mothers are planning to decorate the
classroom with the “Winnie the Poo”
motif. Draperies, a
€ornice the full
length of one side of the classroom
and stuffed dolls in the characters of
the

book

will be

done

by

the

women,

many with artistic talent.
The public is invited.

A

Rev. Hugo Leinberger of St. Paul’s
church was the guest speaker
on
Monday evening at the annual Brotherhood ladies’ night banquet at Rev.
F. G. Piepenbrok’s church in Oak
Park. The Rev. Mr. Piepenbrok was
pastor of St. Paul’s church from 1925
to 1942, leaving Deerfield for the Oak
Park church.
The Rey. Mr. Leinberger was a navy chaplain
until
April 1, 1947, when he accepted a call
to St. Paul’s church.

Marriage License
A

marriage

license

was

issued

in

Waukegan last week for the re-marriage of George Nahum Hersom, 63,
Chicago, and Irene Mitchell Hersom,

| 36,.Deerfield road, Highland Park.

was

born

May

13 to |

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn J. Lockwood of |
County Line road at the Highland
Park hospital.

STORK

land Park hospital. This is the 17th
grandchild of the George W. Stickens
of Sheridan avenue.

More

on

SHOWER
than

thirty .guests

honored

Mrs. John Derby, the former Shirley
Clark, at a stork shower last Thurs-

day afternoon.
The
at the home of Mrs,
of Waukegan

road

Mr. and
Waukegan
arrival of

patty was held
William Majors

with

Mrs.

Maurice

Allsbrow (Josephine Schessler) and
Mrs. Glenn Ohman (Betty Muhlke)
as the co-hostesses.
Back from Trip

Rev. Hugo Leinberger Is Guest
At Rev. F. G. Piepenbrok’s Church

daughter

Mr. and
Mrs.
Richard Hoffmann
have returned to their home on Waukegan road after a two weeks’ trip

to New

York.

En

stopped

off

Murray,

Mr.

and

at

Mrs.

Hoffmann)

route

home
Ky.,

Philip Tennis

and

they|

to

visit

(Frances

iy

Mrs. Theodore Sticken of —
road are announcing the
a daughter, Nancy Jean,

Saturday,

May

10, at the

Gloria Barrett Is Ill
Home From U. of Colo

_
—

High-—

~

Miss Gloria Barrett was unable to
complete her second year at the Uni-

—

versity of Colorado because of illness
and arrived
Sunday.

home

from

Boulder

on

8th Graders Take Excursion
Trip to See Chicago Sights
Twenty-five
Deerfield

eighth

Grammar

~

:

graders of the —
school

took

an

excursion trip last Friday accompan-

two: sons.

Royal Neighbor Party
Mrs. Matthias Hoffmann was hostess at a luncheon yesterday at her
home on Waukegan
road
for
the
members of the Royal Neighbor sewing club.

ied by their teacher, L. E. Seaver;
W. E. Sheehan, superintendent; Mrs.
Arthur Kaatz, Mrs. Donald Easton,
Mrs.. R. O. Clark, all of Deerfield,
and Mrs. Earl McGath of Highland
Park.
They attended a performance of
the radio show “Musical Milk Wagon”
at
the
Merchandise
Mart, then

"te

—
—
©
|

St. Paul’s’ Guild

walked to the Board of Trade to see ~

The Woman’s Guild of St. Paul’s
church will meet Thursday, June 5,
at 1:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs. C.

there. They also observed the Board
of Trade businesson the floor,
In the afternoon they visited the

the minature elevator, and

capschull Sr. of Spruce street.
a eessalb

sip

Ey

ie

ks

Ni

DAN RE

asi

FE

dia) fi

Planetarifm. —

Li Sieh aN

oy

|

had

|

i

The
Deerfield
Grammar - school
faculty were honored guests at a tea
on Wednesday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. J. H. Kies of Landis
lane. Mrs. William §. Jacob, of the
Highland Park section of district 109,
was co-hostess.

etc.

ceive her degree at Eastman School
of
Music, University
of Rochester,

bass

column on Mon-

;
Lullaby Time
Do mother birds sing a_ rock-a-bye
song
When they’re putting their babies to
bed—
A soft little twittering lullaby tune
While they're being tucked in and
fed?

ing.

For her wedding to the son of
Rev. and Mrs. John von der Linden,
Forest avenue, Deerfield, . the
1021
Butzow,
Laura
bride, the former
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hi.
Butzow of Glenview, chose the traditional white satin, designed with lace
inserts and long train. Her veil was
finger tip length and she carried
white roses, sweet peas and carnations.
The maid of honor, wearing pink
taffeta and carrying a colonial bouquet of blue carnations and pink
sweet peas, was the bride’s sister,
Adeline, who will marry the groom’s
Wearing
Erich, in June.
brother,
identical frocks of light blue taffeta
were the bridesmaids Mrs. John Ackerman of Rockford and Mrs. Otto
carried
They
of Chicago.
Wenzel
bouquets of pink carnations and blue
sweet peas. All three wore matching
flowers in their hair.

of the News”

day:

officiat-

with the Rev. G. F. Raedeke

Ad

Mrs. Paul M. Dietz (Laura Karch)
of Deerfield road had the following
poem accepted in Arch Ward’s “In the

Glenview,

church,

Lutheran

manuel

annual

Bannockburn

Biss hei Gade
Plan Fall Wedding

Deerfield Poetess

Garden

Club May Breakfast
Held at Keady Home

lunch

—

�Hill, Wall

Our Weekly Story of

s HIGHLAND

PARK

HOSPITAL
Last

Dick

Flinn,

and

compete

in

Dick

Deno
the

Sheridan,

state

Fred

home
on
submarine
The

a 30 day leave from
duties in the Navy.

Porterfield

and Roy—are

Army

Ave.

A

New Understanding of Fhe Bible
A

new understanding

through

of The

Bible

the study of Christian

gained |

Science is

‘apparel

is

‘Mrs.

headquarters

our

Edna

for

Children’s

Edwards,

for
camp

Children’s

manager, has a complete stock of the
latest in campwear ready for your
youngsters.

for

nament
he

the

National

in Detroit

placed

among

P.G.A.

tour-

month

when

next
the

top

seven

per-

formers in the Illinois tryouts at St.
Andrews
course
Monday... Sam,
one of the most consistent top-notch
golfers in the state, was recently installed Exalted Ruler of the Highland
Park Elks.
Our Palm Beach and tropical wor‘sted suit department. is practically
bursting with eye-appealing numbers
. We invite you to come in and
browse around . . . Oh, yes, in case

you

might

open

Monday

have

forgotten,

nights, 7 to 9.

Fells
rue

Sta

We at

eee

:

Ge

a

on

Saturday,
*
*

BIBLE, the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE text-

Brugioni

book and periodicals containing testimonies of

their

CHRISTIAN

SCIENCE

READING

son

Peter

on Sunday,

Parents

Mrs.

hospital.

born

at

the

May
*

17.

local

C, Murphys

first

of 433 Lin-

are the parents of a son
Highland Park hospital

May
*
of

18.
me

a dws

child,

are

Linda

Lee,

and

Mrs.

Mr.

John Brugioni, 251 High street, Highwood. The baby was born at Lake
Forest hospital May 17. Mrs. Brugioni is the
former
Rose
Bruno.
Grandparents include Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Bruno of 1209 Pleasant avenue
and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brugioni of

healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at

ROOM

43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN

DAILY:++-

YOU

ARE

WELCOME

Varied Styles to Be
Modeled at Trinity
Fashion Show Today
Smart summer beach wear, afternoon and evening dresses, suits and
sportswear are among the fashions

GREAEDT f the Graduate
gs}AGRE
-.

which

we are

BE SURE

TO SEE OUR

ATTRACTIVE

GIFTS

-and black

from $1.75

The

AUTOGRAPH BOOKS ...........--------------------ssseesseesseees from $1.25
PHOTO ALBUMS &amp; SCRAP BOOKS ................ from $1.95
Colors
or Ladies’

white,

brown,

blue

and

black

COMB &amp; BRUSH TRAVEL MILITARY SETS . . from $7.50
SHEAFFER, PARKER &amp; EVERSHARP PEN &amp;
PONEH. SETS cc toc
from $5.95
LEATHER

(leather, lucite or metal)

ZIPPER

BRIEF

CASES

FLUORESCENT

&amp;

fashion

NOTE

BOOKS

........ from
from

$3.95

of buff

buckram

GRADUATION

(indexed)

CARDS

............ now

from

$25.00

fashions

are

from

Hein’s ex-

parade.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

5c

Chandler's Ine.
525 Central Ave.

models

$10.50

WEBSTER’S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
3,350 pages; 600,000 entries; 12,000 terms illustrated.
Binding

as

Mrs. Charles Perrigo is president
of Trinity guild. In charge of the
event today is Mrs. James M. Cuthbertson, general chairman.

Bracelets, Pins, etc.

Brown or black.
DESK LAMPS 4050...

review

Dessert will be served at 1 o’clock,
to be followed by the fashion review
at 1:30 o’clock. Bridge will follow the

..0000.022.. from $2.50

STATIONERY TRAVEL CASES .... from $6.00:
Necklaces,

in

rens.

HOROSCOPE &amp; POETICAL BIRTHDAY BOOKS from $1.00
Attractive Assortment COSTUME JEWELRY from’ $1.00
Rings,

pass

clusive Smartwear shop in Waukegan. They will be shown by the following
models:
Mesdames
Samuel
Bingham, John Newey, Arthur Rooney, Hugh Seyfarth, Claburn Jones,
George
Ross,
Harold
Rutherford,
Earl Sproul and Misses Marjorie Ful-_
ler, Barbara Blessing, and Lynn Ah-

ALL LEATHER BILLFOLDS -.................. g--. from $5.00

COMPACTS

will

parade inthe fashion show which will
be staged in the parish house of Trinity Episcopal
church
today.
The
fashion show, which will be followed
by dessert bridge, is one of the major
features of the year’s program of the
Woman’s auxiliary and guild.

DIARIES « colors, red, brown, blue, =

Men’s

Highland Park’s Sam Bernardi has
done it again...Sam,
Old Elm’s
golf professional, won a qualifying
berth

and

Italy.

Store...

our

of

hospital

-

and

Mr.

Mrs. Thales Lanington of
St.. Johns avenue, are the

parents

The

senior class president, is living

camp,

to

Highland Park
*
4
*

coln avenue,
born at the

Christian Science at no cost to yourself. The

his

in Cambridge with his wife and month
old daughter.
ready

born

Murphy

tresses to many thousands. You may investigate

is

Bill Jones, son of the W.T. Jones
of N. Linden, was the recipient of a
General
Electric fellowship at the
Harvard
Business Administrative
School .. . Bill, 1939 Highland Park

to get

the

Mr. and
805 South

bringing release from disease and other dis-

brothers—Louis

time

was

Lanington

going great guns in the

is the

son

17 at

section at Camp Stoneman, California
‘while Roy is a dental assistant in
Korea with the 17th Infantry division.

Now

a

Anton Svoboda Jr., on Saturday, May

... Lou is in the headquarters

High

of

Svoboda

Valley’s

of Deerfield

Phillips

‘me

/

The

Roscher

C.

a daughter born at the Highland Park
hospital on Wednesday, May 14.

Dan

1929.

Mrs. Hugh

320 Central avenue are the parents of

championship

Bill Chambers—Sunset

new pro—in

Phillips
Mr. and

»

Melchiorri—will

meet at Champaign this weekend .
The locals, noted for its famous team,
will be one of the favorites to cop
the crown ... According to the re- cords—Harry
Pertz’s
of the high
school—Highland Park annexed IIlinois prep titles in 1939 and ‘1940 while
the 1941 squad took second place
honors
... Manuel
DeLa Torre—
Northwestern’s present
captain—
Herb Chambers, Willy Wolak, Harry
Mussatta
and
David Horenberger
were the members
of those three
crack aggregations
...DeLIa Torre,
by the way, set a new mark in 1940
while winning individual honors with
a 144 total for 36 holes ... Other
individual
state crowns have been
won by HPHS’rs Dick Martin in 1924

and

Year

421
184
1,534
5,672
391

‘Tel.H. P. 3100

a
yo

Ori,

Coleman

This

.

2

Highland Park High’s golf team
is to be congratulated on winning the
district title last Saturday over a
rainswept Sunset Valley course ....
&lt;'The local “linksmin—Dors “Mouse”

Week

Emergencies attended 2.0.2.2... c....ccceeceecteeeee ee 51
Babies delivered
9
X-ray examinations
63.
Laboratory examinations ........ 22... 301
Operations performed
.................... aie. Senet ae

Rt.
Rev.
Rev.

Deerfield and Green Bay Koaas
Highland Park ig
Msgr. Joseph
P. Morrisoa,
Pastor

Rev.

Edmund
John P.

J. Skoner,
O'Connell,

Ln A.,
M.A.,

8.T
S.T

MASSE»
Sundays—6 :30, 7: $0, 9 00, 10:00, 11:00
nd 12 novuu.
Weekdays—6 730 - 8:15.
CONFESSIONS
Sernge
areas eves. of apo
Fridays ane

|

Daye 4:00 and 1:8

\

�-

cobs
ae

ve

-

Rt. Rev. M

a,

4

*‘ai

a3

3

au

ser. Morris n Will —
Be Memorial Day Speaker Here

Will Deliver Address in
Ceremony at Memorial Park
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison, pastor of Immaculate Conception church in Highland Park who
‘prior to taking charge of the local
parish was for 17 years rector and
administrator of Holy Name cathedral, Chicago, will be the speaker of
the day in the veterans’ ceremony
to

be

conducted

monunrent

in

the

steps

Memorial

on

park,

of

the

Pros-

pect and Laurel avenues, at 11 o’clock
Memorial day morning.
The annual ceremony will be pre¢eded by a parade through the busi‘ness district of the city, starting at
10:15 a.m. from Central avenue and
Green Bay road. Mayor Robert F.
Patton, Commander Raymond Mann
of the VFW and Commander Chris
Matthiesen

of

the

American

Legion

will head the line of march, which
will include the high school band,
members of the Legion and VFW
auxiliaries, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts,
Red Cross and representative groups
from civic, fraternal and patriotic
organizations in the community.

The

Rt/ Rev.

well

known

church

the

and

Msgr.

for

his

civic

is
in

affairs

Archdiocese

ceived

Morrison
prominence

of

throughout

Chicago.

part of his education

attended
timore,

St. Mary’s
Md.,

and

the

He

re-

in France,

seminary

in Bal-

Catholic

Univer-

sity of America in Washington D. C.,
was former personal representative ot
the late Cardinal Mundelein and is
governor of the Catholic Church Extension society.
The committee in charge of the
ceremony includes Commander Raymond

Mann,

Robert

Schneider

and

Gordon Clavey of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars; and Commander Chris

MSGR.
|

JOSEPH

MORRISON

Hugo Schneider of the VFW.
All veterans in the community have |
been invited to take part in the parade, and the public is cordially invited to attend and take advantage
of this opportunity to pay tribute to
the many from Highland Park who
gave their lives in the service.

Royal Neighbors to Attend
Party in Waukegan Monday
The Royal Neighbors, Camp
No.
5126 of Highland Park, will hold their
next regular
meeting
on Monday,
May 26, beginning promptly at 7 p.m.
at the Masonic temple on Sheridan
road. It was announced that the reason for an early meeting was to enable members of the Highland Park
camp

to

attend

a

costume

$

\

Ringworm

Ellison

GREENWOOD

Bay,

Door County, Wsconsin
26th YEAR
FOR

BOYS AND GIRLS
Ages 7 to 14 Years
July
They
of real

4

to

August

15

will enjoy the advantages
outdoor life and compan-

ionship with a fine group of. boys
and girls under able guidance.
Greenwood is ideally situated with
all the facilities which woods, waterfront and natural beauty can offer.
Phone

or write
for folder
detailed
information.

6

Bertram

A.

Weber

1885 Groveland |

HP. 1782

infection

of the

of

scalp

is an

childhood—and

probably contracted more often
in the summer when children
are bareheaded.
First evidence of the disease
is a small bald spot that will
enlarge gradually if the fungus
infection is not treated. Since
there are various types of fungi,
diagnosis is the first step in

controlling the infection.

Your doctor will advise treatment, if medicures are needed
let a trusted druggist supply

your

needs’ from

stocked

his

freshly

shelves.

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.
—Pharmacists—
Highland Park
Phone

2600

Fashion Plus |

by Serbin

~

and

CAMP GREENWOOD
Mrs.

of

The Scalp
Ringworm

CAMP

to

kegan.

Matthiesen,
Major
Harvey
Hopp,
parade
marshal,
and
Senior
Vice
Commander
Albert
‘Bork
of
the

American
Legion. , Presentation
of
wreaths at the monument will be
made by Judge Henry Hansen, district chaplain
of the Legion, and

party.

be given by the Royal Neighbors of
Waukegan at the Legion hall in Wau-

Ravinia

Phone 2300

Cool chic in a two piece chambray . . . broad stripes
for

that

long,

lithe

brown stripes on white.

look.

Blue,

green,

black or

Sizes 10 to 18 ........ $1295

|

�Page8

DUES EN RENE

S

TER

ON dela

dag 2a S0EF

HOSPITAL AUXILIARY AT WORK
Papa

FUR
STORAGE
Time
Don’t trust your closets!
Have your furs cleaned and
revitalized by “VOGUE” and then stored in our refrigerated

storage

vault

@

FIRE
@ DUST

for positive

protection

@
®

ORY CLEANERS FOR

from

THEFT
MOTHS

~®22.PARTICULAR PEOPLE

THE

WOMAN’S

AUXILIARY

OF

Gold Star Women Are

WITH the

Invited to Tea
Highland Park
Highland Park
Winnetka

Masters in the art of rug and furniture cleaning.
Prompt attention given to mail orders. Beautiful
new carpeting.

if

view avenue,
the Highland

ary, asks

Gold
Park

that

Star chairman of
unit of the auxili-

all

contact

Transportation

her

local

Gold

Star

at

H.P.

3403.

will be arranged.

Binding, Serging and Repairing of all types
—

Asphalt Tile

HIGHLAND

—

PARK

N. Sheridan

Rubber Tile

RUGS

3500

oh

MAY

15th

Men’s

Pads
Stair

Park

FOR:|12
League,

8:00

An

p.m.

Keep your average or improve it
at the coolest spot in town.
Air conditioned for your comfort.

excellent opportunity to establish
your average.

HIGHLAND TEN PIN
139 N. SECOND

ST.; HIGHLAND

PARK

Ellsworth

LODGES

Glencoe

MORAN

FURNITURE CLEANED
Ave.

hall,

CARPETING

of
360

hotel,
er
Valley

12:15
club
:

Moose,
Central

No.

446,

avenue,

8

TUESDAY
Post

Odd Fellows
temple.

No. 42, Masonic

Lodge,

No.

501,
}

WEDNESDAY
Park Chapter No. 226,
Masons, Masonic temple,

Veterans of Foreign
hall, 8 p.m.

MOTHPROOFING

Wars,

Witten

THURSDAY

Tel. H. P. 1137

Lions

club
7

Ladies

Night,

Moraine

p.m.

SPECIAL
DOGS

By the Case

Nights,

8:00 p.m.
League, Wed. Nights,
:00 p.m.
Mixed Leagues, Fri. Nights,

—_e.

Jr.

renders

WILSON'S IDEAL
DOG FOOD

WEEKS

Tues.

Order

Highland,
eae Arch

FOR

Ladies

i‘

Prior,

Highwood
Legion
City hall, 8 p.m.

hotel,

SUMMER LEAGUES ARE
~ NOW FORMING
TO \\,

-

LIFE-TIME

117

Highland

Rd.

JOHN

|

OHN B-NASH:

Rubber
Padding

19

| oyal

Vorest academy, on Sunday, May 25, | witten
from 3 to 5 p.m.
p.m.
Mrs. Chris Matthiesen, 1720 Broad-

mothers

Relaying

Mrs.

All Gold Star mothers, , wives ? sis.
Rot
lub,
M
ters and daughters of World War I ca eet Se
res
and II are invited to attend a tea and|~
Kiwanis club, Sunset
musicale to be given by the American | 6.39 p.m.

Legion auxiliary at Hixon hall, Lake}

Linoleum

H.

MONDAY

3900
3903
3360

1900

Alterations and

Percy

HOSPITAL

On the left are Mrs. Willard Nelson, Mrs. W. N. Strubank and
Mills. At right, Mrs. Vernon Mortimer and Mrs. Kenneth Lacy.

CLEANER/
AND DYER

ner

by

PARK

invaluable aid to the hospital in many ways. Members regularly produce large
quantities of surgical dressings, raise funds for purchase of equipment, personally
serve at the building when needed.
Last week these auxiliary women met to make dressings at Trinity church.

OOUE
327-329 N. Green Bay Road
391 Roger Williams Ave.
44 Green Bay Road
Glencoe

Photo

HIGHLAND

TEL.

319

$5.75
FREE

DELIVERY

Nn ers
6 NO. SHERIDAN RD.

|

H. P. 206

|
|

|

�‘Thursday, May 22, 1947
Happenings of
Highland Parkers
Robert
Two

Wolters

Elected

Fraternities

at

to

Purdue

Robert Wolters, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. E. Wolters, 1303 Judson avenue, has been elected to two fraternities at Purdue university, where he is
a senior student in electrical engineering. Eta Kappa Nu, and Tau Beta Pi,
national honorary, both electrical engineering fraternities, have honored
him with memberships.
Leave for New
Mr.
son,

York City

and Mrs.
Don,

of

Walter
745

E. Parker

Braeside

and

road

will

Moose Plan May Dance at
Masonic Temple Saturday

Annual Stamp Club

Chairman Leonard
Stratford
and
members of the entertainment committee of the Loyal Order of Moose

Junior Stamp
club
of
Highland
Park Community center will hold its
second annual stamp exhibit at the
center on Saturday starting at 2 p.m.

Lodge

No. 446 of Highland

Exhibit Saturday

Park, have

completed plans for a May dance to
be held Saturday, May 24, at 8:30
p.m. at the Masonic temple, second
floor. Music for dancing will be furnished by Bob Norwood’s orchestra.
Tickets may be obtained at the door.
All members and the public are invited.

Two Ridge Farm Girls Make
First Communion at Barat

leave this week for New York City
where Mr. Parker will represent the
State of Illinois at the International

On Mother’s day two Ridge Farm
girls made their first communion at
Barat college chapel. Mass was celebrated
by Father
Daly,
following

Association

which

of

Public

Employment

personnel. The Parkers plan to visit
other Eastern cities before returning
to Highland Park.

Kay

Cullen,

Pearson

were

cellaneous

and

sister,

co-hostesses

shower

in

at

honor

will

be

at

an

the

avenue,

event

of

a

misMiss

to John
N. Y.,

Saturday,

Pearson

on

Mary

of

Rita Alders, whose marriage
R. Clark of Binghampton,
31,

home,

Wednesday,

May

634

May

Vine

14.

Lake

Forest,

Ridge

Farm,

communicants,

Jean

Carney

of

junior

board

member

of

Downes,

Sgt.

Margeson

Kenneth

Margeson

spending

the

William

Harvard

court

of

had

Los

announced

this

at

Linville

All

$ 3 39

distinctive
Blend

week.

to

700

Highland

Cal., where

she

spent two weeks.

Saternational
Sterling
, Master Craftsmanship in lovely,
| enduring, solid
| silver”

I. H. Nemeroff
Jewelers &amp; Opticians _
Fine Watch—Jewelry Repairing
Highland Park
Tel. H. P. 630

in

Guaranteed

CORBY’S
RESERVE
5th $3.37
FOUR ROSES
5th
$4.25
HUNTER’S
5th
$4.23
Old Underoof
5th weeene $4.09
SCHENLEY
RESERVE
5th
$3.90
3 FEATHERS
RESERVE
5th
$3.90
SEAGRAM’S
7 CROWN
5th
$3.94
LORD
CALVERT

CHANDLER'S
525

Central

Ave.

Tel.

H.P.

3100

PROPER
EXPOSURE
With A
Meter

5th

$3.25
@
Perfect Enlargements
SAME

DAY

GILBEY’S

GIN

Full

2c

QUAL’.

75¢
DEVELOPING
OPEN

AND

PRINTING

MONDAY

EVENINGS

24 HOUR
7 TO

RD.

$4.52
$3 88

GIN

$398

Guare: 2o.000 3358

WALKER’S
BU

GIN

csc Jprconstpetenrsceswnins

FLEISCHMANN’S
ETE

$312

$319

cis cenecer decane

Bonded Whiskies
OLD GRAND DAD
OLD TAYLOR
OLD FO RESTER
OLD FITZGERALD
KENTUCKY TAVERN

Phone 4579

Phone

4579

SERVICE

Adolph’

9

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE
6 NO. SHERIDAN

Full

SERVICE
FROM YOUR
NEGATIVE

25°

YOUR CHOICE
OF PATTERNS.

:

Work

Whiskies

IMPERIAL
5th $3.39
PARK &amp;
TILFORD
5th $3.53

NOW AVAILABLE
Office Typewriters
Adding Machines
4 drawer steel letter files
Order Today

home.

of

Str.

$398

William
Penn

TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED
BY EXPERT REPAIRMEN

George W. McGhie Jr. of 656 Kimball road has been appointed assistant
general manager
of the Highland
Park office of the Chicago Motor
it was

of

5th

KINSEY

returned

Angeles,

Blend

house-

Highland

Park recently from a trip to Louisville, Ky.
On Easter Sunday Mrs.
Linville made a return journey by
air from

Special— PRIVILEGE

Originated

Home

summer

D.

Phone 4579 for
FREE DELIVERY

5th

The
McGhies
have
made
their
home in Highland Park since 1922.
Recently they returned from a trip
to California.

Mrs. Linville Returns
From Kentucky Trip
Mrs.

the

A

Park is expected home today, having
served 18 months in the AAF. He will
return to Carroll college in the fall
after

of

sented to worthy exhibits. Members
of North Suburban Philatelic society
will serve as judges.
High school and grade children who
wish to enter the exhibit may register with Mr. Sanborn or at the Community center. Admission to the show
is free and is open to all.

Russell
D.
Parmenter,
the
.June
Whitworth,
of
Salem,

Kenneth

leader

collection
in the exhibit.
No entry
fee is required.
Awards will be pre-

Ore., arrived in Highland Park on
Mother’s day and is spending several
weeks visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. R. Whitworth of 2387 North
Deere Park drive.
Sgt.

adult

their

Miss
Mrs.

Sanborn,

club, will be in charge.
An invitation is extended
to all
Highland Park boy ‘and girl stamp
collectors to enter all or part of their

Appointed Assistant Manager
Of Local Motor Club Office

club,

Mrs. Russell Parmenter
Visits Parents Here
Mrs.
former

two

mothers,

A.

your

WEEK-END
AU

mother at the Farm, and other children who attended mass, were served
breakfast at the college.

Miss Alders Is Honored
At Bridal Shower
Mrs.

the

own

C.

ps

Ta

Ok

H. P. 206

LIQu
ORS
)c
eh 8
SERVICE

Aisle

335

Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
FREE DELIVERY

�Buddy Poppy

|
eiabhs
Dial Telephone Building!

Comrades

Dance Saturday

of Highwood, VFW

4741, will hold

a Buddy

Poppy

FLOORS SANDED

Post
Dance

AND

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

Saturday evening, May 24, at the post

Dial Phone Service Among
Plans for Highland Park

Bell

clude faster long distance service with
operators dialing calls direct from
their switchboards to telephones all

Purchase of property on Second
street between Central avenue and
Elm place by the Illinois Bell Telephon company as the site of a future
_ dial telephone building was announced

over

_

The property has a frontage of 225
feet on the west side of Second street

The

Mrs.

Commerce

commission

however,

was

denied.

Accordingly bus
service between
Highland Park
and
Deerfield
will
start Sunday, May 25, the first bus
leaving from Deerfield at 7:45 a.m.,
Norman Elsy, president of the line,
said Tuesday.
The schedule has been arranged to
meet most of the imfortant Northwestern and North Shore commuter
trains, Elsy added, with service planned every 30 minutes Sunday and a
week day staggered schedule as follows:
From 6:30 to 9 a‘m., every 20 minutes; from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., every 30
minutes; from 3 to 7 p.m., every 20
minutes, and from 7 to 11:30 p.m., every 30 minutes.
—

_ The company’s plans for Highland
Park are part of its vast postwar expansion program,
Knox
said,
and
most of the money to. carry out the
program must come from people who
are willing to invest their savings in
the telephone business.
Other phases of the program in-

George Boardman to
Speak at Lions Meet

Dr. Sherwin in Grand Rapids
Dr. Louis W.
the
Highland

The Highland Park Lions club is
meeting today at 12:15 p.m. at the
_ Moraine hotel for the regular luncheon gathering of the organization.
George Boardman, Scout executive of
the North Shore Area Council, Boy

will

Illinois

school,

Expansion

of America,

netproand
and
cus-

last week granted a certificate of convenience and necessity for the Highland Coach lines to operate motor
busses between
Highland
Park
at
Central avenue and First street, and
the Milwaukee station in Deerfield.
The bus company’s petition to extend
its route to Vine avenue and the high

Leslie G. Goudie,
who
was
represented by Attorney George L. Reilly
of Lake Forest; and Angelo Menoni
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pekar, represented by Attorney Paul C. Behanna
of Highland Park. The sale was negotiated by Farr and Company
of
Chicago. J. W. Kissell of the Chicago
law
firm of Sidley, Austin, Burgess
and Harper acted for the Illinois Bell.

Scouts

service

Highand Park and
Deerfield Bus Route
In Operation Sunday

Plan Two-Storey Building
Knox said the Illinois Bell’s plans
call for the erection of a two-storey
and basement fire-resistive building
_ of modern design. Start of construc_ tion, he added, will depend on ap_ proval by the Civilian Production administration and the availability of
_ materials.

Postwar

telephone

discuss

with

proceeds

VFW

veteran

Music
the
be

and

Comrades,
served.

SHELBY

Admission will be the pur-

chase of a Buddy

Poppy

planned

to

go

Phone

into

church,

is

in

Grand

Rapids,

-Mich.,

the

a

INSURANCE
HILL
372

&amp;

Central

STONE
~

H P. 64

oe

skits will be supplied by
refreshments

will

Ask
I have
of the
Shore.

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher: All aluminum combination screen and storm sash. |
&amp;

&amp;

if you prefer we will rewire your
screens with bronze or galvanized
FOR

present
wire.

ESTIMATE

H. N. GAMLIN
F. H.

150

for

Mrs.

ILL.
7120-M

5218
Stewart

sanded and finished
finest
homes
along

over 1006
the North

You Are Head Man This
Week.
We’re
ready
for those
Heavy
school coats—those snuggly plaid

shorts—and

A.

.
Deerfield 416

warm

forget

wool

that nice

Call H. P. 177 or 178
And your service man will be
stopping the next time he passes.
Our staff will be pleased to clean
them just like “Pop’s”—waterproof or mothproof them—Returning them in moth bags for
your protection next fall.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY |
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
Tel. H. P. 177

618 N. Green Bay Road
*&amp;
Highland Park

SCOTTS NEW DRY COMPOUND

KILLS THE WEEDS AS
FEEDS SHE: GRABS
Double duty action to make
your lawn a beauty.
Broadleaved weeds are permanently
roots

and

all.

The

SCOTTS LAWN FOOL
Plus WEED CONTROL

“Box to WEED/FEED
|
2500sq ft (50x 50) 3.36
Enough for 10,000 sq ft “2 $12.75 :

Terms

S. First St.

those

sweaters. Don’t
dress suit too.

same action provides the grass
with a healthful feeding thai
results in thicker growth and
richer color. Scatter by hand or
spreader in a few minutes.

HOW ARE YOUR SCREENS?

CALL

Heights

DRY CLEANING
FOR ALL
THE FAMILY
“SONNY”

destroyed,

Or

Arlington

Sherwin, pastor of
Park
Presbyterian

today attending the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, being held in Grand Rapids May 22
to May 28.

work of the council in this locality.
_
The Lions will entertain their ladtes at the Moraine hotel Wednesday
evening, May 28, starting with dinner at 7:15 o’clock. The program has
been planned by Robert Pease, proram chairman.

*

PARKWAY
HEIGHTS,

CENTRAL

work.
and

STEWART

101 8.
PROSPECT

at the door,

tomers.

and a depth of 150 feet. It is improved
with two frame houses.

Sellers of the property were

country;

to and from moving vehicles; a
work of coaxial cable which will
vide more channels for television
long distance service; and more
better telephone service for rural

this week by E. M. Knox, manager.
_

the

clubhouse.

H.

P. 5102

SHERONY HARDWARE

314 RAILWAY AVE.
= _—
HIGHWOOD, ILL.
‘Tel. H. P. 2041
Loge
\

-

�Thursday,

May

22,

Page

1947

11

) : Sea hii
GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50
SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Hotel

Sovereign

Newly
Decorated
Ballroom
and
Private Rooms for Weddings, Banquets and Business Meetings.
Swimming

Pool

Available
NOW OPEN

to

the

Public

Kenmore at Granville
Phone: BRIiargate 8000

Hy-Way

Hank

INTERNAT]
Photo

AMATEUR

o
Pion

ROCKET

Ee

ARTISTS

HELD

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

s+umSOr-

ART EXHIBIT AND TEA AT THE “Y”

Jr.

AN

YWCA

Nursery School

to the

best

nursery

school

standards,

May Add Afternoon

stressing creative and healthful
self-reliance and getting along

Group Next Year

others.

Provided there is sufficient demand,
the nursery school at the YWCA may
add an afternoon group to its present
schedule for next year, it was announced this week.
The school, which was among the
first to be established in Highland
Park, is conducted by Mrs. Ellen Jane
Floriani. Mrs. Floriani is a graduate
of the Pestalozzi-Froebel Teachers
college and has taught at Oak Terrace school.
The school is conducted according

play,
with

ACITY, INC
.
“The odds are starting to pile up
in his favor—they say he just had
a complete Zagalia’s Lubrication
Job.”

The morning class for next year,
beginning in September, is filling up
rapidly.
Those
wishing
to gnroll
should sign up at once at the YWCA.

Those

interested

class are
H.P. 675.

asked

in

Uml)—A'U

EXHIBITION
and tea at the YWCA
Sunday afternoon, May 11. The group is a class of “art as a hobby”’ enthusiasts
who gather for instruction each week under Tom Wilder at the local ‘Y.’’
Gathered at the tea table are Genevieve Kral, Martha Hiatt and Gertrude
Ames, pouring.

an

afternoon

to notify

the

Y

Zagalia’s Service Station

at

401 Waukegan

Ave., Highwood

!
Grand Re-Opening

Welcome

5 20) 4 Aba
'We

WAIT TILL | CATCH TH’ BIRD | OTL

WHO PHONED US THAT THIS &gt; “|=
WUZ A BOOKIE JOINT J )) JIM

Are

Now

Operating

New Modern
25
Our

At Our

Plant

T

N. SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK

O
W

Aim is Courteousness, ‘Quality
and Service at All Times.

John Zangeler, Inc.
Phone

us if your

repair.

appliance

Columbia

pliances

does

a

needs

Household
bang-up

job.

TET

rah

PEN

VOTE,

MUTE TIS TW Ege
305

WAUKEGAN AVE.
Ss
ar ee

eet am ea Ley
UL ee,

HIGHLAND
®

All

their work is guaranteed.

and Radio

PHONE

Ap-

We

again

thank

e
our

PARK

2801

*
customers

for their

patience and kindness while we
operating at our former location.
OPEN

HOUSE MONDAY, MAY
2 to 5 P.M.
EVERY ONE INVITED

were

26

Liquor SERVICE Co.
337 Waukegan
Highwood . . Phone

PROMPT

FREE

Ave.
H. P. 1500

DELIVERY

�Mostly
Wharviod in a

for Women
Diego

Sreejenns Wally: - Cla No

Music Club Year to End with

ENGAGED TO WED

Annual Meeting in Barrington
Mrs.

Harold

formerly
an

active

Van

member

Park Music
in

F.

of Highland

Steenderen,

Park
the

Highland

her home

once

again

annual meeting of the
Wednesday, May 28.
The

Van

close to an unusually successful year
under the presidency of Mrs. Myles
Dressler and the-planning of Mrs.
Schaaf,
chairman
of the program
committee.

still

club, will open

Barrington

of

and

for

the:

organization

Steenderen

residence

Mrs. George Hinn, chairman of the
hospitality committee, and the host-

is

esses of the day will assist Mrs. Van
Steenderen in extending hospitality

situated on Route 22, less than a half
mile from Route 59, and a huge sign
will direct members to her hospitable

to

the

members

and

guests

of

the

club.

door.

An

interesting

chosen

for

the

box luncheon

program

occasion

club

Announcement
has been
made
by
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Evans of 533
Eastwood avenue of the marriage of
their daughter,.
Edith Marie,
to Pfc.
James
Carroll Arnett
USMC,
son cf
Mr. and Mrs. Hershall Arnett of Oklahoma City, Okla., in San Diego, Cal.,
April
1.
The newly weds are residing at the
marine base near San Diego, and. will
remain in California until Pfc. Arnett
receives his. discharge next winter.

Castfald Nicholon

sandwiches

brought

Phelps

W.

will

surprise

Schaaf

play

number

and

piano
of

Mrs.

duets,

musical

announced
the engagement
youngest
daughter,
Betsy

a

Edgar Daniel Crilly, son
gar Crillys of Winnetka.

novelties

for voice and accordion will be rendered by Mrs. Lawrence Meyer, Mrs.
Paul Phelps and Mrs. Don Cuthbertson,

ago

Singing

by

of popular

the

election

of

songs

officers

Betsy is a graduate
more school and is an

the

of long
precede
coming

of
of
of
the

attracts

a large

and

a fitting

A

gathering

will

for

year.
This

annual

gathering

and

outing

is felt

to be

TRINITY

GUILD

Bride

At a cocktail party given in their
Deerfield
home
Sunday
afternoon,
May 18, Mr. and Mrs. Seth M. Gooder

Paul

and

Gooder

ae bs Aubin

by the

membership.

Clarence

Betsy

of their
Jean,
to

of the

Ed-

the AWVA and the Service Club
Chicago.
Her fiance, a graduate
Lake Forest academy, served in
U.S. Navy Seabees in the African
European

theatres.

fall wedding

FASHION

ohn

s

May
Irene

daughter

of the

Herman

Deerfield

road, and Robert

MODELS

Gastfields

of

Pauline

maid.

of

Mr.

bridegroom’s

and

Mrs.

(Continued

J.

the

and

later attended

Bennett

,

sun-

E.

on page

¥

Mare

road,

Photo

mother

Nicholson

13)

Craig

Bride

E-

of

Paregoy

and

Mrs.

Island,

Peregoy,

Cal., where

en route
they

will

have

been

invited

to

become

provisional members of the Junior
League of Evanston.
In the company of 29 other young
ladies of the North Shore, Miss Armstrong and
Mrs. Hixon
will start

navy blue
daughger’s

wore light blue silk. Both wore corsages of white carnations with pink
roses.
A reception for 100 guests was held
at the YWCA.
Out of town guests
were:

of

Two Highland Parkers, Miss Nancy Armstrong of 1812 Ricé street and
Mrs. Henry Hixon of 596 Kimball

of
Belleville,
served as best

chose a
for her

the

daughter

Two Highland Parkers
Provisional Members
Of Junior League

ushers.

and

is the

reside, spent three days in Highland
Park the following weekend.

man.
Howard
Borchardt
of Fort
Atkinson, Robert J. Gastfield of Libertyville and Walter Lips Jr., served

wedding

Mayer

Ensign

peas.

Tillman,

Mrs. Gastfield
silk crepe dress

Miss

to

honor, and Miss Carolyn Soefker of
Deerfield, bridesmaid, wore gowns of
light blue silk, carried arm bouquets
of yellow jonquils and wore match-

as

Ruwitch,

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bane Craig
of 608 Laurel avenue
announce the
marriage of their daughter, Frances
Mae, to Frederick Charles Peregoy,
ensign USN, at Baltimore, Md., May
3. The Craigs flew to Baltimore to
attend the ceremony.

Traditional

sweet

ing floral head dress.
Thomas
Nicholson
brother of the groom,

S.

late Herbert G. Mayer. She was graduated from North Shore Country Day

Paw.

S. Nichol-

Her
lace-edged
fingertip
-veil
was
topped by a tiara of orange blossoms
and she carried a bouquet of white
Miss

Robert

Sunday.

Wiss

Gastfield,

ceremony.

white

to

versity of Michigan.
During the course
of four years in the army during the
war, he served in the European theatre
as a major in the Army Air force.

wedding music was furnished by Miss
Mildred Maechtle, vocalist and Miss
Maxine Berry at the organ.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a gown of white satin.

and

Mayer,

ior college in Milbrook, N. Y., and the
Katherine Gibbs school in Chicago.
Mr. Ruwitch is a graduate of Uni-

is planned.

a candlelight service May 10 before
the altar of St. John’s Fvangelical
and Reformed church.
* The
Rev. Alvin C. Kniker
per-

carnations

MAYER

son of Mrs. Simon Ruwitch’ of Highland*
Park.
A reception honoring the young
couple was held at the Becker home on

school

Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholof Bellville, Ill. were married in

the

SHIRLEY

10

Eleanor

formed

MISS

Mr. and Mrs. S. Max Becker, Jm of
Glencoe, have announced the engagement of Mrs. Becker’s daughter, Miss

Shirley

of the Royceactive member

Si loninized at

Miss

son
son

Wiss

provided by
board mem-

Miss

Barbara

Blessing

and

Miss

Marjorie

Fuller

are

by

Percy

shown

H.

Prior,

Jr.

in

summer

frocks they are modeling this afternoon in the fashion show beina held at the
parish house of Trinity Episcopal church under auspices of the Woman's auxiliary and guild.
The fashion show is being preceded by dessert at 1 o'clock
and will be followed by bridge.
Other models include Mesdames Samuel
Bingham, John Newey, Arthur

Rooney,
and

Hugh

the Misses

Seyfarth,

Claburn

Catherine

Jones

Jones,
and

Lynn

George
Ahrens.

Ross,

W. Harold

Rutherford,

earning regular League membership
in the fall when “provisional classes”
will begin. Recently they learned of

several of the Junior League’s projects in visits to the dental dispensary,
out

patient

department

of

Evanston

hospital, and the Thrift House, and
on Monday they attended the regular
monthly
luncheon
meeting of the
(Continued on page 14)

&gt;.

oe

a

Two groups of sprightly songs will
be sung by the choral ensemble. Mrs.

THE JAMES C. ARNETTS

Vis

follow

at 12:30 p.m., for which

salad and dessert will be
the choral ensemble and

bers, and

especially

will

�Thursday,

May

22,

1947

Pagé 13

NEW OFFICERS ARE INTRODUCED

Vaio

Ill. ; Mrs. Mike Volpentesta of Eagle
River, Wis.; Mr. and Mrs. John Borchardt
and
son
Howard,
of
Fort

Atkinson,

Wis.;

.Miss

Norma

Lund

of
Madison,
Wis.;
Mr.
and
Harold Bloch of Evanston and
Carl Miller of Kenosha, Wis.

PERCY

H. PRIOR,

Mrs.
Mrs.

Jr.

Photographer

Tel.

1026 WADE
ST.
Specializing
in natural
unposed pictures of your
party, wedding or reception
H. P. 3199
Highlond Park,

TIME

FOR YOUR HAIR
You'll Like It

Ill.

FOR

CLEANING

.

RUGS
Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

DRAPES
FURNITURE

Jr.

NEW OFFICERS OF RAVINIA WOMAN’S CLUB were introduced at the
organization’s closing luncheon for the year, held Wednesday of last week
at the Ravinia Village house.
From the left, Mrs. Arthur R. Schramm, second vice president; Mrs. L. L.
Howe, director; Mrs. Francis P. Linneman, outgoing president and director; Mrs.
Gordon Leona rd, recording secretary; Mrs. Robert Spahr, corresponding secretary; Mrs.'H. Bowen Stair, first vice president, and Mrs, Albert J. Bushey, president,

Miss Anita Melohn,
Miss Jean Kearney

Jane

To Bow Together
Miss Jean Kearney and Miss Anita
Melohn will be introduced to society
at a tea dance which the A. Thomas
Kearneys of Winnetka and the William C. Melohns of Highland Park
will give for their daughters June 20,
in the Indian Hill club.
Following
their

the

assistants

tea,
and

the
the

Werner

of

wig Geiser of
Mrs. Jack N.

Chicago;

Miss

Hed-

Park Ridge; Mr. and
Osborne of Lombard,

SUMMER

HIGHLAND

will

go'to the Pump room of the Ambassador hotel for dinner and dancing.
Miss Melohn is a student at Sarah
Lawrence college.
Miss Kearney attends Wheaton
college in Norton,
Mass.

-

Full,

‘mer

exciting

program

-activities for BOYS,

of

sum-

ages

Sr., Mr. and
Thomas

Poole,
dren,

Mrs. J. E. Nicholson

Mrs.
Carl,

Belleville;

C.
Lily,

Mr.

Mrs.

C. Winkler

itt.

co}
4
FE
We

Beth

and

and

Mrs.

If you don’t have a Home Freezer, order yours today.
FRIGID FRepee, le cuble i oo
now $399.00

Jr.,

SIZES
OTHER
MANY
ALSO
Distributors of Home &amp; Farm Freezers

chil-

Philip

of

Martin

J.

Duffy
of Springfield,
Ill.; Mr.
and
‘ Mrs.
D. W. Todd and Miss Betty

On
Mr.

&amp;

Mrs.

J.

R.

Thompson,

A

Complete

Frozen Fruits
Fruit Juices

Vegetables—Lge.
Dairy

Line

of Food

&amp; Small

Size

Turkeys - Ducks - Geese
Chickens - Capons

Products

J. Harriss’ Frozen Pies
Ready to Bake
Strawberry, Apple, Blueberry
Cherry, Boysenberry, Peach
ORDER TODAY! °*
Pet Foods
Fish &amp; Sea Food
Frozen Pastries

Cooked

Calves

Made

Your

Home

(Lowest.

Park 435

Veal

Liver

Chops
Chops

Foods

-

-

-

Pork

Beef Tenderloins,
-

Lamb

- Also Whole
Processed

By Famous

We Specialize in Processing Meats

PHOTOGRAPHY

Meats

Squabs
Pork

Lloyd

the finest .. . be sure of

Highland

Carry

. Also A Complete Line of Supplies.

Directors

pllen Oe’
7 S. St. Johns Ave.

We

Route 22, Deerfield, Ill
LAKE FOREST 796 Y2

Candid
Wedding
Albums
A bride deserves
the finest...

:

galives: dcesticla 6 Highland Park - Northbrook - West
Lake Forest. Call Enterprise 1215 for Highland Park
&amp; Northbrook.
For Deerfield—Phone
860

Leonard

and

WINNETKA

4

to 9 and GIRLS, ages 4 to 8.
Swimming - horseback riding crafts - nature study in wooded
playground.
Transportation
provided - Call or write for folder

from page 12)

Nicholson,

PARK

ae FREE
ON EREEZERT &lt;&amp;
Foop Pree

Gastfield-Nicholson
(Continued

&amp; DUFFY
Cleaners

debutantes,
escorts

DUFFY

Beef
Tenders

- Steaks
Legs
Carcasses

Chefs
Ready for

Freezer.
Prices)

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
Clarence S. Wilson

724

Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield,

Ill.

�«4

SALVAGE PAPER
For Disposal

of Junk

Call
P. 327

H.

NORTH SHORE WASTE
PAPER CO.
|
We Buy
METALS, PAPER,
and BATTERIES

IRON,

Feel

RAGS

Tired

Nerves?

or have

you

or have you

Muscle Aches?

TERMS

Special Values in Diamonds
‘

Price Comparison

Open

Monday

Come

Invited

Evenings

until

ELVIRA‘S

Jewelers &amp; Opticians
Across
Tel.

from

the

location
Highland

club

June

Now

in

TO

TAKE

READY

SALON

637

Call

Guild to

are

LAUREL

welcome

neth
Thomas,
Winnetka,
and
Horald Callaghan, Chicago.

to

can

AVE.

be

Maurer

for

your

LOCAL
DELIVERIES

TEL.

4664

Shrub

or a Forest”

PROMPT
SERVICE
Phone
Highland Park 570

ILL.

National Delivery
Service
212 Railway

Ave.

Highwood

program

will

Highland

Park

cooperate
manuals.

with

start

the

Walter

fall,

and

members

will

the schools

in securing

396

CLEANERS

Central

CARPETING CLEANED

42]

in

League

BROS.

RETTIG

Howard

Mrs.

(Continued from page 12)
organization.
Other Highland Park women who
attended the luncheon included Mesdames Howard Scott Allen, John F.
Dille
Jr.,
Kenneth
Morine,
John
Maxwell and John Adair.
The “Books Bring Adventure” radio
program which was sponsored by the
Evanston League last year and which
was used in most of the Highland
Park schools has just been awarded
the George Foster Peabody award
as. the most outstanding children’s
program on the air. Series III of the

or painting jobs.

FOR

daily until dark.

Mrs.

and

Junior League

repairs;

Trees
Vines
Annuals
. Peat Moss

Kenilworth,

new,

it to our crew.

4766

of

Moat of Evanston
Velde of Glencoe.

like

Mrs.

Guests will include Miss Frances
G. Wallace, principal of Ferry hall,
the school’s faculty and board of
trustees, and mothers of the senior
girls.
The
nominating
committee
for
elections consists of Mrs. William E.

H. P. 4766

home

yard work;

AWAY

INC.
CLAVEY,
ELMER&amp; CLAVEY
RD., HIGHLAND PARK,
‘“Qne

prizes, a
and the

THE HOME CLINIC

grown, eagh plant carefully selected and balled
Locally
in the fields to bring savings to you — CASH &amp; CARRY.

BLVD.

a

Saint Martha’s Evening guild of
Trinity church will hold its next regular meeting on Monday, May 26. A
feature of the meeting ‘will be a talk
by Father Spinner of Lawrence hall.

just leave

Bloom

Shrubs
Roses

Evergreens
Fruit Trees
Perennials
Fertilizer

SKOKIE

at

Meet Monday, May 26

Phone

are

Open

discussed

same orchestra that played at the
organization’s dance last year, are
a few of the highlights of Nuit de
Paris.

630

TUBBED,

were

Jones were co-hostesses.
A variety of games, door
floor show of Wing talent,

Your

Lilacs

21,

Mrs. Alan R. Kidd of Highland
Park is chairman of the committee
for the annual senior class tea to be
given tomorrow at the Deerpath Inn,
Lake Forest, by the Chicago-North
Shore Alumnae Association of Ferry
Hall following a business meeting of
the organization during which officers
will be elected.
.Ferry hall seniors will arrive at
3:30 p.m. at the conclusion of the
hour-long business session, to be entertained at the tea, one of the highlights of the school’s social’ calendar,
and be welcomed as members of the
association.
Mrs. Kidd is being assisted in preparations by Mesdames Franklyn W.
Chaffee, Frank Hough and J. T. Griffith, all of Highland Park; Mrs. L.
R. Gage of Bannockburn; Mrs. Howard Moat of Evanston; Mrs. Ken-

business meeting of the group held
Monday evening at the home of Miss
Judy Howes, 795 Marion avenue. Miss
Virginia Sherwin and Miss Katherine

Tel. H. P. 4061 or 1830

years

Park

HEALTH

304 Railway Ave., Highwood

Bank

35

Tea Committee

Finals plans for “Nuit de Paris”,
the summer formal dance to be given
by the Wing group of Infant Welfare at the Highland Park Woman’s

9:00

I. H. NEMEROFF
Same

Ferry Hall Senior

Plan “‘Nuit de Paris”’

Members and friends
attend this meeting.

to

Mes Alon Kidd Meade,

Welfare Wings

Saint Martha’s

Poor Circulation?
WEEKLY

Infant

2
FURRIER

@ Rugs

—

Ave.

TAILOR

@ Carpets
FINEST

@ Furniture

on

MOTHPROOFING
“The

Time

to

Buv

Is Before They

MOST

Fly”

the

MODERN

FUR

North

VAULTS

Shore

The ideal system of fur storage, including the three essentials—humidity control, fumigation and cool temperatures.
The Haertel Demothing
Cabinet can be most correctly
described as a moth killing machine. It is completely equipped
with mechanical and electrical devices to carry on fumigation
process in the:most thorough and efficient. manner to kill
all

H.P. 676

AND

REFRIGERATED

forms

of

insect

life.

Every coat will be placed in the demothing cabinet
sterilized before it is placed in our refrigerated fur vault.

TELEPHONE

H. P. 4840

and

�Thursday,

May

22,

Page

1947
form for the first stage of the season,
Drinkwine set Des Plaines down with
three hits in a slab duel with Nicks.
The home team won the game in
the last inning when Drinkwine, who

Neild's Takes

Opener 2-1 over.

previously singled, advanced
ond on an error and came

Des Plaines Nine
pitching

and

timely

hitting

brought a hard fought 2 to 1 victory
to
Neild’s
Sport
Shop,
Highland

the

softball

club

of Des

Plaines.

softball

season

in

The

Zimmer,2b
£.Rogan,c

3ordyl,ss

2010

Peterson,lf
Hull,1lb

3

Totals

@

JOHN RUTTKAY

play

Successor

Plaines (1)
ABRHE
Sandberg,cf
40
0 0
W’sth’se,ss
200
0

Epgren,lf

300

Drews,2b
Beaum’nt,lb

2
3

0°1:0
1 0 0

2

0

O’Sh’h’sy,3b

2

0

Alton,cf
Bibitch,rf
Nicks,p

8-0. 071
2 0°1:9
80190

24

wine,

OUR
ON

10;

0 0

000
0 1 0
1 1 0

2°61

Nicks,

Totals

24°

“REPAIR

THE

2 N.

0

CALL

BECKER
Linden

0.0

EVERY

DAY

TULIP
You are

and

DAFFODIL

cordially

invited

—

BULBS

to visit our

garden

Select your bulbs and they will be sent

to you at planting time next fall.

GARDENS

NOW

CO.

Hubbard

Ph. Winnetka
Serving

ROAD

1°22

bloom.
IS

ROOFING
Ave.

SHERIDAN

where you will see over 75 colorful varieties in

TRUCK”

US

Jewelry

Fine Watch and Jewelry Repairing
Telephone 2028

REPAIRED

STREET

Polk’s

JEWELER

1.

LEAKS

to

Des

0
0

RINGS
BRACELETS

@
@

WATCHES
PINS

@
e@

Score by innings:
R.. HE.
White Stucco ...0001000—1
3
1
Renee
Sok
10000
0i1—2
6
1
Doubles—Peterson,
Rogan.
Trriples—
Sordyl,
Bibitch.
Base
on _ balls—Drinkwine, 2; Nicks, 3.
Struck out by—Drink-

ROOF

970

resume

0 1
800

Rosie,3b
‘3
Nicolazzi,cf
2
Drinkwine,p
3

Highland

REPAIRED!

but .will

(2)
ABRHE
3111
83010

Gumbiner,rf

Park.
Mel Drinkwine, one of Waukegan’s
top-flight
softball twirlers, making
his first start for the Neild’s club
this year, turned in a great performance on the mound.
Displaying fine

JOHN!
WE SIMPLY GOT

patk,

Neild’s

game was played under flood lights
at Sunset park.
Despite chilly weather, some 500
fans sat in on the major softball inaugural, which officially opened the
night

local

Complete Line of
EVERSHARP PENS AND PENCILS

next Friday night, May 30, in a clash
against Cohn’s Shoes of Waukegan.

Park’s top softball team, in the opener
of the team’s 1947 campaign last Friday night against the White Stucco
Inn

to secall the

way home on Eddie Rogan’s timely
double.
Tomorrow night the Neild’s nine
will be idle since the Highland Park
Merchants will open their season at

Drinkwine Turns in Slick
Performance on Mound
Crack

Graduation Gifts

Woods

A GREEN

742

the North Shore for 40 Years

KENILWORTH

ROAD.

BAY
Phone

Garden

the

aw

“Everythiag

KENilworth

2330

You re Right
Springis in the air, as is the urge for every housewife
May we suggest that you send all of your fine drapes,
other household

for general cleaning.
slipcovers,

rugs and

throw

‘

items to

Ermine Cleaners, Inc.
Waukegan

&amp; Webster Aves.

Highwood,

Illinois
PHONES: H. P. 3710 - WINNETKA

Our

work will convince

terials and
Your

most

garments

you

modern
are

of the concerted

equipment,

fully

are returned to your home.

insured

effort being

made

by our skilled personnel

guaranteeing

the

best when

it comes

time

our

courteous

bonded

from

the
_

using

3330

the finest ma-

to quality work.
servicemen

accept

them

until

they

15

�Mrs. Joseph Pyle (Amelia Antes)
_ of Chicago is staying with her sisterin-law,

Mrs.

_ Highland

Sunday
_

William

G.

Apartments

Mrs.

Pyle

Antes

of

the

this week.

and

Mrs.

On

Antes,

with Mrs. Pyle’s daughter, Mrs. Ed_ ward Bingham (Clara Pyle) of Chi-

% _ cago

8 in

were

guests

at

the

Ender

home

Deerfield.

a is’ Samuel Fritsch (Mabel Muhlke) is returning to her home in Jacksonville, Fla., Sunday, after a several
weeks’
visit with her mother,
Mrs.
Muhlke
at the home of her
, Harry
Muhlke
of Central

avenue, and
_ this vicinity.

with

other

relatives

in

Springfield

move

. Eas

NEONEONONSOoSOn Zenon HOHSOO HSPNHH SOH ON SONON OHNO OOH

OTOH

house has been sold.
Mrs. Hultgren
is the kindergarten teacher at the
Deerfield

Grammar

school.

G. W. Heupel and. Mr. and Mrs.
Perle Ryder, all of Clinton, Ia., were
weekend

guests

at

the

home

and Mrs. R. G. Heupel of
road.
Mrs. G. W. Heupel,

of

|

SONHTONS
COO

avenue,

and_

from 949 Central avenue

will

as this

,

Robert
Mr.

Robin,

Mrs.

Dr. Heupel and family, for the past
two weeks, returned to Clinton on
Sunday with her husband and the

son

of

home

of her

Rev.

W.

formerly

E.

of

Plapp

of

Bethlehem

Milwaukee,

church,

Deer-

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
Office Hours Evenings by appointment
357 Rosemary Terr.
Phone Deerfield 647

Res.

Phone,

Deerfield

Highland

RELIABLE
708

Waukegan

university.

J.

G

W.

Chicago.

W.

Krimel

daugh-

are

here

from

Ohio

visit-

R. A.

Nel-

court.

to

Deerfield

Bowling

704 Waukegan

Academy

Rd.—Deerfield

Tel. Deerfield 90
Open Bowling
Monday

Hil.

four

years

ago

F.

leased

Rox

to

Lt.

and

of Glenview.

Ender),

has

been

quite

ill

for

= Wednesday

to

Saturdays

and

guests

at the

Fred

GILLWEVE

BEAUTY

SALON

Miss

Mr.

Mr.

Dorothy,

Gillen,

Sundays

762

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

THE GEORGIAN
DRY
816

GOODS

Waukegan
Tel.

and
Road,

‘-

BUSINESS

man

and

AND

ELECTRIC

APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges
- Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of appliances

Tel.

Waukegan

Deerfield

Road

- Tel.

562—Eric

ERIC’S

ESTATE AND
INSURANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Ill.

Deerfield

Banfield,

29

Prop.

D-X

Tel. 419

OPTOMETRIST
813

Mercer
Lumber

884

be

EST. 1925
INSURANCE
764

all its branches
Diatbeaon Road - Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 155

drove

to

guests

of

Mrs.

wife,

Mr.

and

BOX BEAUTY
SHOP

623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julie
Expert
Permanent
Wavers
Try
our Circlette Wave
that is sprayed into your hair.

DEERFIELD

NEWS

NEWSPAPERS
Home Delivery

758

Waukegan

AGENCY
MAGAZINES
Service

Rd.

Deerfield

&amp;

175

SELIG

*

Red Horse Service Station

Waukegan
Deerfield

MOBIL

Road

Greasing
Tel.

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Lumber

H.

-

SAUSAGE

|

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

Telephone
880

Coal

Deerfield

and

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

DEERFIELD

Inc.

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
‘West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

TAXI

E.

Reasonable,

THEO

J.

KNAAK,

R.

Ph.

1884

ML.

- DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.
756

SERVICE
81

Rates

Drivers

Road

SCHULTZ

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
~- Tools
Houseware
- Cutlery
- Sporting
Goods

Roads

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD
Day and Night Service
Courteous

Waukegan

HOLTJE

Deerfield,

577

Waukegan

- Accessories

576—750

Est.

MARKET
Deerfield

Deerfield

MNAAK’S PHARMACY

Companies

- Building Materials
612 Railroad Ave.
Deerfield, Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

GAS

- Washing

Waukezan

Road

Deerfield,

Telephone

SELIG

a home

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND

DR. R. D. MOORE
Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

808

122

SERVICE STATION

M. A. FRANTZ

VANT &amp;

find

Shafroth

to

POWDER

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP
CAKES

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

Sanitary and Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR
BETTER
HOMES

758 Deerfield Road

Mrs.

O.,

Beckman’s'
son
and
Mrs. Harold Frost.

DIRECTORY

FROST’S
RADIO

Deerfield

Deerfield

can

Mrs.

_LUCIUS ERSKINE
REALTOR

SHOP
GIFTS

95

Available

they

and

Baltimore,

Established 1925
REALTORS
Real Estate—Loans
7164 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Ill.
Edward H. Selig
Harold R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

W. R. MITCHELL

Always

as

VANT

760

REAL

Mr.

to

on Sunday to the home of Mrs. Henry
Shafroth.
On Monday Mrs. Beck-

&amp; Company

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.
Telephone Deerfield 33

O.

moving

POCKET (PENGUIN-DELL) BOOKS
CIGARS CIGARETTES SOFT DRINKS

Apparel

Grimes

be

Mrs.
George
Beckman
of Woodward avenue went to Kempton,
IIL,

Wever

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling
and Shaping
Free Consultation

- Friday

Columbus,

will

Md., as soon
there.

Cahill

635
Deerfield Road
Tel. Deerfield 806
Open Monday Evenings
We invite Charge Accounts

Franklin

Holm

abeut

MILDRED WALLDREN
Women’s

Here for a visit this past week
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G.
W. Sticken, was Mrs. William Holm
(Ida Sticken) and her son, William

recuperate.

Sunday

of Milwaukee.

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Sticken
of Sheridan
avenue
went
to Eau
Claire, Wis., on Sunday and expect
to be back today or tomorrow.

Cleveland,

Mrs. Eugene Ender, who went to
Moline, Ill., several months ago to
be with her nephew and niece, Dr.
and Mrs. L. A. Dondanville
(Eva

Evenings

POKORNY

Frank

been

and Jimmy,

Jr., from

almost

has

Peggy

five weeks. Mrs. Dondanville brought
her aunt back to Deerfield last week

Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Nessler Jr.
of Stratford road spent this past
week visiting in Columbus, Georgia.

5869

Deerfield,

Donald

apartment

GARAGE

Road,

Mrs.

and their baby

Krimel’s father,
Sunset

and

western

250

Park

Mrs.

Mr.

Carlson).

from Michigan when Major Brower
was stationed at Fort Sheridan. This

Deerfield

é

Phone

of

field, will complete his work for his
master’s degree this summer at North-

of
:

OX EXER EIEN EX]

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Brower and
little daughter, Sandra, are moving
this week from ,747 Chestnut street
to Lansing, Mich. The Browers came

Mrs.

O.D.

son

(Lois

Nelson)

ing

at the

Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Feigel of
Chicago were dinner guests Friday
evening at the John Armstrong home
on Stratford road..
Weekend guests
at the Armstrong home were
Mrs.
Ellen Roberts Carlson and son, Peter,

DR. G. C. PARKNEN,

and

(June
ter,

a guest

the

Varick

son,

been

Mrs. James Dwyer and two children,

OCI

Mrs. Victor Carlson of Stratford
road went to Schenectady, N. Y., last
week for the christening of her first

Dr.

Deerfield
who has

Ryders.

_ Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Hultgren have
‘rented the John E. Koller home at

1054

&gt;

grandchild,

\

home on Chestnut street were Mrs.
Cahill’s brother and family, Mr. and

Deerfield Activitie:
i

Drfld. &amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield _

ROYAL
722

BLUE

STORE

Deerfield Road—Tel.
707
“Best
Quality
Always”

GROCERIES

FRESH

295

FRUITS

pia Jee

wa,

as.

—-

MEATS

&amp; VEGETAPLES
Hee

Tl.

�: Many

Rare

Flowers
aa) |

To Be on Sale At
Lake Forest Show

TO

VISIT

OUR

GET YOUR BEDDING

INVITED

ARE

TULIP:

DISPLAY

PLANTS

a

f

One hundred and fifty flats of rare
chrysanthemums and dahlias and the
new 1947 double petunia are among the
unusual plants that have been grown
fer the sale sponsored by the Lake
Forest Garden club to be held Saturday
and Sunday, May 24 and 25.
The sale is to be held on the ‘estate
of Mrs. Robert G. McGann at 965 East
Deerpath

Our tulips are
blooming now. Over
150

Milton M. Morse wil be in
of the flower market at the
lane entrance where flats of

annuals

and

flowers

will be on

vegetables

as

sale.

well

as

cut

In connection

with the market, Mrs. W. A. P. Pull-

GREENHOUSES

to se-

aluminum

rakes,

garden

baskets, garden furniture
accessories for sale.

NOW

Follow RK. R. Tracks
to South End of
Elm
Street

440 ELM STREET
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Opposite Greenhouse
Tel, Deerfield 241

BROS:

FRANKEN

'

beac

scissors,

and

x

place
now for

man and Mrs. Knight Cowles will have
new

BAHR’'S

fine imported Holland bulbs.
To Our Nursery

avenue.

Mrs.
charge
Spring

varieties

- ject from.
Come and
your orders

AT

1111

other

This year’s horticultural exhibits are
planned as a display of as many named
varieties of spring blooms as can be
assembled. Anyone interested in gar-

N. RIDGE

ROAD

Ageratum

Lobelia

Allysum
Asters
Bachelor Button

Marigolds
Morning Glory
Nicotiana

Browallia

Petunias

dening is urged to participate and speci-

Begonias

Salvia

mens

Calendula

Scabiosa

flowering shrubs and trees are wanted.

Carnations
Cleome

Snapdragons
Straw Flowers

There

classes,

Cobea

Tarenia

will

Coleus
Cosmos
Daisies
Fuchsias
Heliotrope
Impatiens
Geraniums

Verbena
Vinca Vines
Zinnia
Tomato Plants
Egg Plants
Peppers
Cabbage

Lantanas

Broccoli

of

different

is

to

but special
given.

be

no

bulbs,

perennials

competitive

awards

of

merit

or

be

Mrs. Clymer S. Bowen of South
Ridge road, is chairman of the show.
She is being assisted by Mrs. Stephen
Y. Hord, co-chairman, and Mrs. Joseph
M. Cudahy, special advisor.

ee
Now I can send this
suit to Deluxe Cleaners!”
Pick Up and Delivery Service
Phone Highland Park 455

DeLuxe
454 Waukegan

CHICKENS FOR SALE
200

LIVE CHICKENS
(Fryers)
1,000 5-week old
AUSTRIA WHITES
Also Brooder and Equipment:
for 1500 chickens
Call

after

ARTHUR

5:00

p.m.

GRUNDEIS

642 Chicago Ave.

Tel. H.P. 3159

Larkspur

Cleaners
Ave.

Parsley

Highwood

Lig
k=
Za
THEY'RE REAL
BLUE DENIM COWBOY

PANTS

/+)\\

Make
A

Reservation

For 14 Days
and enjoy the trial offer we’re
extending you ... a vacation
at home
. away from red
hands, unruly hair, and stiff
clothes. Yes, you may have soft
water at the turn of a faucet
... for as low as $2.75 a month
... and to prove it, accept our
14 day trial offer, just by calling

Highland
Park 342

CULLIGAN
. Soft

Water

Service
366
;

Central
Ave.

m—
Play as hard as you like with the
of
d
kin
they'll stand the roughest
NE
wear. Made of tough heavy LA
Denim,

Sanforized, double-stitched

with real heavy orange thread, copng
per riveted —large inside swingi
pockets.
SIZES

1 to 22

\ WAIST 20 in. thru 92 in. §

$5.09

�Page

18

Elect Mary Ferrari

Honor Past Commanders

President of Italian

At Legion Party Tonight

Women Bowlers

Tonight at 8 o’clock Highland Park
Post 145 of the American Legion will
observe Post Commanders night. A

Mary
of

Ferrari was

the

Italian

elected president

Women’s

Prosperity

club bowling league at the association’s annual banquet and election of
officers held at the Bob-Mari recently.
Other officers elected were: Leona
Rossi, vice-president; Louise Onesti,
secretary, Gina De Bartoli, treasurer
and Milly Sherony, sgt. of arms.
Sherony’s wound up the season in
first place with second spot going to
the Manhattan’ Shoe Shop. Tied for
third
were
Esther’s
Tavern
and
Grandi
Brothers
Service
Station;
fourth place went to Louise Beauty
Salon, fifth to Onesti Brothers, sixth
to Zagalia Service Station and seventh to Bob-Mari.
During the evening, Mary Somenzi,
president,
presented
nine
of
the
bowlers with a corsage for perfect
attendance

were

and

corsages

presented

secretary,
surer. A

to

and Gina
gold pin

and

Louise

gifts

Onesti,

De Bartoli, treawas awarded to

Mary
Caldarelli, only
longing to the 200 club.

member

services

for

William

George Antes, 68, of 548 Central avenue, Highland Park, were held Saturday morning at Immaculate Conception church where he had been a
caretaker until retiring 10 years ago.
Burial was in St. Mary’s cemetery on
Ridge road, on the Ender family lot.
Mr.

Antes,

who

died

Thursday

He

was

married

in

1910

Albert

Antes,

Pyle,

and

a

both

sister,

for this

open

has

“Come
ing

prepared

of

been

meeting,

gionnaire is invited
from his family. .
fun,”

and

to

Pictures

Taken
TEL,

H.

in

Your

each

bring

notices

SERVING

FURTH

evenof

| have the opportun-

656

services

PHONE OR WRITE

GEORGE
Kimball

McGHIE,

Rd.

Kenwood

E. 47th
Street

Chicago

0700

ANNOUNCEMENT

mS

We
offer complete
and
highly adequate
facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known
Furth staff of directors.

to

AN OUTSTANDING
PROFESSIONAL
RECORD
OF
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

Jr.
H.

Phones

IMPORTANT

services.

936

WNNGAZZA
All

in the Chicago Motor
you
to
many
free

ofa

Winnetka

&amp; COMPANY
Ne

Directors

A membership
Club
entitles

these

Ave.,

:
AuGite ‘
Rann
ISS

and

THE

PUBLIC FOR
OVER
40 YEARS

May

Linden

this

MOTORING

explaining

932

Le-

guests

Advisers

of

Phone Winnetka 4166

678

Funeral

ty

Home

P. 4470

Deerfield

FILTERS

1” and
“"_ All Sizes
Murphy and Miller, Inc.

arranged

to enjoy an

read

P. 2814

PLYMOUTH ano DODGE OWNERS
We have just received and can install

LY

NEW MOTOR

to

Helen Egan, who survives him. They
have no children. In addition to his
wife he is survived by one brother,
Amelia

program

of a

heart attack, was employed for many
years in the home of the late Mrs.
MacGregor Adams of Highland Park.
Born in Deerfield, a son of Mr. and
Mrs. Christian Antes, he had lived in
Highland Park for
more
than
40
years

special

AIR

KILCOYNE, Photographer

be-

William Antes Buried
Saturday at St. Mary’s
Funeral

May 22, 1947

Thursday,

Mrs.

a COMPLETE-

in your old car for only $281.85.

This includes the reconditioning of Clutch, Carburetor, Starting

Motor,

Generator

and

Distributor

(less

of Chicago,

any new parts)

VILLAGE PANTRY
644

Bank

A

Lane,

GOOD

Lake

.

For that vacation trip you are planning --- be sure you

Forest

PLACE

have trouble free transportation.

TO EAT

We can arrange terms

if desired.

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE
We
To

Do

Have All New
Equipment
Your Work Right

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood
We

Build Lawns
Driveways

TRY

US

106 South First Street

and

OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137 N. Second,

Golden Motors, Inc.

All Phones 3785

HIGHLAND

PARK

H.

P.

2500

�Thursday, May 22, 1947

IREDALE

Club Honors Mothers,

Initiates Eight Newt) Members
and

her

hostess

committee

Fight new members and a large
group of mothers shared the spotlight at the regular monthly business
meeting of Highland Park Emblem
club

is

113

Wednesday

night,

May

slated

for

June

11

at

8 p.m),

when

14, in Elks hall. The mothers were the
honor guests of the evening in keep-

the following candidates will be initiated as members: Mmes. Otto Fisher,

ing

Leo
LaBuda, ‘Agnes
Golden,
C. R.
Wennberg,
N. C. Risjord and John

with

the

club’s

annual

Mother’s

day festivities.
They included both
the mothers of Emblem club members and of Highland Park Elks.
The new members were initiated in
honor of Mrs. Madelon Parker of
Chelsea, Mass., supreme president of
the Supreme
Emblem
Club of the
United
were:

States
Mmes.

Joseph

Paletti,

George

Rose,

of
America.
They
Mortimer
Singer,

Peter

Hickey.
Membership in Highland Park Emblem club is open to the wives and
mothers of afl Highland Park Elks.
are

invited

PACKING

Interested

women

tact Mrs.
chairman,,
4941.

Arthur Bess, membership
telephone Highland Park

to con-

AGENT

and

means

MckKillip;

Wil-

Ravinia PTA

committee

of

the

Mrs.

Supreme
Emblem
club.
They also
voted to buy new card tables for the
club rooms.
Door awards were won by
lowing mothers:
Mrs. Carl

Mrs.

Anna

Dean.

by

Cards

Mrs.

Neilson
and

James

ALLIED VAN

LINES

374 Central Ave., Highland

H. P. 181

Park

Fullilin

Yfpokly

on

Peradotti,

James

and

Invites New

Riddle,

president-elect

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.

Spur-of-the-Moment Picnics are Fun
The beginning of the picnic season is a sign it’s
time to relax... time to take life a little easier
for the summer season. Spur-of-the-moment picnics are fun for all... little work for any one.
se

for

the coming year, will explain briefly
the part played by the parent-teacher
association in school life.

the folBonson,

Mrs.

refreshments

Berube,

Hugh

GOODS

STORAGE

liam Cortesi Jr., Clayton Lundquist Kindergarten Mothers to Tea
and Walter J. Meierhoff.
Approximately 100 members and guests wit- |
Mothers of children who will be
entering
kindergarten
at
Ravinia
nessed the ceremony.
Mrs. Raymond
Sheahen, president, school next fall are cordially invited
announced
that a costume
party at by the Ravinia PTA to d tea in the
Sunset Valley Golf club on Thursday
Village house Tuesday, May 27, at
afternoon, June 26, would
take the 2:30 p.m.
At this time their children
place of the regular June afternoon
can be registered, and they will have
social meeting.
A buffet lunch, golf | an. opportunity to meet mothers of
and cards will comprise the program. | other prospective kindergartners and
During the business meeting the| Mrs.
DeLaney,
the
kindergarten
membership
approved
the
board’s teacher.
recommendations
that contributions
Mrs. Elwood Hansmann, president
be made to the Red Cross and to the of the PTA
for the past year, and
ways

OF HOUSEHOLD

con-

cluded the meeting.
The regular monthly dessert card
party will be held for members on
May 28 at | p.m. in the club rooms.
Next business meeting of the club

No.

AND

essesses

man,

MOVING

esses

Six to Be Initiated June 11;
Plan Costume Party Next Month

19

Sees

Emblem

Page

social

M.

C.

BY PHOTOGRAPHERS
FOR PHOTOGRAPHERS

served

chair-

Good pictures
demand good film
We are your
KODAK - ANSCO
DEALERS

' tiietad Cold Cuts ... for picnic pleasure
Reading clockwise: WILSON’S CERTIFIED BRAUNSCHWEIGER (liver sauslices
sage) in 12 o’clock position; half slices of DUTCH BRAND LOAF; alternate
of NEW

ENGLAND

BRAND

SAUSAGE

(repeated above) ; half slices of DUTCH

JELLIED

and

BRAND

BEEF

POT

ROAST

ROLL

LOAF; THURINGER.

Clip Here

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Fun for All

Results

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Guaranteed 24-Hour

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e Effectiveness guaranteed 4 yrs.
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in our own

A nation-wide service rendered |
right in your home.
@ Upholstery and carpetings may |
o6 &amp;b the same time... .'be
Duracleaned. America’s foremost furniture and department
stores recommend Duracleaning
for SAFE cleaning.
Chicago

Duraclean
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HOME SERVICE

839 Waukegan

photography

3222

Co.
Co.

Rd., Deerfield

. .

| A ple tore

444

...AMBassador

our

supervision.

@

Deerfield

laboratories

under
i

is done

7S.

|

St.

Johns

PHONE. _ i.

P.

Ave.
435

If you keep a picnic basket packed
and a picnic shelf well stocked at all
times,
you'll join in wholeheartedly
when the gang says “How’s about a
picnic tonight?”
Especially welcome on a hot day are
quality cold cuts such as those shown
above; and welcome to the “‘cook”’ is
an excuse to get away from her usual
routine.

Simple Menu
To the platter of ‘cold cuts, add
lenty of fresh bread and Clear Brook
utter or Certified Margarine;
pickles and olives; a salad. plate of
sliced cucumbers, tomatoes and cole
slaw, as shown above; with coffee or
milk, and you have the makings of a
grand picnic.
For a Fourth of J ay picnic supper,
serve the salad on a blue plate for a
timely “red, white, and blue” effect.

Two-inch cubes of Certified steak
(porterhouse or similar tender cut)
alternated with slices of onion, Certified Bacon and tomato (one or all
three) and speared on a green twig for
roasting over the coals are always
luscious.
One-inch cubes of Certified American Cheese wrapped with Certified
Bacon and grilled over the coals is
another tasty morsel.

Biscuits for the Brave
Hot bread is marvelous at a picnic,
too... and fun to make. Combine dry
ingredients for baking powder biscuits

at home, using Wilson’s Bake-Rite

for the shortening. Add milk after you
arrive, pat out thin on wax paper, cut
in strips, and wrap around floured
» sticks, It’s fun to roast meat in one
hand, biscuits in the other. Take

Clear Brook Butter and jelly along
for filling the biscuit ‘‘cone.”’
Yours for fun,
George Rector

A Cook-Your-Own Picnic

Radio’s Biggest Daytime Show

Once ‘in a while it’s fun to have a
cook-your-own picnic. Your Girl Scout
or Camp Fire days will serve you well
on such occasions.

Listen to the Fred Waring show each
Tuesday and Thursday morning. See
your local newspaper
for time and station,
A
2
WILSON'&amp;

Co.

�ye
4

‘Chester
A.
Carlson
| i
EI
d p
sd

|

s

Elected

‘Of

:

Bay

fae

urer; Mrs. R. M. Henderson and Mrs.

PTA

’

J. W.
Henry

bc
fo thes
ing al el
:

Chester

A.

Carlson

was

elected

to

Immediate
of offiTypewriters,
AddingService
Machines, || organization’s
cers held at theannual
schoolelectton
on Thursday,
Calculators,
Pick up: and. Registers,
delivery
511 Waukegan, Highwood
Tel. H. P. 5505
©

eee

os 4

president;
Mrs. J.
Houghtaling,
| Pa rents Have Letter
secretary; Mrs. SidneyV._Graham,
treas-

‘

President

Green

ek

From

Hilton, social chairmen; Mrs.
Stein, program chairman; Mr.

On

and Mrs. D. H. Julian, activities chairmen; Mr. and Mrs.

Ruth

Work

peg

In

E.

Dennis

Japan

:

pee ey a ae [oe ras a a
Lloyd Kilian, vibe

Following

ia
Senay
|Mrs. Draie
JR oYork
tovith chiles
; a ee
and}

is

a letter

written

from

Sy 2400
gh South
eid Greensa Bay road.
Pe ie
of
“Miss

Dennis is working for the U.S. GovMrs. E53 Ranks spesppaisresislyg 5
ee
Mrs.
H.°
Ambler, outgoing PTA
+
ita bene
:
elected officers are Mrs. president, thanked this year’s board for ernment in the foreign country, helpOther newly
William H. Aaron, first vice-president ; , its cooperation in making the year’s|ing to install improved school sysM iss Ethel McBroom, _second vice- | activities so successful.
tems there. She is a former employee
@
of Fort Sheridan, was graduated from
University of Michigan and has had
considerable teaching experience in
left the United
She
this country.
States a year ago February and was
recently home for a 45-day furlough.
May
oe 15.

2 May 1947
Dear Mom:
Really started working on my new
job today. Arrived in Kyoto at 6 a.m.,
was billeted and came right to I corps
headquarters to report in for duty.
This
Headquarters
covers
all
of
southern Japan like GHQ includes the
Tokyo area.
I am in the process of being ori;
XN
:
entated to this new job and will stay
here until next Thursday*night, reading up on Japanese education before,
during and after the war. It is all
\| very fascinating because it differs so
{much from our system.
Of course,
the purpose of our work’ is to demo| cratize their system. In order to do
| that we have to be thoroughly ac|quainted with their system and be
able to show them where and how to
|make the necessary changes.
An experience like this is a chance
lof

a

lifetime.

There

|other

American

| ahead
erably

of me
older.

are

women

only

four

in this

work

and they are all considHowever, the program

| will expand rapidly now, I’m sure.
|
| really think my assignment to
| Oita is the best in Japan as far as
‘sie

| having a desirable
i cerned, Everyone

place to live is conwho has been there

SSS
S

&gt;

‘raves about what a wonderful loca| tion it is. I haven’t heard one unfavforable report yet. Can hardly wait
'to get there to see the set-up and
really start my work in the field.
Fortunately or maybe, unfortunatePvt won't get to Oita for some time.
| After leaving here next Thursday, [
proceed to Fukuoha, Kyushu. That is-

TlIOw

Qin

GQ

headquarters

for

to

by

=

ee

“N

;

|

¢

the

tainly

.

island.

I have

stay

there

enough to absorb the overall
I
least
At
for that region.

should

eee
ek

that

‘long
| work

8

and

the military government

time
put

prepared

well

be

I get

plenty

of

for

my

job

there.. They

cer-

preparation

into

+:
Love
Ruth

to all,
Ellen

| Bethany Men Sponsor
| Used Shoe Campaign
Illinois Bell sincerely regrets the inconvenience to the public
We Hak
tite:
causedby the re t teleph
strike. 1 ¢ thank you for your
ane
ae
:

To help to relieve the serious need
) for shoes in war-torn areas, the Men’s
‘brotherhood of Bethany Evangelical
| United Brethren church will sponsor a °

Customers served by non-dial exchanges will not, of course,

| wear in this community.

be charged for the period their local

|

cooperation which enabled us to get the emergency
calls through.
ged

ILLINOIS

fe

Fee

BELL TELEPHONE

servi

er

interrup

ee

COMPANY

a

GH)

|campaign to collect serviceable foot-

The collection will be carried on
| from June 1 to June 14. A large barrel
| will be placed in a prominent spot in

—_—_stess. The Mes brotherhood. wile
‘the

business

district

to

receive

the

�-

—_

Peggy Jo George
Will Give Recital

Receives | Sischasse
From Naval Rervice
Lt.

(jg)

USNR;

William’

husband

1419 Wildwood

of

C.

e

Sack

Mrs.

Jr.,

Sacks

Miss

of

Naval

Air

e

Peggy

Jo

George

Announcement

will

Mrs.
road,

W. D. George of 850 Westcliff
Deerfield. She will be assisted by

Jacksonville, » Miss Patricia Peterson of. Brierhill
road, Deerfield, and Miss Marcia Riggs

station,

Fla.

...

present

her senior recital Friday evening, May
23, at the home of her parents, Mr. and

lane, recently was dis-

charged from the United States Naval
“service at the separation
center of

the

e

of

RESTAURANT &amp; COCKTAIL LOUNGE

Braeside.

Skokie Boulevard

Peggy Jo plays both the piano and
the double bass and has been teaching
piano

for

the

past

two

years.

She

(Route 41) and County Line Road

(Formerly the ‘TIC TOCK”)

has

been a member of the Highland Park
High school orchestra for the past four
years. She is leaving the day after her
graduation from high school to enter
the University of Colorado at Boulder
where she plans to major in music,
Patty Peterson, a junior at Highland
Park High school, is both a pianist and
flutist, having just won first place in
flute in both the regional and state

NOW

Serving

The Finest in Italian and American
Dishes

contests.

Marcia Riggs, who is. a high school
freshman, is also a pianist and plans
to major

The

in
215°)

Op.

LGretry

So

PARNS

(Little White
Prelude
in C

nym

2

Be

se,

Op.

William

C. Sack

Beethoven

10;

No.
Jo

Dinner and

Rachmaninoff

P.M.

iki cae oe

1

......:.

NIGHTLY

Banquets Our Specialty

Molique

ad

Phone GLENCOE 1827 *
(Closed on Monday)

Chopin

MacDowell

George

E.

of Ohio State university |
Miss Marion Dahl, 877 Ridgewood
Reserve university, Lt. | drive, and Benton Raymond Tillman,
Sacks entered the navy in June, 1945. 615 West Park avenue, were enrolled
He received indoctrination training at irecently as evening school students at
Moody
Bible institute, Chicago.
Great
Lakes
and
was
then
transThe institute annually trains more
ferred ‘to Tientsin, China, remaining |
than
2,500 students
as missionaries,
overseas for six months during which
A
and

5:30

Ibert

' | Enroll at Bible Institute

Jr.

AT

at 3:00 P.M.

ENTERTAINMENT

Chopin /

Peterson
Op 10,

Ny ig bie sates

Peggy

Gg)

h

2565205,
c dete

Patricia
Etude,

oes

Praeludium

Lt.

e sc

Marcia
Riggs
lst Concerto
for
a Se
ot
le

from
6
A

Revolutionary

Sundays Open

HOUR

Bach

Donkey)
Sharp
Minor,

eine:

COCKTAIL

,

ese

Ane

Andante
MOTO

Maio8. oon.

Andante,

.»Feggy
Jo George
26
NG
Toe
a,
Patricia
Peterson

Om.

AND

will be as followse
Fiat

26,

MV TIASIOR
Wes

DINNER

music.

program

Pretudico
Sonata

OPEN

_
:
Geo.

Heller

Bartoli

graduate
Western

time

he

visited

cluding

points

Yokahama,

Tsingtad.
sonville

nawa,
The

Before
he

also

in-| pastors,

interest

Shanghai

reporting
made

Guam and
lieutenant

gage
tistry

of

stops

in the private practice
upon his return home.

Dried

Use "of

Oki-/|

C quipped

of

den- |

OIL

eSiniy

tank

,

CRADLE

With

|

ANNOUNCEMENTS

installed

No

ae

Down

Payment—36 Months to Pay
Also
STOKERS
- FURNACES
- BOILERS
Ask

for

Free

Estimates—Call

HEAT-RITE
Telephone

PRINTED or ENGRAVED
for Every Occasion

Now

CO.

We will gladly assist you in the
wording and preparation of your copy.

H. P. 6094

WALLACE S. WAKEM
INVITES YOUR

FOR
BOARDING
PONIES
A

@

STABLES

JUMPERS

@

PLEASURE

HORSES

TRAINING

and

RIDING

SPECIALTY

on the Knollwood

Country

Club

Grounds

SAMPLES

ANNOUNCEMENTS

BRIDGE

TALLIES

SINGER PRINTING CO.
Entrance on

LESSONS

LAKE FOREST 2451
Located

,

OF PRINTED

STATIONERY

WEDDING
@

SALE
and

DISPLAY

_ PERSONALIZED

the

KNOLLWOOD
@

@

INSPECTION

of

CHILDREN’S

&gt;

CORRECT

SEE OUR

HUNTERS

esac

Complete $295.00

excellent

salad material.
Pit cooked prunes
and fill them with lush ripe strawberries.
Arrange
the
starwberry- |
filled prunes around a mound of cottage cheese and pass French dressing
separately.

@

You

From

BURNER

2%75-gal.

to

and

SMALL HOME OWNERS
CONVERT NOW!

to. en- |

Prohes:

fruits make

workers.

workers.

With

Novel

school

Jack-

at

Hawaii.
is planning

Christian

and

at

Sunday

Green Bay Rd.
Just So. of
Central

Pus, lers

Sm

‘Telephone
Highland Park 3482-3483

Lithographers

�Yes,

maam, you can

Have Your LAUNDRY
==BACK

IN 4. DAYS!

»*

‘111 on First Honor Roll for
Fifth Period at High School
Second Honors Are Awarded
To 91 Students for Period

Paula Kuhn, Lois Lineberry, Frances
Manfredini,
Bruce
McClure,
Sam
One
hundred
eleven
students ap-4 McMaster, Beverly Mett, Jill Moore,
pear on the first honor roll at High- Elaine Mrazek, Alberta Page, Henry
land Park High school for the fifth Peddle, Bob Phillips, Ellen Pierce,
six-weeks period, while 91 received Evelyn
Pritchard, Adrienne
Rebechini, William Ruekberg, Rosina Sassecond honors recognition:
sorossi, Sue, Sparling, Winogene Stur~
FIRST HONORS
5 A’s—Geraldine Bailey, Mary J. gis, Harold Tasker, Ann Templeton,
Nancy
Thorsen,
Barbara
Wagner,
Eriksen and Wendy Savin.
4 A’s

bara

and

Strauss
of

) THINK of the satisfaction it will give
you to know when, and exactly when, your
laundry will be at your door again, crisp and
clean as quality workmanship can make it!
FLAT IRON guaranteed four-day delivery
means you can make your plans for the
week, and carry them out just as you
planned. Pick-up on Monday—delivery on
Thursday.
Pick-up on Tuesday—delivery
on Friday. And so on. No more wishing you
could enjoy better service . . . FLAT IRON
sees that you really get it! So, if you’ve
‘been spelling “trouble” with the letters
l-a-u-n-d-r-y, why not take this tip to its
permanent solution? Play safe, from now
on, instead of “taking chances” on_ this
question of time-saving delivery!

1 B—Marilyn

Britton,
and

Ned
Nan

Berg,

Bar-

Greenberg,

Sue

Wiener.

4 A’s—Barbara

Alexander, Sue Bar-

ker,
Barnard
Barnes,
Al
Jeanne
Bertrand,
Bernadine

Baum,
Booth,

Nancy Cahill, Carol Coppens, Marste
Demichelis; Richard Flinn, Alice Gilbert, Kenneth Harder, Charlotte Harris, Susan Lautman, Patty Peterson,
Louise

Pollak,

Peter

Taussig,

Bar-

bara Tuerk and John Weber.
3 A’s and 2 B’s—Russell Clark,
Anne Myer,
and Regina
3 A’s and

Joan
jorie

Marjorie Baker,
Lee Bruno, Joan

MarClem-

to BUC. 0286

Bill

Notz,

Werner

Rosen-

telle and Penny Zeisler.
2 A’s and 3 B’s—Joan Chester,

John

Hill, Sue Ostrander, Mathilda Saphir
Dorothea Schwennecker and Sherla
Sybeson.
2. A’s and 2 B’s—Connie Alexander,
| Portia Allen, Willard Allen, Jim Aronson, Gertrude Barber, Patricia Bartell, Jessie
Belmonte,
Joverne
Bulmer, Robert
Bushey, Yvonne
Char-

and we I do the rest!

Bill

Hesler,

David

ney, Barbara
pere,
Robert
Feuchtwanger,

Clemence, Mary ComDemichelis,
Claire
Rosalind

Fox,

Helen

Gardner,
Gertrude
Goodman,
Elsie
Greco, Kent Hallawell, Dick Hesler,

Finch,

Barbara

Patty

Edith

Hirsch,

Hutchinson,

Kilpatrick,

Jean

How-

Helen

Kee,

Margaret

King,

Rosemary Kropke, Anh Lawton, Arlene
Lenzini,
Vera
Lindenmann,
Patricia
Lynn,
Marjorie
Marshall,
beth

Nelson,

Janet

ard,

Carole

old

Wiltberger

Floyd,
Barbara
Flynn,
William
George, Joanie Goelitz, Lewis Goldberg, Bill Goldman, Barbara Halsted,

Robert Metzenberg, Jean

Miller, Har-

Gretchen

Theo Zaeske.
‘SECOND HONORS
1 A and 4 B’s—Ronald Bailey.
1 A and 3 B’s—Ralph Archer, Kenneth
Arenberg,
Peter
Armstrong,
Kate Becker, Louise Bertrand, Jean
Calzia,
Hartman
Canon,
Delories
Casolari, John Churchill, Gloria Cortesi, Caroline Cronkhite, Agnes Bradney, Patricia Dier, Mike Farrell, Mary

ence, Jack Close, Rae Collard, Kean
Block, Aldo
Crovetti, John; Gherardini, Georgia
Glader, Bob
Haskins,
Nancy
Johnson,
Hein
Juergensen,

thal,
Jean
Troxel,
Santi
Ugolini,
Caryl Wagner, Martha Weaver, Ellen
Whitney, Guy Wilbor, Marvyn Wit-

Make your call collect

Walecka,

and

Ferguson,

Jo

Ruth Rogan, Joan Smith
Wirth.
1 B—Dorman
Anderson,

Avety,
Brown,

Jerry

Metzenberg,

Neuman,

ron
Jay

Don

Nash,
) Eliza-

Edmorid

Nichols,

By-

Q©’Connor,
Edward
Piacentini,
Plotkin, Ann
Postels, Elizabeth

Rademacher,
Ringer,

Richard

Barbara

Rietz,

Riskind,

Harold

Helen

Rob-

ertson, Betsy Sanders, Janice Schick,
Richard Schimmelpfeng,. Jayne Swi
nea,
Nell
Taussig,.
Victoire
Toof,
Winslow Whitman and Roland Zagnoli.
5 B’s—John Rosenheim.
;
4 B’s—Adeline Cassel, Mary Andrews,

Jane

Barton,

Jackie

DeRusha,

Marilyn
Erikson,
Gordon
‘Garrett,
Jerry
Juhrend,
John
Kaatz,
Sally
Lautman, Bill Miller, Sue Nolde, Robert

Peet,

Marjorie

Robb,

Ryan, Freddie
Schweiger,
Sinclair Holly Stair, Harold
Gwen

Sybeson,

Margaret

Janet

Nancy

Cynthia
Swanson,

Weiser

and

Wolf.

GienLaing,
Barbara
Lasier,
Jean
Lineberry,
Richard
Loewenthal, John
Mandel,
Edward Neisser, Emily Perreault and
3 A’s—Joanne
Febel,
Ellen
ger,
Nancy
Howe,
Kathie

\

In making this frank bid for your patronage, we want also to acquaint you with
the fine handling of your garments, and
careful responsibility we put into FLAT
TRON service. Four-day delivery of your
work, with us, means
more
than just
prompt attention to your needs. It means
quality all the way through as well!

WANTED
A
After

HOME FOR OUR PUP
— AND OURSELVES
months of looking we finally

pup that ever wrung a fancier's
heart. But the landlord of our Evanston apartment said No!
Dog
lovers understand
why we can "t
give

move.
We

up

this

puppy—so

we've

believe that somewhere

got

to

like to rent to a settled couple with
substance
and
background
(no
children), who would care for the

FLAT TAON LAUNDRY
3629 North Halsted St.
CHICAGO
Forty

Years of Fine

Service

to Fine

Folks!

Zahnle.

By cultivating the beautiful we scatter the seeds of heavenly flowers, as by
doing good we cultivate those that belong to humanity.
—Howard

wind

Chcago’s North Shore — between
Evanston and Waukegan—there’s
a small house that somebody would

Why not giveus a ring—NOW ?

Lawrence

found the most appealing little Boxer

GREGG COLLEGE
School of Business —Preferred
by College Men and Women
e

property as if it belonged to them—
a place where ‘Biff’ (grandson of
both Lustig and Dorian) would
have

4 MONTH
INTENSIVE
COURSE

his “‘very
romp and

SECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGE
STUDENTS AND GRADUATES
Starting June, October, February. Bulletin

own yard,”
grow.

with

room

to

We don’t need a large house but
would like a good-sized living room
with fire-place. Must be available to
North Shore Line. Willing to make
substantial
advance
payment
of
rent. If you have such,1 place—or
know of such a place that might be
available now
or within a few
months — please phone Greenle
2272; or write Box Z, us Hlablens

Pre News. ie

A,

on

request.

Registration

NEXT COURSE

STARTS

now

open.

JUNE 24

*

Regular Day and Evening Schools
Throughout

the Year. Catalog.

_ Approved for VETERAN

T:Training

President, J ohn Robert Gregg, 8.C.D.

~ Director, Paul M. Pair,M. A.

THE

GREGG

COLLEGE

S.,6 a , sieht
;
Dept. Cc.
TELEPHO
ie SATve isst

|

�Thursday,

May

22,

Page

1947

Local Men, 17 to 40
Can

Join

‘Sign for Green Bay
Kindergarten on
Wednesday, May 28

Civilian

Naval Reserve Here
Operation
Naval
Reserve,
being
observed on a national scale during
the week of May 18 to 25, has as its
objective maintaining as an instrument for world
peace and
better
citizenship the potentials of America’s
victorious sea power.
The task of a local committee
organization now in formation will be

Mothers of
tering Green
garten in the
their children
of the school
May

John Bean Attends

Culligan Convention
John

wear

They

the

naval

will not

meetings

or

reserve

be obligated
go

on

cruises,

lapel
both

FLAVOR-OF-THE-MONTH

Royale

and

BENEFIT

28.

The softwater service, which has
been operating on the North Shore
since

last

year,

originated

in

Whea-

ton, Ill., in 1938 and now has more
than 700 operators
serving 250,000
homes

from

A new
fits

and

New

York

technicolor
economies

to

California.

film on the beneof

soft

water,

The beauty of holmess has done
more, and will do more, to regenerate
the world and bring in everlasting
righteousness than all the other agencies
together.

—Chalmers

of

:

@lésernce
our

Spring
gowns

of

complete

Collectisn
suits

wraps

CREAM

Vy,
butterscotch ice cream

all the way through!

Now its Sealtest time!

ICE

CREAM
BY

to

be available for local showing during
the summer, was given its premiere
at the conventfon.

put

ANY

TEST

to

4,

DANCE

manager

millinery and accessories

Ribbons of mellow

BEST

owner

pin.

Butterscotch
ICE

Bean,

‘to attend

which are voluntary, and they can
resign at their own request.
Men from ages 17 to 40 are eligible,
those 17 years old permitted to join
only with parental consent.
No physical examination is required.

SEALTEST,

H.

of the Culligan Soft Water services,
Evanston, and Highland Park representative of the organization, attended
the first annual district convention of
Culligan Soft Water service operators in Chicago last week.

children who will be enBay Road school kinderfall are asked to register
in the kindergarten room
on Wednesday afternoon,

It was announced that the child’s
birth certificate should be brought at
to acquaint service clubs and other the time of registration and only chilcivic groups with the necessity for dren who will be five years old before
maintenance of a strong naval re- December 31, 1947, will be eligible to
serve as an instrument for world enter kindergarten this fall. It will not
peace, and to inform prospective re- be necessary to bring the children to
cruits of the advantages offered them be registered Wednesday.
,
by the same new civilian reserve.
Kindergarten teachers and mothers of
First to Enlist
incoming kindergarten children are inFirst Highland Parker to enlist in vited to a social get-together and tea
the new naval reserve last week was the same afternoon at 3:30 o'clock.
James Bernard Jones of 1701 Greenwood
avenue,
Chief
Electrician’s
Further information can be secured
Mate Paul E. Richter of the local
recruiting station has announced, In from Chief Richter at the Highland
World War II Jones served as a mail Park postoffice every Thursday beman second class, in the fleet post tween the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
or by calling Harrison 6886, the Navy
office at New York.
The peace time naval reserve offers Recruiting station, 321 South Plymany advantages to young men seek- mouth court, Chicago.
ing a trade, Chief Richter said. The
new training includes study and training in more than 50 trades, several
of which cannot be completely studied
elsewhere.
Among
trades
listed
by
the
recruiting
officer were
electronics,
photography,
aviation mechanics,
aerography and radio. technique., Reservists are paid for learning these
trades and also will be eligible to go
on a cruise aboard a man o’ war
with all expenses paid, he added.
Voluntary Attendance
Members of the reserve will carry a
US Naval reserve identification card
and

23

off

Presented by

HALF

DAY

BOY

SCOUTS

Troop No. 54
Place
Salem
Route

22

Follow

Farm,

Long

Grove

to

first dirt road west of
Route 83.
the arrows and lights.

Saturday Evening, May 24th
Time

8:00 Till

12:30

P.M.

Music by
Santi and
Orchestra

Refreshments
Fun

Donation:

His All Scout
from Chicago

—
for

Door Prizes
All

One

Dollar

�Plans
(Continued

vacant land on
_ school now has

3 desks,

tables,

from

Page

3)

most of which the
an option; 100 new

and

chairs

for

three

‘ classrooms, $1,400; and about $1,800
for school building repairs and up‘The “balance of approximately $1,200 will be used for the first and most
ediate steps for the development
of the playground as outlined by Mr.
~“MacFadzian.
,

Faculty Salary Increases
~ Operational costs
of maintaining
the
school have not risen as_ high,
proportionately,

as

the

salary

expen-

ditures.
The increase in salary is
_ partly due to added personnel, with
a full-time kindergarten teacher, music
department,
registration.

and

larger

primary

Mr.
Giss explained that teachers,
as a group, prefer to be paid on a
salary schedule which will give them
some definite indication of maximum

salary. The teaching staff has been
authorized by the board to present
such a salary schedule. Since there
are innumerable ramifications of such
a program

the

final

plan

will

have

separate

on

a salary

for

a

few

regimented

fundamental

subjects without individual approach
to the child. He mentioned many of
the ever increasing innovations in the
teaching field, with great improvements, most of which are here to

to,

be carefully worked out before being
put into effect.
It is reported that
about 80 per cent of all schools now
pay

entrances

boys and girls,

stay.

The

schedule.

growth

of

the

kindergarten

School funds are not directly available to boards
of
education.
Tax
funds for school purposes are paid by
voucher through the township school

and nursery schools, lunch programs,
broadened techniques in teaching,’social
studies,
comprehensive
health

trustees,

ation, state required physical examinations and physical education, psychological
advisory
services,
indus-

whose

treasurer

is

programs,

Martin

Hart of Highland Park. Several signatures are necessary On each voucher,

so no

individual

could

have

in the

tary
be

the

program

with

son of today’s aims with
years ago:—the country

a

recre-

newer

school

additions

to the

field, many

offered

in

elemen-

of which

will

Deerfield.

At the conclusion of the meeting,
Mrs. James Collins and the hospitality committee served refreshments in
the school lunchroom where a prolonged informal extension of the eve-

for publication.

cluded

aids, planned

trial arts, and scores of other departments are benefits to the school child

ac-

cess to funds. (This answers a recent
false rumor regarding the taking of
school funds.)
A financial report is being prepared
Curriculum Sketched
Superintendent W. E. Sheehan

visual

con-

compari-

those of 20
school with

ning’s

subjects

was

enjoyed

present.

by

all

DEERFIELD BOWLING NEWS
Sweepstakes - Finals - Banquets
It is not news that the Deerfield church
Ladies have skill in cooking in their well
equipped
kitchens.
This
past
week
has
ushered

in

artistic

YOUR RAILROAD reports

Me Typ
ST PAUL

wal9/4

on its business for 1946
|

ageagi TRAFFIC was affected by many strikes
and a national shortage of freight cars due to

wages, and costs of materials and supplies.
The Milwaukee Road is a local industry. It
owns property, pays taxes, meets payrolls, purchases materials and supplies in your community
and state. Its employes are your neighbors; its
taxes help support your schools and roads. How
the Railroad earned and spent its money last
year is illustrated in the charts below.

inability to obtain material for new car building.
Demobilization resulted in heavy passenger traffic for the first five months, but there was then

a sharp drop. While total operating revenues
declined only 12.1%, net income was considerably lower than in 1945 due to greatly increased

WHERE

OUR

DOLLAR

CAME

Hauling

Freight

FROM
..

Carrying Passengers
Other Passenger Train ‘Revenue. .
including Dining and Buffet Car Service

Mail and Express.

&lt;——_——

NT

sis

¥,

.

Cie

oe:

81,6

And,

foods,

so,

Other Income—Net.

7

ability,
League

Local

..

.
Ex.

Interest on Debt and Other Faahiccsiesin ot
eee

5.9

Coes

Remainder Available for Improvements and
Other Corporate Purposes. . .

1.6

The Milwaukee Road appreciates your patronage when you travel or ship. To serve you more
efficiently, new diesel locomotives and freight

cars are being continuously placed in service.

New passenger trains and services will also be
inaugurated this year—including the transconti-

nental OLrympran HrawatHas making their
first run on June 29th.
rs

THE MILWAUKEE
ae ete

Se

aren ¥ a.

Roap
West

church

league

to

perfection,

on

the

1946-47

fine service
sponsors.

mention

Secretaries
and
who
contributed

goes

to

the

are
soci-

of

all

League

Treasurers,
and
to the
success

to
of

—

all
the

leagues.

Charlies Crovetti of the Major
League,
Velma Vander Bloomen of Victory Rollers,
Clarence “Smitty” Schmidt of the Chamber of Commerce,
Arthur
Merner
of the
Bethlehem

League,

Charles

Yous

of

the

Holy Cross Church League, Mrs. Florence
Jacobs
of St. Paul’s
League,
throughout
the season have entertained everyone with
their accurate,
faithful
work
as Scribes.
Giving

you

weekly

reports

of

progress

made
by
their
leagues,
Other
reports
have been available from the weekly bulletins of each league.
To Mrs. Ruth Pettis, many
thanks for
her
kindly
cooperation,
and
painstaking
efforts to include all news at all times.
To all patrons
and
generous
sponsors
who
encouraged
high standards
in bowling, the management wishes a happy vacation and
extends
a cordial invitation
to
return next season 1947-48, in the fall.
In the
Lake
County
Major
Traveling
League the D.B.A. team won second place.
VICTORY
ROLLERS
By Velma Vander Bloomen
standings:

Team
The
D.B.A.
Scarlett’s
Mac’s
Lorette’s
Girls
Gourley
Co.
Erie’s D-X
Reliable
Garage
Team
high series: ‘DBA, 2401; Haven,
2338; and Scarlett’s, 2288.
861;
Team
high singles
game:
Haven,
DBA, 858; and Scarlett’s, 811.
High individual series: Betty Rich, 582;
Mary
Spannraft,
570; and
Elda
Klemp,
549
High
individual
game:
Frieda
Moore,
225; Theo Hamill, 224; and Vera Vander
Bloomen, 222
DEERFIELD “CHAMBER
OF COMMERCE
Final results and standings:
Park
Ave.
Elm_
St.
Walnut
St.
Cedar St.
Central
Ave.
‘Cherry

St.

Pine Ave.
46
Clay
St.
2591—
Team High
Series: 2705—Elm;
Cherry;
2573—Pine.
982—Elm;
934—
Team
High
Game:
Cherry; 925—Clay.
Individual
Series:
650—Leisk ; 623—
Picchietti; 615—Hamill.
266
Individual High Game: 279—Wolf;
—Schmidt; 250—Picchietti.
Frizes
will be awarded
at banquet
at
Briergate
C.'C.
Monday,
May
19, at
o’élock
(all bowlers be there).
Sweepstake results on final night: 1st—
Hans &amp; Bestor; 2nd—Johnson &amp; Johnston;

. .

Depreciation Charges, Mise. wees
penses, Net Rents ie

Mortgages

done

commenting

good
fun, and
Officers,
loyal

Honorable

Labor—to Operate and Maintain the Railroad

Fuel, Power, Materials and Supplies.
State and

of

&amp;

4th—McGarvie

Wolf;

&amp;

6th—
Tibbetts;
&amp;
5th—Plagge
Leisk;
Schmidt &amp; Seiffert.
out of vemnpieaited
Game
Team
High
out of
game
2nd
chietti &amp; Seider; high
money—J.
Falasco.
By “Smitty.”
LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEGION BOWLING
By Mary Frances Anderson
Team standings :

:

Taxes—Federal,

all

in

8rd—Welch

oie
Switching
Other Operating Revenues. ....

succession

season
just
completed,
outstanding
the high standards
of sportsmanship,

Team

A

a

banquets, with entrees of delicious turkey
and tender ham, with delightfully planned,

&gt;

.
.
.
.
.

8—Coleman
6—Dunham
8—Johnston
2—Hurt
5—Riley

.

1—Trute

. 4—Klemp
40
7—Olson
“High three games: No. 6, 2437; No. 3,
2411; No. -1,.. 2878,
High individual 8 games: N. Harvey, 606;
J. Klemp, 599; and F. Coleman, 597.
8, 887;
No.
game:
single
high
Team
No. 1, 879; and No. 3, 860.
Individual high single game: F. Stupple,
246; and F. Coleman,
268: M. Anderson,
246.
ST. PAUL’S BOWLING
LEAGUE
Florence
Jacobs,
Scribe
Last night of bowling ean cin ee. are:
Team

7

Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team

5
1
2
6
8
4
3

Sweepstakes
Men:
High, C. Pantle Jr.; 2nd, J. Juhrend; 8rd, W. Bean.
Higk-out’ of money:
J. Swanson—190.
Women: Ist, Martha M. Bock; 2nd, Ada

of

money

A. Moen;

Alte

tied:

M.

Spannraft—186

3rd, Dorothy

Clavey—1 86.

Davis.

and

High out —
ores

i

�_ Thursday,

May

22,

1947

BROWNIES ON THE STAIRS

Make

A

3-Year

Contribution

to the

Highland

Park Hospital

$525,000

Building

Fund

— New Address —
62 E. VAN BUREN ST.
HARRISON

FOR

GORGEOUS

in color or black and
The New Improved

3747-3748

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NEW

BROWNIE TROOP 18 OF. LINCOLN SCHOOL gathered at a Highland Park
home recently for this spring get-together.
Bottom row, left to right, Sherry Howard, Julie Patton, Marilyn Nathan
and Elspeth Maxwell. Second row, Patsy Oppenheimer and Beth Brownlee. Third
row, Jean Youngs, Susan Murray and Carol Summers.
Fourth row, Angela
Scornavacco and Brownie leaders, Mrs. Arthur Howard and Mrs. Louis Nathan.

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EVANSTON
1645

Orrington

Phone

Use Our Budget Plan

STORE

Davis

Moll

and

Phone

2363

There

may

other

good

Wilson's

Sprig

CUSTOM

Mad

Collections

CHICAGO

Orders

34

foods-but

butere

Phone

Ave.

STORE

N. Clark St.
Fra.

2230-1

be

dog
only

is Ideal.

Yood 7
heck tts

MADE anZ

READY-TO-WEAR

haLe hy

unsurpassed
CHESTNUT

ed
Values
ST REET

The

7-Course

Meal

1. Meat and meat by-products
—animal protein.
2. Bone — calcium and
phosphorus.
3. Wheat and barley —carbohydrates.
4. Wheat germ
— vitamins and
vegetable protein.
5. Carrots — carotene
and
roughage
ge.
6. Cod liver oil, fortified —vitamins Aand D.
7 Soy grits—vegetable protein.

�Page:

26

?

i

Men

]

at 4 p.m. on Week-ends and Holidays
77

OWN

opens

Lk

dawn.

|

IT’S A DATE
FOR FINE FOOD
If you are looking for an adventure
in Fine Eating you'll be interested
in Villa Moderne.
Frank Hutchins’
“Villa” is famous from coast to coast.

at

Noon.

Waukegan

Highland

’till

open.

Lounge

Library Notes

Road.

SAFETY LEGION TOGS
These popular Clothes for Boys have
been made in Berne, Indiana, for 40

York,

is

known

quality Food

for

which

the

excellent

he serves.

FASHIONS

The

Ruth

idea

was

born

when

The

Highland

Park

Public

Awards Dinner May 20
William H. Savin of Highland Park,
art director of Roche, Williams &amp;
Cleary Inc., and president of the Art

library

a

are

EXTERIOR

Club

of

Chicago,

assisted

in arrangements

Art

ee

oe

Shi

ae

the

Institute,

Chicago,

Make

were

band

are

Varney;

trumpet;
and

-Jim

Gordon

piano;

Dave

Humphrey,

Gieseke,

Garden

gi

drums.

Being Fit to Live With—H.
E.
Fosdick
/
Lorado Taft—A. B. Taft
Land of the Dacotahs—B. Nelson,
Dachu Sermons—M. Niemoller
Behind the Silken Curtain—B. C. Crum
How Green was my Father—D. Dodge
Radiant

Corn

Heating—T.

Country—H.

N.

Adlam

Croy

Defeat in Victory—J. CiechanoWski
Great Salt Lake—D. L. Morgan
George Ade—F. C. Kelly

HOUSE
3365

FRANKLIN, Singing®Pianist
Radio

Star

Entertainment

9 Until

Closing

THE

FAMILY

DINNERS

PLACE

FOR

Delicious Food at Moderate Prices

DECORATORS

Winnetka

132

Dine

|

in a Distinctive

Ultra

AAES

'

2

eee
gS

(Reet

’

”

aes

Sa

Modern

Cocktail Lounge
Atmosphere,

Air Con-

—

. ditioned to insure Maximum Comfort—Ample Parking Spaces..."
ce

SE

2

ae Na a)

Holt,

clarinet;

On

TOWERS

Popular

Bert.

Radio Debut

A SMART NORTH SHORE RESTAURANT
at: Lincolnwood, Illinois —- Lincoln and Touhy Avenues

ORLAND

the
the

Jim Varney and his band have'been
added to FM radio station WEAW
in Evanston.
They may be heard
weekly at 2:15 p.m. on Saturdays,
featured on their own program.
Since Jim Varney, the leader and
arranger,
organized
the band
last
year, they have gone far, playing at
dances, receptions, dinners and other
group gatherings.
Members of the

The GLASS
Phone:

din-

of
at

Ray, 1622 Judson avenue, George S.
Lyman 910 South Linden avenue, and
George
W.. Straub, 2360 Lakeside
place.

one
Re

for

ner and the annual exhibit
club which opened last week

IN FURNITURE

60 Green Bay Rd.
Lege

presided

ADV.”

Opens

EVERLASTING EVERGREENS
in, also shrubs, perennials, roses,
vines, hedges and seeds.

Cobaictul,

Directors’

at the annual awards dinner held at
the Palmer House May 20, and presented 10 medal awards and 26 merit
citations for distinctive contributions
to advertising art during 1946.
Among Highland Parkers
who

Wakefiel

For lawn, porch and terrace. Beautiful
SALTERNI Wrought Iron table sets in
White wooden garden
lovely new colors.
chairs and tables.
:

Man

k

Aid in Advertising

has added many new books to its
school bus accident so deeply affected shelves in the past month. These were
a man that he dedicated his life to purchased
with
money
raised
by
sponsored Friends of the Library. A partial list
Where
else does one find more beauty “safety for children.” He
in a Dine and Dance Spot!
And the “Safety Legion of America” to follows:
teach safety to school children.
And Three Came Home—A. N. Keith
where, oh where, is more gorgeous
Food served!
Here the utmost in so—Safety Legion Clothes came into Grand Central—D. Marshall
They are good clothes—wear
glamour is combined with the utmost being.
Cities of America—G, S. Perry
in refinement. Henri Gendron’s Or- well—wash well—hold their fit. Sold
chestra plays for Dinner and Dancing only at Teverbaugh’s Store for Boys West Coast F'ortrait—J. R. Muench
in Evanston.
Booklet with each gar- Inside Your Home—D. Cooper
after Nine. Skokie at County Line.
ment “10 Goals of Safety and Sports- Picasso—A. H. Barr
EXQUISITE
GIFTS
manship.”
The
Pilot Magazine
is River of the Sun—R. Calvin
FOR
SPRING
BRIDES
interesting.
624 Davis.
Uni. 6240.
Ghost Towns of Colorado:
Grace Herbst shows most appealing
RARE
BUYS
IN EAR-RINGS.
Home Furnishings to grace the homes
Haydn—K. Geiringer
AT CHANDLERS
of the most fastidious Brides.
MaRediscovery
of Morals—H. C. Link
hogany End Tables and Book Racks. Better hurry, hurry, hurry to Evan- Citizen 13660—M. Okubo
ston
and
take
advantage
of
this
wonSterling Silver Candelabra, Sherbets
Thru Russia’s Backdoor—R. E. Lauterwith Tray, Martini Mixer Sets, Ice derful Ear-Ring Sale at Chandler’s
bach
on
Davis
St.
A
large
lot
of
salesBuckets
(thermos)
Italian Pottery
An American Dynasty—J. Tebbel
man’s
samples,
values
to
$7.50.
a
pair
Luncheon
Plates.
AND _ beautiful
Christian Perfection—F. S. Fenelon
Lamps with the most glorious Shades. —all marked at the price of ONE Jim Crow America—E. Conrad
The selection includes alMany Tooled Leather articles and DOLLAR.
Chrysanthemum and the Sword — R.
some grand Mirrors.
563 Lincoln, most everything — Silver, Gold, Jewel
Benedict
—
and
White.
We
were
so
impressed
Winnetka.
that we walked away with six pairs, Alexandra Kollontay—I. de Palencia
WITH
THE DIGNIFIED
AIR
— for ourselves and for gifts. Sher- Appeal to the Nations—N. Thomas
One Damned Island After Another—
OF A COUNTRY ESTATE
man and Davis.
C. Howard
That’s the Moraine Hotel in HighVENTILATING FANS
Life and the Dream—M. Colum
land Park.
The years of gracious
FOR HOME USE
Faith of a Liberal—M. R. Cohen
living have given it appealing charm
Keep
“GREASY
GRIME”
out of Creative Home Decorating — H. K.
—A wise management has given it
your home with a Kitchen Ventilating
Rockow
fresh decorations and every modern
Fan.
The same air currents which Your Mexican Holiday—A. Brenner
convenience.
Picturesque
Gardens.
Wooded
Ravines, and Lake Michi- carry appetizing odors from foods Alaska Land of Tomorrow — E. A.
prepared,
also carry
steam,
Herron
gan. Drive out for Lunch or Dinner. being
smoke,
grease,—depositing
a
film
on Nine Bad Shots of Golf—J. Dante
Excellent Cusines.
801 Sheridan Rd.
walls, furnishings, clothing.
About Human Destiny—P. L. du Nouy
HP. 4444.
403 pounds of “GREASY
GRIME” Touched With Fire—O. W. Holmes
are given off from cooking for a fam- Firebrand—H. Troyat
FRESH AND COOL
ily of four during a year — a pound Experiment in Rebellion—C. Dowdey
AS DEW AT DAWN
This can all be removed and With Fly, Plug and Bait—R. Bergman
Are the crisp White Ruffle Curtains a day.
shown
at Mildred Doyle’s
Curtain your kitchen kept cool — clean — The Doctor has a Baby—E. Barkins
Shop.
Many styles in Organdy, also odor fresh, with a good Ventilating Sonora Sketch Book—J. W. Hilton
Dotted or Plain Marquisette.
De- Fan which is sold at Utility Products Mysterious Sea—F. C. Lane
lightfully
Flowered
Rayon
Faille Co., Inc., 1521 Sherman, Evanston. Hurrah for Arkansas—M. Lyon
Bedspreads with Matching Dressing Dav. 7733.
Spring in Washington—L. J. Halle
Table Skirts and Draperies by TexMAKE RESERVATIONS
tron.
Also Shower and Bathroom
FOR YOUR DOG
Curtains, and Shag Rugs, all in lus- When you make plans for your Vacacious colors. 944 Linden. Win. 3377.
tion, be sure and ’phone Butterworth
Kennels
about
keeping
your
Dog
ON YOUR
LIST
when you are away.
Large, cool,
‘OF SMART PLACES. TO GO
modern buildings. Big shady grounds.
Be sure and put Glenview Country Splendid food and all comforts. Your
House near the top.
It’s pleasant Dog is certain to be well and happy
when you drop in there to find our in the care of Dr. Butterworth.
Liold friend Hildegarde at the Ham- censed Veterinarian
always in atmond
Organ
and
‘“Mary”
as _ the tendance.
2810 W. Park Ave.
H.
cordial hostess — both came from P. 2967.
the same Dining place on Skokie.
Mr. Buzanis, Owner here from New
years.

Dark

igh

ee EES ON a Fae

a Mg

�Page 27

GIANTS WIN DISTRICT GOLF TOURNEY
4

‘Thursday, May 22, 1947

Grammar School
Track Meet To

State Meet To
Be Held Friday
And Saturday

WHEATON

AT

TROPHY

AWARDED

Be On May 28
The

Track

High-

*

and

Club,

“H”

schoo]

High

the

by

sponsored

meet
Park

land

annual

fourth

Suburban League Champions Set
Sights on State Golf Title

School

Grammar

directed by Dave Floyd, head football
coach,

Wednesday

next

held

be

will

afternoon at 2 p.m. at the high school
The purpose of the
athletic field.
meet is to better acquaint grammar
school students with the activities of
the high school.
The meet will be host to boys in the
sixth, seventh, and eighth grades from
Deerfield, Bannockburn, Wilmot, Ravinia, Ridge, Braeside, Lincoln, Elm
Place, and Oak Terrace schools. The

sixth and seventh graders will participate jointly, while the eighth graders will participate separately.
“It’s sure to be a swell meet,” says
Bob Kohf, president of the “H” Club,
“and I urge all the boys to come out.
Be on time.”

on

Place—Highland

Park

School

High

Field.

Athletic

Classification:
Class 1—Boys of the eighth grade
Class 2—Boys of the seventh grade
Class 3—Boys of the sixth grade
Awards:
‘Medals will be given for the first
three places in class 1 and ribbons for
fourth and fifth places in class 1.
Ribbons will be given for the first
five places in classes 2 and 3.
Participation:
Each competitor is limited to two
running events and one field event or
three field events.
Three competitors may be entered
in each event from each of the three
classes from each school except in relays

class

in each

limited

are

which

from

each

school.

considered

are

Relays

team

one

to

event.

an

Special:
For class 1 or eighth grade only.
50 Yd. low hurdle race on the grass.
Hurdles

Only

one

feet

two

six inches

competitor

high.

from

each

school.

Yds.

to

second,

ten

Twenty
yds.

to

first
yds.

hurdle,

ten

third

and

to

ten yds. to finish line.
Events:
Entree sheets are provided for all
events in each class.
Please fill them out carefully and

return them to Highland Park High
School in care of J. D. Floyd, at least
one week before May 28.

Local Golfers Win 2

Meets; Down McHenry
15-0, Waukegan 8-7
Highland Park High school’s Chamteam,
Golf
League
pion Suburban
coached by Mr. Bolle, defeated, Waukegan in a close meet last Tuesday,
Golf
Flora
May 13 at the Glenn
course in Waukegan by a score of 8The Parkers also defeated Mc7
Henry last Monday, May 12, for the
second straight time by a score of 150
The defeat of Waukegan marked
(Continued on page 30)
i;

Spe

TRACK

VARSITY

OF THE

MEMBERS

time.

:
*

41-37—78.
Photo

Facts about the meet:
28.
Date—May
Time—2 p.m. Be

Highland Park
High school last
Saturday won its own district golf
tournament to qualify for the state
tournament this week-end. The Little
Giants finished with 338. Arlington
Heights came in second with 357, with
Waukegan, 360; New Trier, 363; Evanston, 366;
Northbrook, 371; and
;
Niles, 377.
winThe individual scores for the
ning Highland Parkers were Richard
Flinn, 40-43—83; Dominic Ori, 44-40—
and
42-43—85;
Coleman,
84; Dan
AlterRichard Sheridan, 43-43—86.
nate Deno Melchoirre finished with
43-43—86 and also will compete inthe
State tournament.
Robert Dombrowski of Niles High
school in Skokie was medalist with

by

Henry

X.

Tomorrow

Arenberg

display the trophy they won

TEAM

From the left the men are
in the shuttle relay at the recent Wheaton relays.
Behr, sophomore, who
Bill Hesler, Bill Miller and Pete Haupt, seniors and Steve
by Mark Panther.
competed in varsity track this year. The team was coached

Frosh-Soph Trackmen Capture
Third in North Shore Meet
Table
/

Park

17

1/5

tine),

5

Waukegan

—

41

Trier

Highland

5 1/4”.
Discus—Roth

Palatine 6

45 1/10 —

Evanston
New

of Points

Pole

Highland Park High school’s FroshSoph track team, coached by Mark
captured

third

in

place

(NT),

Vault

—

May

another

Knowlton

sophomore

member

of the track squad placed third and
fourth in the shot put and the 50 yard
dash respectively.

Summaries
50

Yd.

(BE),
Time

Dash—Hodge

High
ardson

(E),

Thiel
6.0.

Hurdles—Behr
(NT),

(Niles). Time
100

Yd.

(E),

Ransom

Knowlton

Cooksey

(HP).

(HP),

Rich-

(NT),

Siegel

16.8.

Dash—Hoban

(NT),

Ran-

som (E), McLean (E), Calkins (NT).
Time 10.6.
660
Yd.
Run—Demichelis
(HP),
Newport.
(Palatine),
McHugh
(E),
Dern (NT). Time 1:33.
Low Hurdles — Richardson (NT),
Knight
(E), Behr (HP),
Sorenson
(W). Time 14.4.
220 Yd. Dash—Hoban (NT), McMurray
(Niles),
Pesak
Lean (E),
(W). Time 23.3.
Roth
(NT),
Put—Richberg
Shot
(E), Knowlton (HP), Smith (E). 52’

(E),

Calkins

Colligion (PalaRichberg

he:

—

(NT).
(Niles),

Faithfulness and truth are the most
sacred excellences and endowments of
the human ‘mind.
—Cicero

PERRY'S

10.

Evanston nosed New Trier out of
top honors by scoring 45 1/10 points
to the Trierites 41.
Park
for Highland
scorer
High
was Steve Behr who garnered seven
points by winning the high hurdles
and placing third in the low hurdles.
Park
Dimichelis also of Highland
showed good form by winning the 660.

—

3 3/4”.
High Jump—McGrew (NT), Spaid
(E),
Littlejohn
(E),
Miller
(W),
Lange (Niles)—Tie for 4th. 5’ 6 7/8”.
Relay—Evanston, New Trier, Niles,
Arlington Hts. Time 47.1.

Hunt (Ben.),—Tie for l1st—Gibs (EF),
Robinson
(AH),
Raglan@
(AH),
Heap (HP), Llewellyn (HP),—Tie for

Eleventh Annual North Shore Meet
which was held at Evanston on Saturday,

Saturday,

(NT), Busse (AH), Carlson (E). 20°

Henniger

the

and

3rd—9’ 3”.
Broad Jump—Knight

113’ 9 1/4”.

—

Arlington Heights 4 1/5
Niles 9144 — Bensonville 4

Panther,

Smith

(E),

(Friday)

the Highland Park High school golf
team will seek to annex the state golf ©
title to their recent collection of victory laurels.

Highland fling
Hours:

Daily 11 to Midnight — Sunday 1 to Midnight
Featuring

@
BANANA SPLITS
@
HAMBURGERS
SODAS
630 N Green Bay Rd.
One

block ‘north

of

HIGHLAND HITS
SUNDAES
H. P. 5442.

Vine

LAKE FOREST DAY CAMP.
FOR YOUR
EXPERIENCE

BOYS—A

COMPLETE

THE

WITHIN

CAMPING
SHORE

NORTH

AREA!

Boys 5-12. Under the direction of three Lake Forest
Academy faculty members. Swimming, Boating, Fishing,
Games, Arts &amp; Crafts, Athletics.

Happiness,

Capable Staff.

and

Athletic Training

Emphasis

Camp,

c/o

Lake

Forest Academy,

Lake

or call L. F. 2833 or L. F. 2790 evenings.
a

pes

Character

on Health,
9 A.M.—
Hours
Building.
Season June 23-Aug. 1.
For
information
write
Lake
Shore
Summer
-4:30 P.M.
Day

ae.
-

Forest,

Ill.,

|

�Thursday,

L

American

Legion

Activities

May

22,

1947

Girl Scout News
By Mrs. Lewis C. Stryker
And

Mrs.

Stuart

Hoadley

Troop 2—Brownie Troop 2 has
just had
its investure.
Boy!
activity.

Oh_

boy!

Here,

lowing

Such
a week
of
fellows were just

the

their

for

14th,

the

line

Cuneo

handicraft

up

farm

for

contest,

an

June

excursion

(which,

fol-

got

Brownie

wings:
Emily
Hart, Susan Hay-

settling down
after the big circus
when they started to move into new
den quarters, plan a very special project

The

girls

ner,

Nancy

Ja-

cobs,

Gloria

Mc-

Laughlin,

to

Nagel,

Ruth

PaKay
Paul,
gel,
Gertrude
Siffert
Betsy Sturm, Carol Yous, Margaret

unfortunately

had to be postponed due to rain) and

Doris

plan and practice kite flying for the
contest this next Saturday...
It’s a pretty heavy schedule, gang,
but we know you love it. The darn

Worth,
Catherine
Pearson,
Jacob, Joyce Altman, Sharon
Mary Miller, Phyllis Becker,

kite flying game is dependent upon
weather,
but I’m certain
this
rain
can’t last forever. Your den mothers

in this troop. Donna Berquist
has her brownie Wings while.

will

to scouting.
began
with

keep

place

so

you

posted

we

as to time

hope

you'll

all

at

the

moment,

but

Seiler

and

be

on

hand, May 24th.
Of
course,
that
complimentary
baseball game at Cub’s’Park on June
16th seems to overshadow everything
else,

Peterson.

much

will

Left to right:

Deerfield’s

rict Commander Archie

Bowen

Russell

Zartler’s

with

remain

on

mom

her group
Wilmot

refuses

so this
road.

...

den

District Legion Commander
To Be Here on May 26

to

will

What

a

has

“taken

now!

over”

plans!

DEN 5—
Whee!

gee!

does

she

have

... Yessir, this gang learned a flock
of songs last week that they’ll sing
on a “Private” picnic some day soon.
With woods on two sides of them
Billy’s mom is planning a hot-dogfest out in the open some warm evening soon.
DEN 4—
With a super special treat in refreshments

known

as

the

“Den

Special” Randall Vanderbeek’s
er made quite a hit with her
, Rene Marshall had to miss out
he was in Chicago at the time
meeting, but we hope he'll be

, the fun
cial”

this week. ... “Den

...hm-m-m,

I

wonder

4

mothcubs.
since
of the
in on

4 Spenow!

Will this wonder be revealed? ... I
think I'll drop in some day to satisfy
my curiosity.
Bill Neill was the only. one who
guessed the answer to a Magic trick
Ranny’s mom showed the boys. .. .
Nice work, Bill!

...

here’s a new

adopted:

“The

slogan this
next

award

and maybe more for every cub in
Den
4.” ... Boy,
that’s
sumpin’!
How about a “Happy Birthday” ato
Kenneth George, gang? . . . He’s ten

swell
reputation
they
must
Congratulations, fellows 1
DEN 3—
Billy Powell’s mother has
and,

have!

Wait!
den

A

surprise

party

for

Joe

Kilcoyne! . . . No, it wasn’t his birthday, but Tommy
Salyard’s mom refused to pass up a chance for a very

special meeting
Joe

who's

at her home

sporting

to honor

his

Webelos

badge these days.
A lucious coconut cake with more
root. beer than the fellows
could
drink served as refreshments. Fancy
paper plates and cups decorated
table while a swell prize awaited

boys who could
farthest—outside,
Chief.

Dickie

scale
of

Special

the

the
the

his plate the
course!
Den

Johnson

Bobby Cole for
was very close.

nosed

award,

out

but

it

Cross
every

hall tonight, gang!
We
family
represented,
so

make
sure they
arrive on
7:30 p.m., Thursday, May 22!!

10th
nee

time!

Bluff.

by

James

and

Kilcoyne

Tenth

Dist-

district Legion meeting at Guron Friday evening were Earl

Hurt,

Clarence

Scheer.
of this
Forest.

The next
group will

Huhn,

and

monthly
be held

Carl

meeting
in Lake

World War II Veterans
Should Read This
The
affidavits
necessary
for all
navy men to sign in order to obtain
the state bonus are now available
and may be obtained from Eric Banfield at the D-X Service station, from
the

Deerfield

News

agency,

or

from

Earl Hurt.
Forms for terminal leave pay for
both army and navy must be filed
before September 1, 1947. Forms may
be obtained
from Earl Hurt, who
states that after the final date on
September

“can

forget

1,

those

who

didn’t

file

about it for good.”.

Deerfield

Post Buys

Woodman

Todd

Woodman

kegan
May
Earl

W.

House

Todd

house

on

Wau-

road, Contracts were signed on
14 by Harold Giss, adjutant, and
Hurt, commander, to complete

the negotiations. Théy expect to take
over the building about the middle
of October.

Cubbing Discussed Saturday
Evening at Neill Home

cepted the chairmanship. Frank Zartler is cubmaster. Cub leaders will atten da conclave the first week in June.

Leinberger

Rev.
church

Meeting
Hugo

Attends

in Peru

Leinberger

attended

the

of St. Paul’s
annual

of

the

Church”

new

Hammer

girls

already
Noreen

are

new

The investure program
the regular color cere-

night
circle.
Refreshments
were
served
to the
‘many
mothers’
who
attended the ceremony.

Troop 3—The girls of Troop 3 are
working on the
Dramatics
badge.
They hope to fulfill all the requirements by the end of the school term.
Troop 4—This troop had a potluck
Supper Friday, May 16, at Wilmot
School. The
fathers
and
mothers
were invited. A court of awards was
held at this time. Names of the award
winners will ‘appear in a later issue
of the Review.
Troop 5—The girls of Troop 5 are
working on three badges: Personal
Health;

Foot

Traveler;

and

Some of the girls are also
on outside badges. All are
toward

their

first

class

They

were

very

working
working

badge.

Troop, 6—These Brownies
to Lake Bluff Orphanage
care that
The troop

Clothing.

impressed

went up
recently.
with

the

the children were given.
celebrated its birthday on

them than in the box!
Troop 8—The girls of Troop 8 had
a birthday in April and on May 3rd
had a dance at the home of the Harry
E. Wing’s. The girls and their dates
had a grand time dancing to records,
playing charades, and enjoying refreshments at the coke bar. Mr. and
Mrs.

Lewis

Stryker

and

Mr.

and

Mrs. Stuart Hoadley chaperoned the
group. The girls will have completed
their dancer badge this spring. This
was

one

of

the

requirements

for this badge.
Troop
9—The
Monday
before
Mother’s Day the Brownies of Troop

IX

made

crepe

paper

roses

for

their

mothers. Monday, May 12th they had
a wonderful marshmellow roast at
Mrs. Kies home. The girls hiked out
to her place. Trogp IX is planning a

Picnic

with

expected
together.

Troop

to be

quite

VI

and

this

a Brownie

is

get-

Don’t Forget
Don’t forget! Brownies and Scouts,
we march on Memorial Day!
Leaders, also, please be on hand
to assist in the Memorial Day parade.

North

Illinois Synod meeting at Peru, IIL,
on Tuesday and Wednesday.
The
Rev. Mr. Leinberger served on the
“Boards

Shirley

three

mony. Next came the caydle lighting
followed by the investure of the girls.
The program closed with the good-

dance

At a meeting on Saturday evening
in the home of Horace Neill of, Fair
Oaks avenue, Cub Scout leaders of
the adult committee met to complete
plans for the program for the next
few months.
Harold Nelson Sr. has resigned as
chairman and Irwin Dasso has ac-

Rev.

and

are

May
14. Monday,
May 12, the girls
Played in a sand box and when they
got through there was more sand on

|

The Deerfield Post of the American
Legion has formally purchased the

Syned

Notice

Don’t forget to remind your parents of the
important meeting ot
Holy
want

Earl Hurt

of Lake

happen in the meantime so keep well
and join in the fun.
:
Archie Bowen, 10th district com~+
Den News
DEN 1—
mander and his staff will be in DeerThis tribe has moved over to John- field on Monday evening, May 26, to
ny Wolter’s home for the weekly attend a theeting of the Deerfield
meetings. The fellows formed teams post. Douglas Getchell of Grayslake,
last week to see -which side could who is senior vice commander of the
blow a ping pong ball across the table. State of Illinois will also be a guest.
Sounds simple, but it takes strength! District Commander Bowen of Lake
Bluff was graduated from the HighJohnny’s team won.
Dickie Johnson, from Den 5 helped land Park High school in 1913 and
show Tom Swift the ropes in acting is a classmate of a number of local
as den chief. Phil Growney has re- residents.
signed as leader so it looks as though
Tom will take his place.
Legion Delegates
Jan Holmquist was absent and as Attend Meetings
far
as we
could
determine
he’s
At Elmhurst last Monday evening
“somewhere’ in Omaha.”
at a meeting to hear the guest speakDEN 2—
Den Chief Greg Armstrong’s ab- er, Paul Griffith, the National Comsence was a let-down to these boys. mander of the American Legion were
They really miss him when he can’t Earl Hurt, Ralph Dunham, and Hans
Buhrow
of the Deerfield post. The
be there.
It seems Greg missed a very fancy Joliet Legion band played a 45 minute
spread, too—cake,
ice cream,
and concert, also.
Those from Deerfield attending the
soft drinks. Golly, even my tongue is
hanging out!
part

Photo

Commander

There

Susan
Lange,
Hanne

committee.

Flies

to Cleveland

Miss Mary Ann Hoffmann flew to
Cleveland, O., this past weekend for
a visit with friends in that city,

�Two Local Men on

19 Brownies Will

Teenagers to Have

Jaybird Squad at
Lake Forest College

Graduate in Court

Dancing Party Friday

Of Awards Friday

The

staff

creation
Two

Highland

Parkers

are

mem-

bers of the varsity baseball squad at
Lake Forest college. Tom McEwen,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mcterrace,
is
Ewen,
448
Naida
the

starting first basemen

on the Jaybird

nine

team’s

and

one

of

the

leading

hitters. Howard Wadley of 938 North
St. Johns avenue is one of Coach
Ralph Jones’ relief hurlers and is a
candidate
for
his
second
varsity
award. He was a pjtcher on the 1946
Jaybird squad.
McEwen has been instrumental in
pacing the team’s current record of
three straight conference victories.
Returning to Lake Forest after serving three years in the army air forces
as a bombardier-navigator
in the
Ninth Air force, he is attempting to
earn his second varsity letter in baseball and is a sophomore majoring in
economics.
Wadley, a junior majoring in biolOgy, comes to Lake Forest college
from Purdue university following five
years in the army.

and

Re-

will conduct a dancing party for all
teen-agers living
in the
Highland

awarded.

for teen-agers at the community :center and a committee will be chosen to
direct these activities. All boys and

Park

High

school

district

on

322 N. First St.

served.

During

the evening

discussion

of

there

summer

will be a

program

Tel. H.P.77

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A SPECIALTY

Friday,

May 23, in Community center starting
at 8 p.m. An orchestra will play for
dancing
and
refreshments
will be

Parents and families of the girls are

McEWEN

Playground

assisted by volunteers,

Nineteen members of Brownie Troop
No. 35 of Braeside under the leadership of Mrs. Daniel Zick will graduate
during services at a court of awards to
be held tomorrow evening at Braeside
school.
:
Girl Scouts of Troops 14, 24 and 23
will participate in services when second,
and first class badges and gold bars are

invited to attend the Court, which is
scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments and a social hour are to
follow the award presentations.

WADLEY

of

board,

DAHL’S AUTO.
RECONSTRUCTION
—_T

Ty
Ae
—s |

plans

girls who are interested in helping to
promote and conduct teen age activi-

ties at the center this summer
especially invited to attend.

are

SCREEN PORCHES
We will build complete with canopy
or permanent roof.
Bronze

Approximately
gas customers

Wire

AL GAS.

3,500

of

our

have NATUR-

Work of converting

gas appliances is being rush-

CALL FOR ESTIMATE

ed

by

200

special

workmen.

H. N. GAMLIN
150

S.

FIRST

ST.

.

H. P. 5102 - 4274

%

Deerfield 416

Dickens
hess

said,

and

“Cheerful-

contentment

are

great beautifiers and are
famous preservers of youthful looks.”

Legion Group Holds
Potluck Dinner and
Dance Saturday
—and

A group of the younger Legionnaires
of Highland Park Post 145 held a potluck dinner and dance last Saturday
evening at the American Legion hall.
The

repeat

party

was

so

performance

successful

is

being

that

a constant supply of

hot water helps to bring that
cheerfulness
ment.

and

NOW is

time

content-

a

planned

for June, and it is hoped that more
members and ,their wives, sweethearts

and friends will attend the next party
so that it will become a monthly event.
Those in charge believe the gatherings
will promote comradeship and create
greater interest in Legion activities.

, Wt “ok- |
Yee

* THESE BETTER
BEANS

ARMOUR’S BACON ...........
COLD MEATS
“POT ROAST
ROUND STEAK
-PORTERHOUSE STEAK
RIB ROAST OF BEEF
LEG OF SPRING LAMB ....
LOIN LAMB CHOPS ....._.....

GROUND
CALVES

BEEF

LIVER

—

HEATER
ing
ee

ee

ee

ee

eee

ee

ee

—

FRYING

SWEETBREADS

eee

RICHELIEU COFFEE
STRICTLY FRESH EGGS
GREEN BEANS
HEAD LETTUCE
WHITE GRAPEFRUIT
FLORIDA ORANGES .:........ se

rr)

ewe

mewn

ten www

46-02. tin 29c
tin, 2 for 25c
nem
eneens
Ib. 49c¢

oe

ee

doz.

i

oe se

ce

N

at Ha

totes

fais
iD

i

gs

plumb-

dealer,

or

at

store.

NORTH SHORE Gas CO.

35c

ROGER WILLIAMS AVE., RAVINIA
Highland Park 6585
|
‘
eek

“The Friendly People”

T. P.’Tom” CLARK
Div. Mgr.

:

A

Wi Aee

your

Plan now to BETTER YOUR
LIVING WITH
NATURAL
GAS.

GREAT-NORTHERN GROCERY &amp; MKT.
"
AER ABA oh ake
Ss
Lees

to order
WATER

CHICKENS

Ib.
ate

from

contractor,

your Gas Company

anew ees

Fruits &amp; Vegetables
RICHELIEU TOMATO JUICE pn weeee-----.
RICHELIEU TOMATO JUICE
16-oz.

375

the

GAS AUTOMATIC

Per

J

F

Vyatt
gt e eet Lt gir Ae

5
v
3% Nes Aenea
aie ct, At

sia REom

4

�Page

30

-

Thursday,

Local

LOOK AT YOUR FLOORS
YOUR
FLOOR

FRIENDS

SANDING

AND

SINISHING

DOWNING
Our

25th

Year

RUGS
RUBBER

FLOOR

SHOP

in Highland

Park

373 Roger Williams Ave.

straight

TILE

both

AND TRENCH WORK
BLACK DIRT
FILLING DIRT
DRIVEWAYS BUILT

DAY

AND
“A

TAZIOLI
NIGHT

Veteran

of

PHONE
Foreign

H.

P. 4662

this

year.

meets.

(Because

Despite

of the deadline,

results of the Evanston
available at this time.)
On

EXCAVATING

matches

the fact that it was raining during
both the Waukegan
and
McHenry
meets the scores were fairly low in

Tel. H. P. 566

LOUIS

from page 27)

the fourth straight suburban victory
for the Parkers who have won seven

DO!

WOOL AND COTTON
LINOLEUM — ASPHALT AND

Golfers

(Continued

Saturday,

May

meet

31

are not
Parkers

will defend their
Suburban
League
title when they enter the league tournament which will be held at the Sunset Valley Golf course.
The individual scores for the Waukegan meet are as follows: Ori (HP)
82, Dodich (W) 86, Flynn (HP) 87,
Pucin
(W) 84, Sheridan
(HP) 85,
Sherron (W) 85, Coleman (HP) 81,
Polochuick (W) 87, Minorini (HP)
89, Smith (W) 89.

Sponsor
The
ica
at

Games

Catholic

will
the

sponsor
Labor

Party

Daughters

of Amer-

a games party today
temple
in Highland

Park. Games are to start promptly at
8:30 p.m. with proceeds to go. to

Wars”

charities.

Of North

DINNER

READY IN 15 MINUTES!

1947

Shore ORT

On
Wednesday,
May
14, at a
luncheon held at Villa Moderne, Mrs.
Albert N. Sacher of Highland Park
was installed as president
of the
North Shore
chapter
of Women’s
American

ORT.

Sacher

Highland

has been a resid@nt of

Park

for the past two

years,

having moved to the North Shore
from Cleveland. Introducing her to
members and guests, Mrs. William J.
Borkovitz of Winnetka, president of
Chicago

and

Midwest

region,-.

stated

that Mrs. Sacher’s qualities for leadership had been recognized early in
her life..She is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa

(and

sorority)

a

and

past

president

received

an

of

her

award

of

merit
upon
terminating
five years
in the educational field to undertake
social work.

Among
chairmen
are Mrs.

officers
and
committee
elected with Mrs. Sacher
Harold
Blumenthal, vice

president,

membership;

Mrs.

Nathan

Gore, vice-president, ways and means;
Mrs. Leonard Scheyer and Mrs. Edward N. Pinsof, program; Mrs. Leo
Ginsburg, recording secretary; Mrs.
M.

CHICKEN

22,

Mrs. Albert Sacher Is
|Installed President

Mrs.
the

May

A.

Rosenthal,

corresponding

sec-

retary; Mrs. Fred Moore, Remembrance funds; Mrs. Avron Schneider,
publicity;
Mrs.
Arnold
Holland,
chairman

of white

elephant

sale.

Following
the
installation,
the
guests were informed that Mrs. Borkovitz had been delegated by the
national
executive board to go to
Europe to visit ORT, workshops and
schools,

which

are

maintained

in

all

countries. She will leave Chicago June
1,

flying

from

New

York

to

Paris

on June 4. Mrs. Borkovitz will visit
as many of the schools as possible
during her six weeks’ journey, and
will bring back a factual report of
ORT work and its implications under
present economic conditions.
The chapter is planning an event
in August
called “A
Day in the
Country”, to be held at the home of
Mrs. Jack Horberg in Glencoe. Guests
will
be
those
members
who _ have
signed five new members. That event
and the annual white elephant
sale

which takes place in September, are
keeping the board and membership
actively engaged in the. service of
ORT.

Notice to Camera
Club Members
Members of Highland Park Camera
club: Bring your cameras and film,
model

WHOLE! .. PRE-COOKED! . . JUST HEAT

28,

Now you can get country-flavor chicken whole
in the can, and pre-cooked, ready to eat! Just
heat and serve—no fuss or bother. 15 minutes
and your Pinafore Chicken is hot on the table,

delicious as a chicken you’d spend hours in
preparing! Wonderfully quick, convenient—
and economical, too (no waste). Pinafore’s the
modern way to serve chicken—always ready
on

your

shelf,

for

a festive

dinner

anytime,

in 15 minutes! At your grocer’s now.

PINAFORE

and

lights.

8 o’clock

Commun-

evening,

May

sharp.

Me
Amazing whole chicken,
pre-cooked—just heat and serve.
Packed in delicious broth.
Approx. 3% lbs. live weight—serves 4

NNED
CAHOLE

provided

ity center, Wednesday

CHICKEN

Quick

Service

Sa
397

Central

Avenue—Room

Highland

Telephone

Park

H.

P.

1553

12

�AeP

Close-Trimmed

“Super-Right” Meats

AGP

“Super-Right”

Meats

are Selected

for Quality ... More Waste is Removed!
of

qROtlED pz Wy,

YOU GET GREATER VALUE
Ps

‘Cny

Here’s
why ‘Super-Right’’ Close-Trimmed
Meats
give you more good eating for your money. Price
per pound and cutting method govern most meat
purchases. Price doesn’t necessarily mean quality.
IT’S NOT PRICE PER POUND THAT COUNTS...
IT’S WHAT YOU GET FOR YOUR MONEY!

Often,

cutting

methods

*

pavce?

give

you

coarse

meat

and

bone you can’t put to best use, along with the finer
cuts ... all at the finer cut price. But AGP’s ‘’SuperRight’’ policy guarantees you quality ‘satisfaction
. . » gives you Close-Trimmed Meats. And there’s
only one price at AGP . . . as advertised!

“SUPER-RIGHT”

OLD-STYLE RIB ROAST

RIB ROAST

AN OLD-STYLE ROAST
HERE’S HOW WE TRIM

Trimmed as pictured, this roast cut

from first 5 ribs of corn-fed beef is
uneconomical
it contains
ribs which
roast, cut in

old style, weighs:
9 lbs. and would
COSE. s sceceee na

NOW

Pictured is the same rib roast—

even at &amp;3¢ lb. Note
chine bone and short
A&amp;P removes: This
the

READ

A&amp;P Close-Trimmed.

.

&amp;

oz. At 57¢

THIS!

Here’s how A&amp;P trims a whole rib of beef: (1)
Prime rib roast is only the first 5 ribs. (2) Blade
ribs are not sold as prime rib roast... AT A&amp;P
it’s pot roast.
(3) Short ribs are sold as short
ribs and (4) excess chine bone is removed before
you buy. Buy your meat the “Super-Right” way
—trim your meat bill!

Short

ribs

removed and sold at A&amp;P at 29¢
per pound: You get same number
of servings of heart of the roast—
but it weighs
only 6 lbs. 12 $
tb.

roast costs onty

Visit
A&amp;P

56

.

Our Newly Remodeled
Super Market At

N. FIRST

HIGHLAND

ST.

PARK, ILL.

BE RIGHT — BUY “SUPER-RIGHT”’

+

�i Page

32:

Ravinia to Open
(Continued

from

City Salaries

page

(Continued

3)

sales totals up to $69,200 will hear
informal talks by members
of the
Ravinia executive committee, including Percy B. Eckhart, chairman of
the Festival; Francis M. Knight, program chairman; Howell W. Murray,
chairman

of

the

guaranty

committee,

and Charles Z. Henkle.
Full plans for the Ravinia season
will be *discussed in detail at the
luncheon, and the first coupon books
will be distributed so that committee
. members
may.
immediately
launch
their campaign.
With one exception, Mrs. von Ammon’s community
chairmen
remain
the same this year. Miss Marjorie
Porter of Waukegan will replace Mrs.
Alexander F. Beaubien of the Waukegan

committee.

Other chairmen are Mrs. L. F. McClure and Mrs. Richard Kuhns of
Highland Park; Mrs. Konrad Schrier
of Lake Forest, Miss Juliette Brown,
Lake Bluff, Mrs. John R. Nicholson,
Glencoe, Mrs. L. B. Sherman Jr.,
Winnetka, Mrs. James R. D. Stevenson Jr., Kenilworth,
Miss
Frances
Scheidenhelm, Wilmette, Mrs. Norman
Westerhold,
Evanston,
Miss
Alice
Barler,
Chicago,
and
Mrs.
Joseph M. Friedlander, Barrington.
The summer’s first visitors to Ravinia park will be 30 of the season’s
prettiest debutantes, who will appear
in a preview of the annual Ravinia
fashion show Monday afternoon, June

from

page

improvements | \:,........-..-...
City engineer &amp; building
INSHOCTOY.”.
eRe

3)

Helpers

A comparative list of salaries of
the city employees for 1946-47 and
1947-48 is appended:
Corporation

1946-47
.......... $2,640

counsel

COISH
eS
RMT
oi) bacco bicsl ace
Pollde
captain © &lt;i. c0-.0c ices.
Folice sergeants Nos.
1-2-3
Police officers
Nos.
1

1947-48
$3,500

3,740
,150
2. 827

4,100
8,400
3,000

Sette Ge ara
csc es
Police officer No. 11 ........
Police officers No. 12 &amp; 13

2,640

2,800
2,800
2,500

Mayor’s
secretary.
Stenographer
Visiting
nurse
.

1,500

1,800
2,500
2,100

............

Chief
clerk
Comector?
235 .c40c
Water
collector
3...
Bookkeeper—water
dept...
Foreman—garbage
dept.
Incinerator attendant ........
Dump

BSE
2,574
2,310
2,244

3,600
3,000
3,070
2,800
2,420
2,344

4,510

4,690

attendant

Superintendent—water
saricy tele OS

lst

Se

ass’t.

OS

weical see degiaves

engineer—water

OE Ms
2nd &amp; 8rd

Ty caz cai cscs ceduncpeeascd
ass ’*t. engineers

ee
NN
ig
rs
4th ass’t. engineer works..

Meter
Ass’t.

man—water
dept.....
meter
man—water

WOE Stes ain sgt

3,068

,695
2,500

2,795
2,795

2,200

2,500

Tapper—water
dept.
Helper
No.
1—water

......-.
dept.

2,563
2,530

2,663
2,725

Helper

dept.

2,400

2,540

No.

aces oot hc ss cakne

2,948

2—water

Foreman—streets

&amp;

bute was created by the
Legion after World War
been perpetuated through
vening years.
Articles on display in
Service window all have
by

men at Downey.
“The rehabilitation

and

are

work

in

work

making

paid

by

a

the

connected

American
I and has
the inter-

conducted

please

contribute

generously

to

3

2,725

,530

2,725

DOG s edd neai yin ivastncei
cee)
Mechanic—city
garage
. 2,640
Chief fire marshal ............ 3,740

2,500
2,900
4,100

Helpers

Aas’

Nos

&amp;

fire

7

aaog

Nos.

1-2-3

2,827

3,00

Firemen Nos. 1 thru 9......
Fireman No. i acne ute ct
Assistant
building
in-

2,640

2,800
2,500

spector

Assistant

seas

Seiya

building

small

VFW.

with

for

the

the

for

orphans of
arfd families

forces.

GLASS

r

EXQUISITE

DESIGN

‘

3,600

Glenview,

2,850
3,500

Glenview

HM.
1641R

2,000
2,400

2,310

SCOTTS

WEED

CONTROL—Quick

weed

destruction

and

without

to the grass. $1.25, $3.85.

SCOTTS
TURF
BUILDER— Enriched
grassfood, long lasting and economical.
25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft.
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds 10,000 sq. ft.

is

veterans who
of men in the

.
AND
of

Here is the Simple prescription for lawn
beauty: Clear out dandelions, plantain
and the like with Scotts Weed Control.
Provide a meal of Scotts Turf Builder to
keep springtime sparkle in the lawn.
Sow Scotts Seed to cover the lawn with
millions of husky grass plants.

their
sale

ge

WEEDS GONE---GRASS SPARKLING
AFTER SCOTTS LAWN CARE TREATMENT

work

nationwide

”

:

Clerk—building
dept.
......
Janitor at city hall ............

months

other

4

OE

MIRRORS

in-

spector
(outside)
..........
SIPEG
CR ia ee
a to

blossoms,

sum

All

/
ass

3,150

lieutenants

66

streets

marshal....

ire

chief

6

:

:

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—General purpose
for lawns in full sun or light shade.
1 Ib. $1.25
‘55 Ibs. $6.25
25 Ibs. $29.85

HUSENETTER
365

HARDWARE

Roger Williams

Tel. H. P. 4387

FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought for Cash

the Public
been made

work

GWG
capi akegarca
tien nate
noc
Nos. 4 &amp; 5 streets
GOD, |&lt; .-Giadeecs
is Sasi

harm

veterans

year

present armed

by the American Legion is extensive,”
Mrs.
Chris Matthiesen, Poppy day
chairman, said. “If you cannot help
us with volunteer hours at Downey,

streets

Disabled

each

dows and
have died,

3)

4,800

permanent

Poppy Day
page

3,900

,700

in service of their country. This tridisabled veterans who make them.

9,

from

1-2-3

public

voluntary.
Entire proceeds are devoted exclusively to the welfare and relief work
of the VFW. Funds will be used in
assisting disabled veterans, the win-

(Continued

Nos.

8,465

Oriental

Rugs

Silverware

Porcelains
Pianos —

—

—

Carpets

China

—

Jewelry

—

—

Libraries.

Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service

this

“Cause, as every poppy contribution
goes back into-rehabilitation work.
Remember American Legion Poppy
day, Monday, May 26.”
The
name
“Buddy
poppy”
was
chosen for the VFW flowers by the

&amp;

WILLIAMS, BARKER
SEVERN COMPANY

Martha

Mooney,

229 South

Auctioneer

Wabash

Avenue

Chicago 4, Illinois
Harrison 3777

COLD

STORAGE

SAFETY

Heat drys out natural oils that keeps furs soft
and beautiful.
Our modern COLD storage vault protects against
heat and moth damage.
Insured and bonded against fire and theft.
LUCKIES
*
CHESTERFIELD
OLD GOLD
PHILIP MORRIS”

e
*

PALL MALL
RALEIGHS
KOOL
REGENTS
e

CAMELS
Marvels,

NO

Wings,

LIMIT—AHl
Cigarettes

carton

Orders

Guarant@ed

$1.21 ,

Insured
FRESH

receipt of
or money order.
LARGEST CIGARETTEe MAIL ORDER COMPANY
IN THE MIDDLE WEST. Est. Over 25 Years

Dept. 22

eae

SALES

Approved

furriers method

of cleaning,

restyling,

relining and repairing by expert furrier.
Us

Carton of 10 Pkgs.
(200 Cigarettes)
MINIMUM
3 CARTONS
Include
for
postage
and
s
ce
within
150 miles — 12c for
8 cartons —:add
ic
for
each
additiona)
carton.

fect

to

Prices

change.

1215

CO.

HAMMOND
INDIANA

Washington
WILMETTE

Avenue
GLENCOE

1300

�———

=

em

_

Deerfield
A series of informative talks by the
teachers of the Deerfield Grammar
school, District 109, very briefly summarized, are being presented in the
Deerfield Review. These articles have
been condensed from their talks before the board of education given
earlier in the year.
This
series.

is

the

ninth

in

article

the

By

Holland,

Herbert B. Graffis
spent the weekend

Mich.

Guests last’ Sunday at the R. M.
Harvey home on Deerfield road were
son-in-law

and

daughter,

Mr.

and Mrs. Louis Schneider of Chicago.

L. E. Seaver
Because of the
- overlapping of interest between the
- 7th and 8th grades,
the
teachers
in
these

two

work

closely

gether,

rooms

to-

exchang-

ing some classes
including social
studies, mathemat1*,,

in

their

Eighth Grade

AN

Activities
Mr. and Mrs.
of Bannockburn

and

science.

The Fortnightly club met Saturday
evening at the home of Miss Virginia
Hurlburt of Oakwoods drive.
Miss Patricia Nelson has
from a visit with relatives

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Robert

of

(Bob

in
Phoenix,
of Mrs. Wil-

Church News

self-government.

The

sub-

Fundamentals
in mathematics, the
whole number, fractions, and decimals

should be mastered. Application to
everyday life is furthered by the study
of graphs, meter reading, budgeting,
bank account maintenance, taxation,
and

simple

business

a

comparatively

new

sub-

ject in the Deerfield grade school, is
initiated by the development of a
scientific attitude and
curiosity. It
is taught with practical information
in hygiene, combating disease, nutrition, heat control, the solar system,

the weather, etc. This study aims to
give

a

science

foundation
courses

to

for the
follow

numerous
by

arousing

interest in scientific factors

that af-

fect our lives from day to day.
Literature

is

taught

by

continued

stimulation of the selection and reading of good books and informative
works.
The continuation of self-creation
and natural talent begun in the lower
grades is carried on in the home
room, in the absence of an art depart-

ment.

RY

THE

PRES.

much
thereof as
be and the same

field at this conference are Mr. C. Wessling and Mr. Arthur Pagel.
FRIDAY, May 28,
7:30 p.m. There will be a fun night for
the voung people of the Senior Department
of the Sunday school.
The committee in
charge
is
Mrs.
Arthur
Merner,
Harry
Johnson, Arthur Pagel, and the pastor.
TUESDAY.
May 27,
8 p.m. The Woman’s auxiliary will hold
its monthly meeting at the home of Mrs.
Robert Page.

West

Deerfield

Township,

Lake

County,

Illiois, for the fiscal year beginning the
first day of May, A.D. 1947, and ending
on the thirtieth day of April, A.D. 1948.
A—ADMINISTRATION
EXPENSE FUND
For statioery, books, records, office supplies, printing, postage
and
miscellaneous
office
exDenke; : Stes

oe:

ME

se ase seatn $

100.00

B—LEGAL
EXPENSE FUND
For miscellaneous legal service....
150.00
C—FIRE
PROTECTION
FUND
1. For the purchase of fire fighting : eqtinuient &gt; -o.-..4. iain. tet’ 1,500.00
2. For
rental
of
fire
fighting
ITER
66 oo saa
cea otaenigliae
100.00
D—FOR
PURCHASE
OF
LAND
LAND FOR NEW FIRE STATOE.
5 0Co Ci ouensibie:
cenit 1,500.00
E—FIRE
EQUIPMENT
MAINTENANCE FUND
1. For
expense
of
maintenance
and operation of fire fighting
WTR S 5 5s inks cacnesdgeicssestttes
encnten
500.00
2. For
expense
of housing
fire
fighting
equipment
..................
660.00
F—SALARY
FUND
1. For salaries of fire chief, fire-

seeto

help

you

—

men and miscellaneous agents,
Cle
ass eet
icaeniny eer »--2. For salaries of trustees............
G—INSURANCE FUND
For insurance premiums
..............
H—CONTINGENT
FUND

1,250.00
150.0
300.00

For
contingent,
miscellaneous
ad
general
unforeseen
expenses,

not

included

in

any

item

above

500.00

Total «sii ic stac de i3 scans Seco eape- $6,710.00
a
aoe
SECTION 2.
The
unexpended
balance
of any item or items of any appropriation
made by this ordinance may be expend
in making up any deficiency in any item
or

items

in

the

same

general

appropria-

tion and for the same general purpose, or
in a like appropriation made by this ordinance.
SECTION 3.
This
ordinance
shall
be
in full force
and
effect
from
and
after
its

passage,

approval

accordance with
SECTION 4.
lished

in

an

the

and

publication

official

newspaper

of

the

Fassed

ANTHONY
F. NOSEK
President of the Board
May
5, 1947.

Approved,

May

5,

Published, May 22,-1947.
Attest:
CONRAD
UCHTMAN
Secretary of the Board of
Approved

Geo.

S.

as

to

form,

McGauhey,

Sophomore

of

Trustees.

1947.

May

on

Trustees
5,

1947.

Attorney.

This Year

William D. Linville Jr., son of the
William D. Linvilles of 700 Harvard
court, is a sophomore student at Lake
Forest college, not a freshman as

The News

reported

last week

SUNDAY,
May .25,
9:45 a.m. Church

school.

Robert

E.

Jor-

dan,
general
superintendent.
11
a.m.
Sunday
Kindergarten
for
children
from
3 to 5 years
of age.
11
a.m.
The
morning
worship.
7 p.m.
Young
People’s
Tuxis
society.

MONDAY,
Boy

ST.

and

May

26,

Mr.

Linville

finished

his freshman

year at Lake Forest in February,
1945, and the following month enlisted
in the army, spending 21 months in

‘the infantry
released

in

and air force.
November,

He was

1946.

make

Directory

Girl

Scout

Troops

as

scheduled.

PAUL’S

EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH
638 Waukegan Road
Phone
Deerfield
858
Rev. Hugo Leinberger, Pastor

THURSDAY, May: 22,
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce dinner.
SATURDAY,
May
24,
8 p.m.
Fellowship
club
meets
at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brandwein on
Central avenue.
SUNDAY,
May 25,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school for all ages.
10:45

a.m.

Morning

worship.

This

is

Pentecost and we will observe our guarterly communion as part of this service.
7:30 p.m. First united
Youth
Rally at
the Presbyterian church.
.
WEDNESDAY,
May 28,
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal at the church.

will increase its usefulness.

Be

sure to discard

your

OLD

telephone directory if it was not

collected when the new one was delivered. (Don’t destroy it—turn it
in for waste paper.)
If you have a memo list of numbers called frequently, verify
these numbers now by looking in
your NEW directory.
Always
when

consult
not

sure

the
of

the

directory
number.

from.

college records on his recent initiation into Kappa Sigma fraternity.

WE TRY to make your telephone
directory accurate and complete.
These five suggestions, if followed,

FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek, Minister
Manse:
1024
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775

said

district.

better use of your NEW
Telephone

in

law.

That this ordiance be pub-—

fundamentals.

Exposure to simple formulas is begun
as an introduction to algebra. There
is a constant effort to attempt to have
a direct
connection
between
the
phases of mathematics and practical
daily experiences.
Science,

ORDAINED

are hereby
appropriated
for the
objects
and purposes herein specified to defray all
necessary
expenses
and
liabilities,
and
for all corporate purposes of the Deerfield
and Bannockburn
Fire Protection
District

Deerfield

democratic

IT

or sums
of money,
or so
may be authorized by law,

This
year
the liam Steinhaus, went to school here,
8th grade teacher class of 1930, in the Deerfield Gram(Mr. Seaver) has mar school.
also supervised the
Mr. Seaver
physical education for boys of the 5th
through the 8th grades.
In the field of physical education,
the aims are to develop healthy bodies
and
minds.
The
fundamentals
of
games are for both pleasure and skill
with
the
understanding
of good
HOLY
CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
sportsmanship, are stressed. Rules of
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
eligibility are followed in interscholRev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.
astic
competition
outside
of
the
Sunday Masses:
7, 8:30, 10, 11:30.
school.
\
Daily Masses:
6:30 and 8:15 a.m.
The boys learn the all-important
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Confessions.
principle of give and take competitive
contact:games. Sportsmanship learned
now will be invaluable to successful
THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
living later in life.
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Boelter, Minister
The eighth grade program is sub815 Rosemary terrace
mitted as the completion of the student’s preparation for high school. SUNDAY, May 25,
school.
Classes
for
a.m.
Church
In general there is an extension of all 9:45
age groups.
There will be no morning worship servthe acceptance by the student, of
because
of the
conference
sessions
at
responsibility
for
self-control
and ice
Barrington, Ill.
The delegates from Deerject matter stressed is outlined in the
following paragraphs.

ORDINANCE TERMED THE ANNUAL
AFPROPRIATION
BILL
IN
AND
BY
WHICH
THE
CORPORATE
AUTHORITIES
DO
APPROPRIATE
SUCH
SUM
OR
SUMS
OF
MONEY
WHICH
MAY
BE
DEEMED
NECESSARY
TO
DEFRAY
ALL
NECESSARY
EXPENSES
AND ALL LIABILITIESOF THE DEERFIELD
AND
BANNOCKBURN
FIRE
PROTECTION
DISTRICT
OF
WEST
DEERFIELD
TOWNSHIP,
FOR
THE
FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING THE FIRST
DAY
OF MAY,
A.D. 1947, AND
ENDING
ON
THE
THIRTIETH
DAY
OF
APRIL,
A.D.
1948, AND
SPECIFYING
THE
OBJECTS
AND
PURPOSES
FOR
WHICH
SUCH
APPROPRIATIONS
WERE
MADE, TOGETHER
WITH THE
AMOUNT
APPROFRIATED
FOR EACH
OBJECT
OR PURPOSE.
RE

returned
in Cali-

Grimm

are
living
Grimm, son

‘LEGAL NOTICES

DENT
AND
BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
OF
THE
DEERFIELD
AN)
BANNOCKBOKN
FIRE PROTECTION
DISTRICT OF WEST
DEERFIELD
TOWNSHIP,
LAKE
COUNTY, ILLINOIS:
SECTION
1.
That
the
following
sum

fornia.
Miss Nelson has completed
her course at Gregg Business college,
Chicago.

Steinhaus)
Ariz.
Mr.

LEGAL NOTICES

i

Calling from memory is a common
cause of wrong numbers.
Look in your directory
— don’t
ask “Information” for numbers
listed there. This avoids making
two calls instead of one.
A

Use the “Classified” section
(yellow pages in most directories) to locate wanted products,
services or professional help.

�@ Highland Park
y
@ Sell It!
ty / REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(Highland

"EARLY

Gage)

REAL

Park)

REAL

ESTATE. SERVICE

Central

Avenue

Tel.

H.F..

“191 8 GREENWOOD

2360

CHOICE

AVE.

- Open House 3:00 to 5:00, Sunday, May
© “a5th,
Here is a charming white clapboard
Ye Colonial
home
with pleasant living room,
nice
size dining
room,
attractive
kitchen
and
screened
porch
on
the
first floor.

_ 8 bedrooms:and.
erty

bath on: the second.

is’ 80x150.

nished
for
yourself.

This

$21,000.

Frop-

home

partially

Come

and

wooded

land

‘all for

all
of

fur-

see

for

Fine

WOODRIDGE

‘In perfect condition white brick Colonhome
with
living room, dining room,
kitchen,
breakfast
room,
library, powder
_
room, screened
porch.
4 bedrooms,
and
_ 2 baths, recreation room with natural fireplace.
Gas heat.
OQne-half oes of ground,
a lovely flower gardens.
$36,50

COUNTRY

$878

~FOR

-

&amp;

Central hom

RINGER

Tel.

H.P.

880

es

aie

two flats. _ First floor

oot

possession,

$13,000.

IN

central

location.

Price

GUY VITI

Railway

Ave.

Tel.

H.P.

39388

LOVELY
GROUNDS
MAKES
THE
SETTING for this attractive, modern six rm.
house;
built.
’37; screen
porch,
auto.
j
heat, 2 car gar. Early possession. $17,500

MARGARETE. BYRN

_

8

N.

Sheridan

LOWER
5rm

_ 5rm

brk

brk

2

Tel,

PRICED

car

gar

close

6rm frame
6 rm stucco
8rm
frame
_2apartment

Rd.

in

N.

St.

Johns

Ave.

12,000
12,000
12,500
18,500

Tel.

H.P.

577

Two veterans buying
money down
with
G.I.
monthly, like rent.

Brick

building

in

together need no
‘loan.
Payments

Deerfield

containin

_ 1—6-rogm,
1—38-rm.,
1—2-rm.
apt., eac
_ with private bath; also large store.
H.W.
H. with
stoker.
Large
lot and
garage,
Small apt. available June 1st.
Present income $145 per month
with possibility of
obtaining
much
more
Two
flat frame
5 rms.
&amp; porch each.
Near
central
Highland
Park.
2 heating
_ plants,
2 car garage.
Price
$12,500
or

JOHN
}

F. LEONARDI

Tel.

FOR

SALE:

H.P.

2468

Two

or

596

story seven

room

house,

four bedrooms,
Furnace heat.
One car
garage.
Deerfield Ave., Highland Park.
See E.Ay
Williams, 672 Deerfield Ave.
Tel. H.P./1185.

eee:
ey),
e

NEW LISTING
Located in the central part of town, is
this Cement and
Frame
home
consisting
of unusally large living room, dining room,
kitchen
and glazed
porch
on first floor.
‘There are three bedrooms and bath on 2nd
floor.
Within walking distance to stores,
‘ pee
and
school.
Friced
at

“2641.0

;

oR

S. HAMBLY

Tel. H.F.

&amp; CO.

1484, 2855 or 1491

‘EXCEPTIONALLY
attractive
Ranch
type
home;
6 yr. old, 5%
rms., 1%
baths,
. Plus unfinished room &amp; bath.
Fireplace,
studio rm. west balcony. Screened porch.
Attach, garage with work shop.
Automatic gas heat.
Best construction. Ben-

Se
ay
4 acre beautifully landscaped, Finest neighborhood. Early possession. R.
oh eH
tes
me Pius, eee: Haw Ra,
orthbrook,
3

hi othe

8

rm

brk

2%

St.

Johns

&amp; SON

Ave.

Tel.

2

car

att.

garage.

In

fine

section

Tel.

H.F.

WANTED:

near

2855

or

rooms

MARGARET

N.

Sheridan

5.

blks.

E. BYRN

Rd.

Tel.

H.P.

2542

COMPACT -- WELL BUILT

567

&amp; ORR,

Ave.,

Winnetka.

Inc.
Tel.

HAMBLY
H.P.

703

REAL

ESTATE

23855

FOR

or

NEWS
ate,

Py

MARGARET
N.

Sheridan

(Vacant)

Tel.

H.F.

2542

LARGE
corner
lot in Sherwood
Forest.
All improvements in and paid for. Priced
for quick
sale.
Tel. Baek
867%,
LOT
60x187, improved,
(sewer &amp;
on Elder lane, Deerfield, for sale.
Scheskie.
Tel. Deerfield 98-R.
DO

water)
Arthur

YOU
WANT
TO
LIVE
ON TOP
OF
THE
WORLD?
High
wooded
hill, 20
acres, fresh water stream, in BARRINGTON
countryside.
See your broker or
call Deerfield 169.

REAL
4

ESTATE

TO

EXCHANGE

bedroom

house

with one

REAL

ESTATE

prices.

ANCHOR

REAL

NICE

HOUSES
OVERLOOKING
house
_ Bree.

for
$600

golf

TO

P.

E.

bath.

= 4-5

TO

|

- start

INCREASES

ILLINOIS BELL
- TELEPHONE
COMPANY ~

:

STENOGRAPHERS,
typist,
bookkeeper,
permanent
employment,
pleasant
working conditions, good wages.
Apply: Manager’s
Office,
Moraine
Hotel,
801
N.
Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.
GIRL
SWITCHBOARD
and experienced girl,
Northmoor Country Club

WANTED:

young

work.
Apply
Glencoe
Rd.,

~

OPERATOR
°
office clerk
Tel. H.P. 3800

lady for general

North Shore
Glencoe.

Gas

office

Co.,

130

WANTED:
Girl for general office work—permanent — must have experience in
typing and
have a good
knowledge
of
cashiering
or
bookkeeping.
Apply
at
Highland
Park News,
59 S. St. Johns.
STENOGRAPHER:
Experienced.
Permanent position—some knowledge of bookkeeping
required.
Top
salary.
Apply
George B. Caskey, Winnetka Park District Office Village Mah, Winnetka.
Tel.
Winn. 2160.

HELP

WANTED

'

(Domestic)

6

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white.
6 weeks or permanent, starting April
References
required.
Mrs.
W.
P.
Bride. Lake Forest
36.

For
1st.
Me-

COOK AND HOUSEKEEPER
Experienced.
Considerate family of four.
Private
room,
bath,
radio,
near
trans.
References.
256 Moraine
Rd. or Tel. H.
Pe Ste
‘
WANTED:
go home

Cook, all or
nights.
Tel.

part
H.P.

time.
5674.

Must

COOK,
general
housework.
8
children.
Houseman
&amp; laundress
employed.
Top
salary.
Own room, bath; references required.
Tel. H.P..1605.
|
LAUNDRESS for family
ing.
Tel. H.P. 1034
RELIABLE
Small new
week.

ironing.

No

wash-

woman,
general
housework.
home.
Assist one child.
$25

Tel.

room

for

H.P.

5351.

employed

frn. Pgapt. }in
Ox
5 c/o

man.

room

summer
rental
in restricted _
per month.
Te HP. 891.

H.

Tel.
-

for
Po

rent.
Tel

240

PARK
AVE.
Furn. room for 1.
EMPLOYED
woman;
no transient;
single
bed, innerspring matt., kit. priv., brkfst
&amp; lunch only; refs.
Tel. H.P. 1138.
double room
or couple.

HELP

for two men or
Tel. H.P. 5117.

room
room

WANTED

for
in

future

proportionate

rent.

Tel.

Ravinia.

Tel.

Growing
national
concern.
experience, references
and

Write

your

Must

WOMAN

housework

Experience

like

children,

.as_

OFFICE
with
a

ability.

State
age,
lary de-

Duraclean ‘Co. Dec :

No

not

Tel.

housekeeper

—

to
do
eet
Tel. H.P. 38

6535.

companion.

Very
light duties.
Stay
or
age &amp; salary expected.
Reply
News
Box K-65
WOMAN
home.

heavy

necessary.

H.P.
go.
c/o

laundry

State
H. P.

in

own

WANTED:
White girl for general. house-,
work.
No Fane
Current wages.
Tel.
H.P. 3886
i
WHITE
maid,
cooking
&amp; general
housework.
2 adults.
No
objection
to employed
husband.
References.
Current
wages.
515 S. Sheridan
Rd.
Tel. H.
P.

488.

‘

:

é

MAID white general housework.
3 adults.
Own
bedroom,
bath
&amp;
sitting
room.
Experience
&amp;
reference
required,
$35.
Tel. H.P. 983 or 8 Beech Lane, H. P.
NURSE to care for
four
years
old.
Pies:

two children, two and
Tel. Mrs.
Hettler H.

CLEANING woman, one day
i, cept Thursday; ref.
Tel.

* (Clerical)

to

for general

cleaning.

for employed
3690
or
714

4829.

LARGE
pleasant
H.P. 43869.
\

WOMAN

RENT

-STENOGRAPHERS,
TYPISTS,
personnel,
Permanent
position

10

apart-

;

SINGLE
furnished
H.P. 3769.

f

RENT

gradu-

room

1138;

FURNISHED
two’ women

AGENCY
H. P.
H.P.» 37

course,

R,

service—
and wife.

college

re

DOUBLE
and single room
N.
Green
Bay
Rd.,
2335
after 6 p.m.

HOUSES
Sunset
Subdiat reasonable

ESTATE

16 N. Sheridan Rd.,
Tel; BP.
'938
Res.

wife,

want

BUSINESS
woman
will pee
H. P. with same.
Writ
H. P. News.

SERVICE
AND
and
Park

&amp;

11,

ROOMS

Excellent condition. Near Beech St. station.
As
trade
plus
cash
for
larger
4
bedroom
house
with
at
least
two
baths.
Write Box I-125 c/o H. F. News.

SEVERAL LOTS
in
Ravinia,
Braeside
visions
in
Highland

editor
son

4 years
for vet

ONE
large
room
for rent
couple
only.
Tel.
H.F.
Ridgewood Dr., H. P.

VACANT
One
of most beautiful homesites
in H.
Pk., 2-1/8 acres on private road.
Water,
sewer &amp; all imp. in. Within city limits for
fire &amp; police protection
but. far enough
out for country atmosphere.
Gorgeous sunsets—land gently rolling. Nr. sch. &amp; trans.
$7,000 or % at!$8,500.
Owner.
Tel, H.
P. 1880.
‘

SMALL

starting

9828-93867.

to

COOK
and light housework.
Lovely room
and bath.
Near town.
Please call Mrs.
TWO
or
three
room
apartment.
Well
Hettler H.P. 1271.
known middle-aged employed couple. No |
children.
No
pets.
Best
references.
WOMAN
for general cleaning, two mane
Tel. Margaret H.P. 920.
week.
Tel. H.P. 4554.
FAMILY
of four desires rental of home
GENERAL
housework,
small
suburban
for
summer
months.
Referenes
furhome.
No heavy
laundry.
Own
room,
nished.
Reply
Box
K-35.
bath and radio.
One child.
Near trans.
Tel.
H.P.
5830
(collect).
PHONE
Majestic
552,
extension
15.
If
you want a good tenant for your 6 or 7
EXPERIENCED
cleaning
woman,
one
or
room
house.
Mechanical
engineer, who
two days week.
1212 Lincoln Ave.
Tel.
knows. how to take care of your propBF. 36.
erty.
Desperately needs a home.

E. BYRN

Rd.

2

APARTMENT OR HOUSE FUR-.
NISHED OR UNFURNISHED.
ADULT COUPLE BOTH EMPLOYED...
LOCAL
REFERENCES.
TEL:
HIGHLAND
PARK 5988.

BEAUTIFUL DEEP LOT in Sunset Ter-|
race, all imp. in and er for.
Price $2,000.
8

or

ment, preferably
unfurnished,
or share
residence.
Excellent references.
Tel. H.

1491

SALE

1%

facilities,

Greenleaf
co

WANTED:
Reward for
just small apartment
Tel HPs
Btat:

&amp; COMPANY

1484,

need

K-55.

Win.

IN BANNOCKBURN
ROBIN
ROAD—Situation
on 2%
acres
beautifully landscaped property, fruit trees,
flowers,
.etc.,
in
this. WHITE
BRICK
GEORGIAN
‘COL.
home;
large
liv. rm.,
dining
rm., breakfast room, powder
rm.,
kitchen butler’s ptry, sun rm. on Ist floor.
4 family bedrooms, 3 baths, 2nd; also servants’ quarters, 1% baths.
H.W. Oil heat,
2 car tiled wall
garage.
Restricted.
Offered at coubiaeratiy lower than reproducort cost.
‘For further details
call Mrs.

R. iS

kitchen

we

NEW
resident of your city desires apartment or house so that his family may
join him and enjoy its beauty.
Best of
references.
Write c/o H. P. News Box

$24,750.

Lincoln

with

but

ANXIOUS
es rent 2-5 room unfurn. apt.
in. Hy.
By. for
meee. business
man
wife.
‘Tel. H.P. -68

English brick.
Six rms; 2 tile bath and
powder
rm.
An
inviting
pine panelled
recreation room
in basement.
Tiled
kitchen,
automatic
heat,
a really charming
yard.
One
of Deerfield’s
best locations
and
the price for immediate
delivery
is

McGUIRE

wed

YOUNG EXECUTIVE &amp; WIFE, ALSO EX.
NAVY
OFFICER;
DESIRE
8 OR
4
ROOM
APT., GARAGE
APT., OR ANYTHING
YOU
HAVE!
HAVE
BEEN
MARRIED
A
YEAR
&amp;
A
HALF,
&amp;
HAVE
NEVER
HAD
A HOME!
ExCELLENT
NORTH
SHORE
REF.
PLEASE TEL. H.P. 2523.
W. D. MORRISON
OR
WRITE
c/o H. P. NEWS
BOX K-15.

CHOICE EAST LOCATION
At Fifty Dollar Per Ft.
ft. wooded.
train

$33 per 5-day week
FREQUENT

REFINED
couple
urgently
needs
to rent
apt, garage apt. or house.
Highest references.
Won’t
you
please
help
us.
Tel.
Glencoe
1841
(collect).

1491

FIVE room brick veneer new house, stone
front.
Gas
heat.
Lot
50x150
ft.
Tel.
H.P.
3659
after
6 p.m.

depth
of over
210
to main N.W. steam

To

July 20.
Tel.
A. Trumble.

&amp; COMPANY

1484,

quiet reNews

REFINED
young
couple,
both
employed,
desire four or five. room apartment, unfurnished.
Excellent
references.
Reply
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.

school and trasportation.
ere
posBeasion.; - PRiCed at. oo ccuauae
es
32,500.

R. S. HAMBLY

apt. to
c/o
Hy

(Clerical),

TELEPHONE
OPERATORS
HIGH SALARIES

WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by responsible family.
ill
furnish
finest
references.
Tel.
Central 5309.

H.P.\ 577

¥

HELP oa.

RENT

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)

WHITE
BR. &amp; FRAME
COL.
This home about 10 years old has large
iv.
rm.,
dining
room,
kitchen,
powder
room
and
terrace
on
Ist floor;
4 bedrooms,
2 baths
on
2nd.
Ree.
rm.
with
fireplace in basement.
Heat is automatic ;

&amp; SON

VETERANS SPECIALS
_

N.

Tel,

......

West side.
Good buy..
in Deerfield.
Now........
home on West side......
bldgs at ....$18,000 &amp;

T. SKIDMORE

332

2542

cond........ $15,000

Ravinia

TO

TWO
room
kitchenette
fine
couple.
Write
Box K-25. »

i

HOMES

ex

to tr.

HLF.

side

E. T. SKIDMORE

only,

HIGHWOOD

Best returnable income property in Town
.
15%
on your investment eight apdrtment
Bldg. for
$16,000.
Two
four-rooms
flat building,
recently
remodeled and modernized.
Price $13,000.
_ Two family
house, .large. rooms,
large
BAER GREP: ia cnchvs scepenc iva eheon ese csabpei diy’
4,000.
226

HOUSES

HOMES

37,500
47,500
33,000

8

im-

PK.

Lg 9 rm brk 100x375 lot, E. side....
Choice East ‘side est 8 rm brick....
Lg older 9 rm brk best E. side

SALE IN HIGHLAND
.
PARK

8 Room frame house recently remodeled,
in the best of condition—Immediate posMORO,
PUIG: i oa etek
acocten
6,000.
House with income and 4-8/10 acres of
ground.
Price

H.

29°500

apartment.

ry EARHART,_ LLOYD

(Improved) |

bath...

ESTATE

_
Ideal year round or summer home adequate for one or two families.
9 room, 5.
baths,
large recreation room.
4%
acres
beautifully
landscaped
property
adjoin- ing Exmoor Golf Course.
Stone and brick
hs eee
ts a yee garage
with cottage

.

East

3832

modern apattractively

$35,000.

SALE

This lov 6 rm stucco with sun R sleep
peh 3 bed R att gar oil heat ........ $25,000
Attractive
7 rm brk home ex loe....
28,500
7 rm brk country home W. H. Pk..... 20,000

HERE IS A REAL BUY

A beautiful home with
arene
on
5
acres

FOR

=

@ ‘Lake Co.
_

(Highland Park)
TWO bedroom home, completely: furnished,
BUNGALOW,
5 rooms &amp; bath on Home- :
beautiful yard, in splendid neighborhood.
wood Ave.
Easy to heat. Full basement. |
For summer months only. Available May
2 Glazed porches. One car garage. Zoned rh
27 te Aue,
ot5....
Pel) BLP,
6614
for two family dwellings.
Tel. H.P. 8638 —_—_—_——eee
or call at 82 S. Green Bay: Rd.
APARTMENT
TO
RENT
(Unfurnished)

OCCUPANCY

_ Three
and
four
bedroom
homes.
Priced from $10,500 to $40,000.
_ Sal

ESTATE

Fae

e@ Dearfield Review
® Highwood News

SECOND MAID:

per week,
H.P. 298.

ex|

White, for serving &amp; up-_

stairs
work.
Adult family
Tel. H.P.
1862
(collect).

#08 ing &amp; ts tine

;

references.
,

floor »

;
é

�HELP WANTED (Miscel.).
One

CLEANING
man
or
woman.
week.
Tel. H.P. 6535.

ty

MAID
for general housework, 8 days per
week, Monday, Friday &amp; Saturday.
Go
: home nights.
Two adults, 5 rm. modern
a
No laundry.
ref. req.
Tel. H.P.
1778.
‘

‘

WOMAN:

4

i

.

COUPLE:
Permanent
position
for
experienced cook, housework and yard.
3
adults.
No laundry.
Nice living quarters.
Current wages.
Near trans.
Tel.

MAN
with car for service or production
work.
Must have good personality and
be capable ‘of selling or making
estimates.
Good
future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired. Address

No

top

and

first

wages,

laundry.

floor,

suburban

references

Tle.

Deerfield

&amp;

452.

WOMAN:
housework
11 a.m. -7:30 p.m.

3-4 days
Small six

nr, Ravinia station.
girls
nings
9

&amp;

7

&amp;
H.P.

mangle.

Tel.

per
rm.

week,
house

Assist with 2 school

12.
Tel.
1310

HOUSEWORK
to 4, five days,

and

mornings

or

eve-

&amp; LAUNDRY
$30.
Wash machine

H.P.

1553

between

need a temporary
501.

DO

Straight

cook,

only.

J

YOU
want a pleasant home
salary?
If you can cook and
housework.
Tel. H.P. 5372.

plus top
do light

WORKING
housekeeper, 6 day week, good
plain cook, small laundry, family of 2.
Salary fair to both parties.
Tel. Deerfield 329.
LAUNDRESS
for ironing one day
Prefer Thursday. Near transp.,
carfare,
8 hr. day.
Tel. H.P!

GENERAL
housework
&amp; cooking,
white,
small house. Current wages. Small adult
family.
2 blks to train. Own room.
Tel.
Glencoe 2077 or 271 Hawthorne.
WOMAN
week.
eces.

for cleaning &amp; laundry,
ermanent.
Experienced.
Tel. H.P. 417

2

days
Refer-

MAID
for general
housework
for 7 rm.
hse.
Also man or boy for cleaning &amp;
garden
work.
Tel. H.P. 186.

EXPERIENCED

COOK

General hswk., for family of four.
Must
like
children.
No
laundry:
Attractive
room and bath.
Liberal time off.
References,
$35.
Consider
woman
with
employed husband.
Tel. H.P.
1283.
WANTED:
Girl for cooking &amp; downstairs
-exp.,
white.
Own
room,
bath.
Near
transp.
Top
salary.
Other help.
Tel.
or:
1046 between 8 &amp; 10 am. &amp; 5 &amp;
p.m.
GENERAL housework.
Lovely home.
childrens
Own
room
and bath.
Excellent pay.
References.
Tel.
lect) Winn. 2926.
WANTED:
PRACTICAL
HOUSEKEEPER.
TEL.

WOMAN,

white,

and yyy
H.P.

Oe

2

OR

EXPERIENCED
white;

current

station.

Tel.

week.

Ironing

ransportation.

housekeeper
wages.

H.P.

Own

&amp;

Tel.

plain

cook,

room;

near

2267.

EXPERIENCED
housekeeper
in pleasant
surroundings.
Do
plain
cooking
for
small family. For summer months starting June 15th; good wages; references
required.
Tel. H.P. 4379 mornings.
CLEANING
perienced;
P. 417.

‘Exman for one day week.
references required.
Tel. H

Experienced,
white.
Serving
and
MAID:
beginning Fas
ly
downstairs
cleaning,
Lake Forest 464.
WAITRESS:
White for one month, beginning June 2.
References required. Lake
Forest 1632.
;
CLEANING and laundry, five days a week,
$7
and
earfare.
Near
transportation.
Lake Forest 2669.
Four
COOK. . White.
portation.
Current
est

adults.
wages.

Near. transLake
For-

375.

NURSE:
Experienced, white to take care
of three children, beginning the mi
of June.
Mrs.
James
R. Getz.
Lake
Forest 464.
&gt;
GENERAL

eR

CN
White, referSma_ aes
seer
rs.
P

GROWING
FOR

DEEPFREEZE

money

years

-any

or

evening,

ll summer
Seventh

men,
7

make

p.m.

to

11

WANTED:

Men

Woods
Cafe,
bard Woods.

or

women.

Hubbard

897%
Linden
Ave.,
f 1. Hubbard Woods

Hub38715.

WANTED:
Gardener for greenhouse work.
Also helper and boys over 16 for spare
time, good wages.
Orrico Gardens, Ravinia.
Tel.
H.P.
8612.
ExcluFi: F;

WANTED:
Store girl &amp; presser.
sive Cleaners, 1545 S. St. Johns,
Tel. H.P. 352.

MALE
FACTORY
WORKERS:
Married,
good starting
salary.
Bonus
for night
work.
Tel. H.P. 3231 from 9 a.m. till
4

p.m.

:

Apply
534

WANTED
Laborers
North
Shore
Central Ave.,

SITUATION

Gas

WANTED

with

laundry
children

do work

5968 ‘or 1631
cago, Ill.

CHILDREN’S
shore

by the day.

Tel Ontario

Wallace

North

NURSE:

references.

nent position.
Forester.

St.,

Excellent

Temporary

Reply

FOR

Box er
SS

or

Chi-

north
perma-

c/o rae

47

8.

St. Johns.

meee

&amp;

four

SALE:

WILTON

and

Te

Roper

refrigerat

Gas

;

6

=

drawer

Simplex

rug

‘piece wicker

advancement

on, 8000.

vadiovpad:
condition: © ‘

H.P.

9x12

rose

porch

all

set.

|e

a

wool.

ales

Tel. H.P.

walnut

brace and some

antiques.

Linden;

or

H.

F.

4

4656.

dining

|

room

Cat at 1111

Tel.

H.P.

692.

s.

P

Shee

WANT
TO SELL:
12 rooms of falnicuee
Including
modern
bedroom
set, dining.
room set and several Eighteen "Centu
P goes living room pieces. ee
.

sai

seal

REFRIGERATOR
Owner ee
+e: Be

Clean, dust free and. modern

you enjoy associating with.

Riscaae

4526.

piano,

“Tel.

0

G.E.
6.6
cu.
ane sell. Good

FOR
SALE:
New
Conlon
three weeks.
Tel. H.P.

and the type of fellow worker

&amp;

F

HR:

A

ae
ee eek sovble drain surface
cabinet
sin
ome oards, t
d
:
Tel. H.P. 4804.
ee

selected

work areas, a five day week

Tel.

aie

Tel.

furniture,

1886.

are

chest.

table and 6 chairs ; anjo clock; pictures,
and other odd piecés, including
ric-a-

KIMBALL

from employees.

|

ft.,
$50.
condition,

Used

mangle.
33.

DRESSER,
dressing table, library
‘ahha;
kitchen table, sink, refrigerator, mirror,
9x12
rug.
441
Glencoe
Ave.
Tate
yD
PP.

3224.

wee

G.E. WASHING machine, G.E.
condition.
Tel. H.P. 1246
DAVENPORT
with
down
Simmons
bed a:
&amp;
Clay St., Highwood, Il

ironer,

:
_—

fill
anictitoual
mattress.
3
A

Duncan-Phyffe dining ‘abi. t
in for interview and you MAHOGANY
Tel. H.P. 5348
E

Come

will understand why your friends
like to. work at

DEEPFREEZE
Personnel

Office

Open

8a.m to 5 p.m.
Monday

through

Friday

FIVE-PIECE
room set,

(Motor

Products Corporation)

Davis St., North Chicago

Phone Ontario 8400
heme

cae

eee

green French Provincial
$35.
Tel. H.P. 4369.

can

oy
:

WHITE aad:
icebox, 100-lb. capacity,
excellent condition.
Has
vegetable bin.
y's aside Saunders
Rd.
Tel. siieivccn’”
MAPLE
studio couch,
steel ae
twin bed
studio
couch,
Edison
maple
Cues. crib swith matching Bag
ag
GHP
mattress, play pen
ad,
toi
eat.) 5

Tel. H.P. 2738.

TABLE
good

top
ar

gas

Ave.,

SPRINGS

and _

bed,

H.P. 5392.

COLDSPOT

,

7 A

ptowk

erase

Central
double

(DEEPFREEZE DIVISION)

2301

;

84- Bizo-Intt

Universal,

eous | items.

opportunities.

nights.

EXPERIENCED
cook and general housework.
Wishes
employment
where
employed husband may stay.
Prefer several rooms.
Tel. H.P. 216

I WILL

pe

Offers

in my

PARK:

FOR SALE:
Gorham
silver, eight knives
and
eight
forks,
dinner
size,
Fairfax
pattern.
Single maple bed, spring, mat-

DEEPFREE ZE};
supervisors

USE

MAJESTIC
table
combination
trola 6 tubes.
In very good
Tel. iP.’
2992;

(Domestic)

I WILL do small or medium
home.
Tel. H.P.
61.
YOUNG girl will stay
Tel: HF.
Sts.

Co.
Pk

SIZE

PORCH

Our

SALE.

sell Puapibans, bric-a-

“Tel. H.P. 504

- Metalsmiths

e

WAITRESS WANTED:
Full or part time.
Transportation or room and board furnished.
Tel.
Libertyville
1098.
The
- Bob-Mari, Half Day, Il.

Pir ing

CHEF,

APT.

139

for day work.
ApCab, 313 Waukegan

FOR

Tel.

FOURTEEN piece Italian style inti room
set.
Fine
combination
of walnut
and
rosewood,
sturdy
construction.
Table
39x78
with
extra
extensions.
Buffet,
china cabinet, server, &amp; 10 chairs. Pie
$1,000.
Tel. Buckingham
2337.

p.m.

at the Highlad Ten ss
St.
Tel. H.P.
319

Worn

Ranges.
Time Payment Pigs
er
connection.
Winnetka Home Appliances
956
Linden,
Hubbard
Woods.
Phows:
Winnetka 2000.

Inspectors

extra

Scher

Reasonable.

HIGHLAND

We

274

MAGIC

Cleaners

Excellent

OWN

Post.

&amp;

H.P.

Spot Welders

Evanston.

blue

condition.

only,

TO. THOSE WHO
THE WANT ADS

YOUR

oe

Assemblers

To work on golf course,
Tel. Northbrook
190 or
Fields Golf Course, Wil-

16

GOODS

Trading

DEEPFREEZE

WANTED:
Woman, 25 to 40 to work in
ice cream
&amp; sandwich
shop
in Kenilworth.
Hours,
10 a.m. to 6 p.m., $40
per week, plus, bonus.
Write Box 751,
over

HOUSEHOLD

VISIT

REQUIRES IMMEDIATE
EXPANSION OF OUR
ORGANIZATION

WAITRESSES
— Full
or
part
time,
top
wages,
excellent
working
con itions.
Apply
Manager’s
Office, Moraine Hotel,
801 Ny. Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.

BOYS

DEMAND

NEEDS

Experienced
for
gardening,
on
MAN:
256 Moraine Rd. or Tel.
day week.
PP. BTR

excellent

powsetord
goods
who are annoyed —
before that hour by telephone calls _
are warned that the caller has pro- |
cured a copy of the paper in an_
illegal manner. They are warned to |
on
their
guard
against
such ©
persons, who are dealers trying to
drive sharp bargains.
“hy
If it is possible to secure information as to the name, address or
phone
number
of anyone
answering any Want Ad before 8:30 a.m.
Thursday please phone us.
;

THE

POLICE
PATROLMAN
WANTED
Age 21-30 years.
Village
of Winnetka
Salary
$215.00 - $250.00
Permanent
APPLY
VILLAGE
HALL
510 Green Bay
Road
Winnetka,
Il.

d., Highwood.

NURSE
H.P. 4645.

days

$15.

GARDENER:
One day a week.
Care of
1622
S. Green
Bay
lawn and flowers.
4,
Rd. or Tel. H.P.

Two]
Stay.
cab drivers
(col- WOMEN
ply Black &amp; White

LAUNDRESS,
experienced,
efficient,
for
family
of four.
Must
do
shirts
well.
Tel. H.P. 1283.
“

Bf

MAIDS—Full
or part time,
good
wages,
- excellent working condition. Apply Man»ager’s
Office,
Moraine
Hotel,
801
N.
Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.

MAN WANTED:
$1 per hour.
apply Techny
low
Rd.

UP

PRODUCTION.

Ww.
Varion

SALESLADIES WANTED
Full
time
work.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
512 Central Ave., H. P.

a week.
gi and
6442. ,

10,

season

This paper is not for sale until
8:30 a.m. each Thursday.
Sellers of _

Deerfield.

repairman—experience not necWill train—steady employment.
Apply 8 to 5.
Holland
Furnace
Company
523. Park Drive
Kenilworth, Illinois

9

Call Win-

cooking

Co.,

BRICKLAYERS—6
day _ week.
Handler
Construction
Co.,
652
Ave., Glencoe, Ill.

‘

;

Duraclean

size

WAC

IS
STEPPING

NATIONAL
ADV. MANAGER
who understands copy, production, merchandjsing.
Unusual
future for right
man.
State
age,
education,
experience,
salary
expected.
Duraclean
Co.,
Deerfield. Tl.

WANTED:
Laundress,
2
days
week.
/ Wither your house or mine.
No sheets.
I have washing machine &amp; mangle.
Tel.
(collect)
H.P. 2380
netka

wen.

Kehle,

FURNACE
essary.

5

IF YOU

a

Mr.

1329.

WANTED : Experienced
laundress
to
do
laundry
in your
home.
Kindly.
Tel.
H.P. 4808, Thursday morning.

:

DEEPFREEZE

(Miscellaneous)

radio.

H.P.

rf

WANTED

WANTED:
Lathe operators
&amp; other machine
shop
employees.
Modern
Engineering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.P.
1057.

Cook

home,

~

HELP

‘ak “SALE

girl’s navy

one CAMP

@®

}

pairs

shorts

-

\

CLOTHING
NINE.

COOK:
Experienced.
Adult
dant of
two.
Near
transportation.
Own
room
and
bath.
Mrs.
K. C. Bowles.
Lake
Forest 330.

day

living

Other

Ea

mise.

innerspring

$20.

Perfect

room

waite, d nae rt

items.

Ae

;

Bee

for

condition.

Tel.”

er

i

refrigerator 6.3 cu. ft. a

Thor
washing
machine,
$25; table top
stove,
$25;
smoke
damage
ay
ee
‘reasonable.
Tel. H.P. 5839
Friday cinta
for Sat. morning
appointment only. —
FOR
SALE:
Modern sink,
uw
board, complete with u d au Sealab

excell ent

es

$

a

eae
ie

�HOUSEHOLD
BEAUTIFUL

GOODS

fect condition,
H.P.

FOR

SALE

large rugs and divan,
used

only

WANTED

in per-

9 months.

Tel.

6066.

PRACTICALLY new, light wood California
type furniture: round table, 4 chairs, one
high back chair, coffee table.
Good for
breakfast
room
or rumpus
room.
One
_boy’s violin; single colonial 4 poster bed.
Tél. HP. 1892;
NEW
mattress
and
box
springs.
Have
moved &amp; cannot use. Must sell. Tel. H.
FP. 1901.
room

mahogany: chifforobe,
chairs,

_mirrors,

walnut

console

bric-a-brac.

Tel.

6 oak

dining

table,

H.F.

misc.

1762.

BEAUTIFUL
English ‘lounge chair, spring
&amp; down
combination, brand new.
Reasonably priced.
Tel. Glencoe
2446.
SIMMONS
frame.

double_
bed,
coil
springs
Tel. H.P. 2321 evenings.

and

PHILCO
Super
heterodyne
console
ve walnut occasional table.
Tel.
46638.

radio
H.P.

MICELLANEOUS

FOR

NINE screens 82’’x86” each $3; used
blast conversion
gas burner
with
trols, $75; striped canvas
11’x12’,
uae be seen at 626 Skokie.
Tel.
696.

lowcon$15.
H.P.

SIX cu. ft. Electrolux
(gas)
refrigerator,
A-1 condition, best offer. Cast iron lamp
post, complete with nee:
2425 Balsam
Rd.
Tel. H.P. 2709
dress,
size
14;
like new.
Tel.

TWO
automatic
each; complete
for all kitchen
N. Green Bay

WANTED

TO

boy’s\ full
H.P. rt

gas
water
heaters,
bathroom fixtures,
sink, oie
See at
Rd.,
iw

$50
$35;
1012

GLASS;

flag;

portable

gedar

SUNBEAM

hot forced

air furnace for sale.

Includes
Mercoid
switch,
thermostat,
draft motor, a
ee s blower.
Like
new, $125.
Tel. H.P.,
f
FOR SALE:
2 wheeler
\ eee! type;
hand
P. 8

FOUND:
Sum
a.m.
Owner,

Cee
P

20-gal.

tank,

avinsink,

PANSIES

&amp;

all

table

$15.

good
kinds

plants

oe

Broadview,

H.P.

condition,
of
you’ll

BACIK’S
1751

Tel.

8754.

$10.

flowers
find

&amp;

Tel.
vege-

at

FLORISTS

H.

P.

Tel.

H.P.

2936

CARPET
6x9, child’s rocker, junior chair,
child’s large steel wagon, garden handicart, vacuum cleaner and console radio.
Best offers.
Tel. H.P. 2817.
FOR SALE:
Sears Craftsman
18-in. lawn
mower, good condition, $10.
Dr. C.. G
Parknen.
Tel. Deerfield 674.
ONE
high
speed
electric
bench
grinder
‘complete
with
1/4
h.p.
motor.
$20;
1 large “Stanley” iron mitre box with 28x7
inch back saw, $20; 1 “Delta”
10-inch
table
saw
and
‘Delta’
6-inch
jointer
mounted on same steel stand, complete
with 8/4 h.p. motor; dado head; extra

saw

blades,

etce.,

$275.

Tel.

H.P.

INSTR

CORNET,
practically
“President,”
used
Tel. Deerfield 169.

METS

FOR

FORD,
two
P.
3058

new,
Fred
Gretsch
only
5 weeks,
$95.

FOR SALE:
Mason &amp; Hamlin AA mahogany grand piano, 6-ft. 2-in., pre-war, like

new.
Price
TN Wabash

$1,500 cash.
No dealers.
2560, or tae
47
Det
aaap idee

AWAY

LAKE
North

of
see

Laurel

FOR

CATS,

Tel.

2468

or.

BUSINESS

&amp;

Gilboa

Tel.

606.

most
cars.
ness.

Ave.

Zion

Zion,

Il.

3496

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
Northwestern Ave., L. ¥..
Tel. LF.
Our’ service department,
has the|
modern
equipment
to serve your
Stop in today.
Now open for busiC. T. Bartlett.

FREPARE FOR SPRING!
Storms removed, Screen cleaned, painted
&amp; hung.
Gutters
cleaned
and painted.
Vet’s Maintenance, 5124 Newport Ave

Chicago

41

Bel

llect)

SERVICE

GOAT

MILK

PASTEURIZED Toggenburg goats’
sale.
Telephone Deerfield 184.

More

Want

Ads

on

Page

milk

for

37

NOTICES

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by
the
Board of Education of School District No.
108 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois, that a tentative budget and appropriation
ordinance
for
said
School
District for the fiscal year beginning April 1,
1947 will be on file and conveniently available to public inspection at the office of
the
Secretary
from
and’ after
9 o’clock
a.m., 22nd day May, 1947, at 495 Lincoln
Avenue,
Highland
Park
in
this
School
District.

Notice
is further given
hereby
that a
public hearing on said budget and appropriation
ordinance
will be
held
at
7:30
o’clock
p.m.,.
24th
ay,
June,
1947,
495
Lincoln
Avenue, “Highland
Park
in|
this
School
District
108
Dated this 13th day: of May, 1947.
Board
of Education
of School
District
No.
108
in the County
of. Lake,
State
of Illinois.
:
B yt

2-29)

OF ILLINOIS
OF

LAKE

corporation

con-

|
jf

ss.

OF
HIGHLAND
PARK
CIVIL
SERVICE
EXAMINATION
Tuesday, June 10th at 8:00 p.m. in

Council

Chamber,

City

Hall,

the

Civil

Service Commission of the City of Highland
Park
will
hold
an
examination
to
establish an eligible list for City Policeman.
Starting
salary
will be
$2,500.00
per year.
No person shall be admitted to
the examination
who
is not a citizen of
the United States and who has not been
an actual resident of the City of Highland
Park

for

at

least

six

months

preceding

the

date of the examination.
All applicants
must be between the ages of 24 and 383
years inclusive, and shall not be less than
feet 8 inches in height.
Certain height
ad weight limits with chest measurements
specified by the Commission
will be attached to the application blanks.
General
qualifications
as
verified
by
application
and interview with a knowledge of local
government will be considered along with
a
written
examination
on
ability
and
knowledge of the position.
All applicants
must
pass
a physical
examination
conducted
by a physical training
instrustor
appointed
by
also
pass.a

&amp; West
Lake Ave.
Glenview, Ill.
Phone Glenview 734

LEGAL

CRAFTSMAN
FURNITURE
REPAIR
“For Work
of Quality”
Upholstering,
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.

SERVICE

A. F. VOLTZ

MODERNE DECORATING
SERVICE
PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More
623 Vine
Ave., Highland
Park
M. Preti
&lt;
E. O. Inman
Tel. H. P. 5676
Tel, H. P. 89
186-J-19-tf

the

Lehigh

29-S-3-In-ts

or

EDWARD
MORONEY
being
first duly
sworn, on oath, states that he was elected
Commissioner
of
the
City
of
Highland
Park,
Illinois, at the
General
Municipal
Election
for City Officers, held on April
15, 1947; that all of his election and campaign
expenses,
including
the
primary
election are as follows:
Newspaper
Ads
before election ....$ 65.20
Care | Bid “BAIIOUR: i. oc cisdidiwa
le donc ecced
27.88
Gas used on election day ...............6.34
Newspaper ads after election ........
6.50

On

C. HEARD
&amp; J. M. Summers.
Storm
windows
removed
&amp;
screens
replaced.
Also garden work % light delivery service.
Tel. Davis 2259.

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park,
Ill.

firm

CITY

SEPTIC TANKS machined, cleaned.
Sewers
built
and _ repaired.
For
your
next
sewer job Call F. R. Garrison, Libertyville 598.
Ten years same location.

O.

FLAGSTONE,
TOP
SOIL,
HUMUS,
CINders,
screcnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
down, power saw for hire; general hauling
and
welding.
Tel.
3931
or
8785.
John Tazioli.

St.

CLEANER

person,

ORR
eae
ee
ae
$105.92
Affiant
further states
that no person,
firm or corporation contributed any funds
for said expeses or any part thereof.
EDWARD
MORONEY.
4 Subseribed and sworn to before me this
14th day of May,
1947.
(SEAL)
EMMETT
T. MORONEY
Notary Public.
i

For All Popular
Makes.
Parts
on
hand
or available.
Fick
up
and delivery.
Prompt service.
Emergency
service.
Guaranteeed workmanship.
A. M. EVAN
81 N. Sheridan Rd.
Tel. H.P. 6488

596

SERVICE

Photographer

38rd

é

IN COLORS, FOR YOUR
BATHROOM AND KITCHEN

PERCY H. PRIOR, Jr.
Specializing in
pictures of
Tel. T.P. 3199

STATE

SEARS ROEBUCK

VACUUM

no

COUNTY

KERRIHARD
OR
MR.. ROOT

DOGS

F. LEONARDI

BUSINESS

that

tributed
any
funds
for said expenses
oF
any part rer
GORDON
HUMFHREY.
Subscribed an sworn to before me this
28th day: of April, 1947.
HOWARD
A. GOETZ
Notary Public.

&amp; CO,
ALSO AVAILABLE - METAL
TILE

OPPORTUNITIES

.H.P.

1179

SEE MR.

CASH

GASOLINE filling station on Skokie Blvd.,
near
Highland
Park.
Doing
excellent
rye
eal
Low
rent, good
lease.
Price
$38,000

JOHN

H.P.

ROOFING,
INSULATION
HEATING

H.

THREE and a half yr. old pedigree Irish
setter
(male).
One
year’s
training
in
kennels.
Loves children.
D. C. Anderson, 629 Massena, Waukegan, Ill.
Tel.
Ont. 5476.

BUSINESS

Tel.

FREE
ESTIMATES

Good
’87 to °47 Used
Cars.
A. G. McPHERSON,
Inc.
887
E. Park Ave., H. P.

BIRDS,

Ave.

Windows,
Floors,
Woodwork
Windows and Woodwork
Washed
Floors Waxed
Storm
Windows
Taken
Down
Screens
Put
Up
ERIC
STURTZ
- JOE BENSON
Lake Forest 2051
Between 7-8 a.m. or between 7-8 p.m.

WANTED

WANTED

STATE OF ILLINOIS |
COUNTY
OF LAKE § ss.
A. GORDON
HUMPHREY,
being
first
duly sworn,
on oath states that he was
elected Commissioner of the City of Highland Park, Illinois, at the General Election
for City Officers held on April 15, 1947;
that all of his election and campaign expenses, including the primary election, are
as
follows:
Pé8stage
$52.32,
Advertisements
$37.60,
Printing
$21. 50 and
Miscellaneous $0.82, being a total of $112.24;

Spr

AUTOMOBILES

AUTOS

2764

HANS BAHR

Mon.,

Tel.
P.

FARM
Forest

Landscapi

533

door, 1939.
Best offer.
or 104
S. 2nd
St., H.

Lake

SHRUBS &amp; EVERGREENS

FOUND

money
in bank.,
Mr. Shinler.

FLOWER

Highway

UP &amp; DELIVERY
SERVICE
Also car radio repair.
*WICK’S RADIO
SERVICE
1151
PARK
AVE.,
DEERFIELD
Tel. Deerfield
525

EXCHANGE

AND

FOREST
Skokie

i

ADJUDICATION
AND
CLAIM
DAY
NOTICE
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
to
all
persons
that
the first
Monday
of July,
1947, is the claim date in the estate of
JOHN C. CHRISTENSEN, Deceased, pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois,
and
that
claims
may
be
filed
against the said estate on or before said
date
without
issuance
of summons.
All
claims
filed
against
said
estate
on
or
before said date and not contested,
will
be adjudicated on the first Tuesday after
the first Monday of the next succceeding
month at 10 a.m.
MABEL
ARMACOST
CHRISTENSEN,
Executrix.
V. Wm. Briddle, Attorney.
May: 15-22-29

PICK

WANTED:
Convertible
coupe,
any
size,
but
in
good
condition,
by
discharged
naval officer.
Cash.
Lake Forest 452.

484.

SALE

GIVEN

1986 INDIAN motorcycle 45, new battery,
good tires, buddy
seat &amp; saddle bags.
Tel. H.P. 4080 daily before 5 p.m.

966

MUSICAL

BE

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966
Northwestern
Ave,
Lake Forest, Ill.
Tel. L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.

BELL &amp; HOWELL
16 mm. movie projector, model 129.
Retail price, $313.
Will
sell for $275.
Like new.
Tel. H.P. 1880.

with

GARDENS — LAWNS
Hauling Dirt and Manure
Annual-and Perennial Plants
Pansies

LOST:
Small beagle pup, brown
head &amp;
brown ears; leg white; body brown, black
&amp; white; male. Reward.
Tel. H.P. 1091.

20-in. boy’s bicycle
brakes;
$30.
Tel.

G.E.
WASHER,
$35;
garage
doors,
two
pair, $4 per pair; coal hot water heater

LANDSCAPING

BILLFOLD:
Lost at Highland Park High
school
containing
driver’s
license
and
social security card of Robert L. Pettis,
745 Chestnut St., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 485.
Reward.
j

picket

play
yard,
12-ft..
sq.;
iron;
pott ay 2
hamper; vanity and stool; 4-ft. shut
exc. tennis racket, $3; few golf rete?
old walnut shadow
box, $2; table desk
with chair, $5; exc. $40 leather jacket,
size 42 at $8; books, very old and new,
10 for 25c¢ each; dinette dropleaf table,
$4; good wagon $4; scooter $1.25; misc.
toys and games, 10--25; beaut. set Book
of Knowledge, 20 vol., $20; uniforms &amp;
clothes, size 12 at $1 each; exc. elec.
razor; misc.
522 N. Linden.
Must be
sold Fri. and Sat. ONLY.

Ruffled
curtains,
panels,
drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 5804

NEW
1947
Ford,
immediate
delivery
at
list, in exchange for 5-room apartment
or home.
Veteran, good position; excellent references.
Write c/o H. P. News
Box K-45.

USED
bath tub and
lavatory; also 4-ft.
glass show caSe.
Tel. Deerfield 167.

OLD

TO

WILL
give
away
three baby
kittens
to
someone
who
will
give
them
a good
home.
-Tel. H.P. 6044.

LEGAL NOTICE

SERVICE

PARKWAY CURTAIN
LAUNDRY

p.m.

USED

DOUBLE
unit
Deepfreeze,
cap.
400-Ibs.,
good condition, $200.
Tel. H.P. 3405.

_GIRL’S
white
size bicycle,

7

LOST

PLANTS
FOR SALE:
Cabbage, tomatoes,
astors, marigolds, cosmos.
Strub Floral
Co., Duffy Lane, Deerfield.

BUSINESS

.

BOAT, 12 to 15-ft. “Vv” or round bottom.
Tel. H.P. 6422
Can repair if necessary.

SALE

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
lawn roller for hire.
Borchardt Fuel Co.,
Tel. H.P. 67,

BUY

WANTED:
Vacant wooded residential lot,
close to Skokie Valley line &amp; H. P. area,
Improvements
must
be in.
Cash.
Dr.
Wishneff, 4753 Broadway, Chicago.
Tel.
Longbeach 3637.

after

ss SOLID

TO

VETERAN urgently needs sewing machine,
wash
machine,
small upright or grand
piano
&amp;
good
miscellaneous
household
goods.
Write P.O. Box 183, Wilmette,
Illinois.

the
Commission
and
medical
examination

must
by
a

medical
examiner “appointed by the Commission
after
taking
the
Civil
Service
Test before they are placed on the eligible
list.
Application blanks may
be obtained
from Mr. V. C. Musser, City Clerk at the
City
Hall.
The
state
civil
service
law
requires that a fee of two dollars must be
paid at the time of filing application.
All
applications must be filed with the secretary by 6:00 p.m. Saturday, June 7th.
H. G. PERTZ,
Secretary
Civil Service Commission
of Highland Park
May

22-29

704

Ridgewood

Drive.
£

MALE and FEMALE.

HELP WANTED
No Experience Necessary
To fabricate essential electrical
equipment
required
in home
construction.
e

Drilling
e@
Tapping
@
Assembly Operations
Phone

Northbrook

715

THE M. B. AUSTIN CO.
Shermer Rd.

�Lhursday,

WANT

May

22,

Page

1947

ADS

(Continued

COFFEE PRICES. ARE
LOWER AT JEWEL

from page 36)

BUSINESS

SERVICE

BLACK

SOIL

Wholesale and Retail
CLEAN
PRODUCTION
TOF
SOIL
Tested
and
approved
by
Pitts.
Lab.
Supply Field: Co. Line &amp; Waukegan
Rd.,
Deerfield
FOR
HIRE:
1947
two-ton
dump
truck
and driver—by hour, day or week.
125
ey awood
Ave.
Tel. H.P.
4339
or. H.

Retail

cream,

&amp;

Window
wax,

moth

brushes.

Tel.

TOPS

Cleaner,

furniture,

preventive.

Chemicals
or Ontario

H.P.

2272

125

BLACK
Manure

or

Vines

Deerfield

INSTRUCTION
SUMMER

SCHOOL

1947
at
further

will

Green
Bay
information

begin

Road
Tel.

June

9,

School.
For
H.P.
3527.

MISCELLANEOUS
OFFERING
$20,000
well
located
income
valued
at
$50,000.

JOHN
51

Tel.

Ave.,

H.P.

PAINTING

first
mortgage
on
business
property

2468
&amp;

1-LB.

eee

e

ORCHARD

1-LB.

1-LB.
@

CAN

@

CAN

runs.."25 93

1-LB.
e@

@

VALUE

pes’ 2 2 DB* |

1-LB.
CAN

5 RIBS—EXTRA

TRIM—FIRST

gotaran2&lt;c 27°

wee 2 2 25

|

BEEF RIB ROAST ...59°
FANCY

NEW YORK DRESSED

Long Island Ducks .

6012

More Want Ads on Page 38

ARMOUR

e

FROZEN

35° | Youngberries
FROZEN

LB.

STAR

Smoked Beef Tongues... .. 39°
PLD DPDDA

|
|

aoe?

ae

a

VAN CAMP

CHICAGO'S

CLARK

am

FOR

FASTER,

SAFER

PURE

KIND

Ivory Soap
BLUES

AS

YOU

FINE TOILET

WASH

ee

TO

TENDER

HOLLYWOOD'S

2 ces.

SOAP

Sweetheart

wees)

Vanilla

‘22 31°

19¢

LuxSoap

Sa

;

BETTER

THAN

FAVORITE

sar

Grapefruit

2 dane 20°

NO. 2

PKG.

“IT WHIPS"

3

Milnot

............ 2

HEAVY WAX

Wax-Tex

OC

CANS

2ic

PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING

3-LB.

SO

4

car QOC3Lifebuoy sss

ae i

Sandwich Bags... oro 10°

9C

EVER

10¢

OF

TIDY HOUSE

$

par

Oe

VITA NIP SEGMENTS

:

&gt;

SKIN

ss.

Extract _” 20%7

diaak Peewee... a

pce, A7eilvory Soap = 2 Fars 21¢

Blu-White

a

vee

American Family Flakes ....

44 99/100%

135 S. LA SALLE ST.

sxe 2O°

WASHING

Spread oe 2ic

McCORMICK'S

as

aS

Sauce 2 cans Ue

Sandwich

. . .2 sxes.o0" $

Gingerbread Mix . 2...

HOUSE

HUNT'S

rip

Great Northern Beans.

eA
as Sey

Tomato

—_

X-PERT

MORTGAGE

a

Beans in Tomato Sauce . . . 2 cans 29°
LEWIS

IN SUGAR
SYRUP

PKG.

A DELICIOUS BLEND
OF BEEF, PORK &amp; VEAL

&lt;
ovOo

Ready ‘uy Season and Cook

FRESH

29° :

16-OZ.

JEWEL MEAT LOAF’
PAPAL

MIXED

pecues. "DOP

CAN

@

MAID

PRESERVES. nn 29° :

CAN

SHORT CUT AND BACK CHINE BONE
REMOVED BEFORE WEIGHING

Exterior
Commercial
Service

Park

EXTRA

JEWEL

Insured

Highland

GROUND

EXTRA- VALUE
tL!

DAN’S
PAINTING &amp; DECORATING
Phone

CUSTOM

BS

596

DECORATING

Interior and
Residential
and
Immediate

BAG

Custom Ground

Highwood

or

COFFEE

2-LB.

BAG

BLEND

HENNING
O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North
Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicag@
26, Ill.
Tel. Longbeach 2404.
Fully insured

Fully

BAG

PRIVATE

LEONARDI

Highwood

cases

BLUEBROOK

e

314

FRAGRANT

1-LB. 3 Be

HILLS BROS. MANOR HOUSE
CHASE &amp; SANBORN
MAXWELL HOUSE
STEWARTS —

327

Cinders

Tel,

in some

STRONG

2-LB. 77°

Reg. or Drip Grind

Fill* Dirt

G.

Al e

CAN

SOIL

—

IN FINE COFFEE

-LB.

SALE

Black
Dirt,
Cement
Blocks
Humus,
Cinders, etc.
Highwood
Ave.
Tel. H.F.
4339

reduced

ROYAL JEWEL

6533.

FOR

Coffee Prices

more than wholesale reductions

MESSINA’S
HOME
LAUNDRY
Piece Work
-- Open
Air Drying
Pick-up &amp; Delivery Service
Tel.
Davis
2259
STANLEY

37

WALDORF

CAN i
PAPER

_.........

125-FT.

ROLL

aic

Sreetheart | "aan 196% Dreft ........... ke, 820 } Bubble Bath....B pxcs, 20°
W

.DLY

SCENTED

MARVELOUS

NEW

SUDS

BEECHNUT

519

Central

Ave.

445 Roger Williams
Ave.

BABY FOODS
Chopped Varieties

JARS

as

C

B sans 26° |
Strained Varieties

,

,

�o——

ALCYON

7

mergerroneitbrers

celene ibertienonieemetiat

Witty Witticism

IWANT ADS
(Continued
PAINTING

Highland Park
TELEPHONE H. P. 2400

Humoresque

Selected

Short

Subjects
News

aa

and

“MY FAVORITE
Selected

Short

THURS.,

FRI.,

BRUNETTE”

Subjects

and

SAT.

Late

May

News

29-30-31

y

“Pardon me for cutting in front of
you, but I’m in a hurry to get to
The Tower Casino!”
Spaghetti - Ravioli - Steak

TOWER

Dennis O’Keefe, Adolph Menjou
Marguerite Chapman,
Michael O’Shea
PLUS
Elyse Knox, Rose Hunter,
Phil Regan, Phil Britto

and

News

HIGHWOOD,

Cartoon

FOREST,

Week

Days—Show

Matinee

FRI. &amp; SAT.
Michael

-

Jill Esmond

from

Cont.

Sun.

“THE
Lon

HOUSE”

RED

Edward

24-27
11:30

2 to

May
22
Chan” ‘in

G. Robinson,

May 23 &amp; 24
Mershall i

Trudy

“THE

specimen

TREE

SURGERY

“GUY VITI

Railway

Ave., Hwd.

Tel.

H.P.

3933

Kid” jn

THUNDER

Latest’ News

In Technicolor
Subjects &amp; Late

TUES., WED., THURS.
Richard Dix, Leslie

News

of the Whistler”

=

AND
Mohr, Sheila

Lone

Wolf

Ryan

in Mexico

zo

Best

THU.,

FRI., SAT.

May

Club Lorraine

Entertainment

“CAPTAIN

Continuous

NOW

CAUTION”

Alan Ladd, Victor Mature
SUN. thru WED.
May 25-28
Laraine Day, Brian Aherne,
Robert Mitchum

“THE LOCKETT”
THU.,

“CAPTAIN
Saturday,
SPECIAL
One

KIDDIES
Showing

“PRINCE

FURY”
May

Only

and

at

2

regi

thru SAT.

“LADY IN THE
LAKE”
SUNDAY

for 5 Days

Ray Milland, Barbara Stanwyck
Barry Fitzgerald
Thrilling Technicolor Romance
of the West.

PARTY
P.M.

Starts

PAUPER”

Performance starts
(30c to 6:30

Friday,

May

30th

Gregory Peck, Jane Wyman

3 CARTOONS
&amp; COMEDY
Advance Tickets Now on Sale
Note:

1:30

“CALIFORNIA”

31

MATINEE

from

Robert Montgomery
Audrey Totter
in the startling murder mystery
with the new camera
technique.

Starts

FRI., SAT., May 29-30-31
Victor McLaughlin
Brian Aherne

at

36.

Tel.

2321

In an attractive outlying wooded
part of town, this property is 100 ft.
in width with an approximate 200 ft.
depth.
.
The house is of good brick, construction. A comfortable living room
with fireplace, dining room, modern
kitchen, breakfast nook and 2-car
garage complete the first floor ar:

$18,000.

at

PHELPS,

Ave.

Highwood

ROOM

FOR

Inc

Highland Park 4580

RENT.

Tel.

H.P.

2986.

LEAVING town, owner will sell but prefer
trade,
approx.
two
acres
North
Ridge
Rd., end of Riders Lane, for good station wagon
or car.
Tel. Independence
3782.
FOR
SALE:
Modern
corner table, desk,
chest, antique
Victorian
sofa.
Reasonable.
Tel. H.P. 5225
WANTED:
Experienced maid.
Downstairs
work.* Go nights.
Top salary.
Tel. H.

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

22-23-24

H.P.

387 Central Ave.

Ss EE AND

Highland Park 605
Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun.,
1:30

Park 4580

size

Transportation
provided.
10 years established record

PAUL

Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre
Joan Lorring

GLENCOE

tuxedo,

THE
PLAYSCHOOL
For pre-school children
219 S. St. Johns

sale

346 Waukegan

Your

Men’s

FOR SALE:
H.P. 5616.

Inc.

Highland

The 2nd floor has two good-sized
bedrgoms and bath, with chance for
additional large bedroom and bath
over garage.
Full concrete basement
with good heating plant.
For quick
Owner has left town.

May 27-28-29
Brooks

“Secret

Gerald

PHELPS,

rangement.

Events

A Thousand &amp; One Nights
Short

PAUL
387 Central Ave.

WOODRIDGE

1896
Skokie Blvd., HighFOR SALE:
New artistic home,
5 rooms,
land Park.
Deep well clear water.
Air
2 bedrooms.
Large lot.
Immediate
condition, oil heat.
to owner
$23, 000.
Sale
possession. ice
price $17,50
226

etc.
of a gen-

erous entrance hall, unusually large
panelled living room, screened porch,
powder room, breakfast nook, kitchen, two car garage on ground floor.
On the 2nd floor are four large family bedrooms with two baths, sewing
room, maid’s room and bath.
All
bedrooms
are light with generous
closet space.
The house is completely insulated
with excellent oil-fired heating plant
and special fire protection.
For immediate sale at Hiele.6.0 FS 0'8 wee $37,500.

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

May 28-29

VERDICT”

evergreens.

TWILIGHT

ALSO
the “Durango

McCallister

WED., THURS.,

Also

&amp; MON.
May 25
&amp; 26
Cornel Wilde,
Evelyn Keyes
Phil Silvers, Adele
Jergens
Bs

Also

May

TUE.,

thru

SAT

a

Louise,

Anita

Wilde,

MR.

Starrett,

Plus
SUN.

Technicolor

In

Dunne,

“GALLOPING

22-23

“THE BANDIT OF
SHERWOOD FOREST”
Cornel

P.M.

“BELOW THE DEADLINE”
“ALIAS,

May

Sundays—2:30

TRAILERS

Universal
late 1945,
HOUSE
TRAILER:
21 foot, perfect condition, electric brake.
4 Sheldon Lane nr. County
Fleets four.
H.F.
5968,
call
evenings.
line.
Tel.

P.M.

PLUS
Douglas,
RamsayA

Warren

Charles

FRI.

7

“Shadows Over Chinatown”

ILLINOIS

orchard, badminton
court,
The arrangement consists

/

JOHN HALL’S
We trim,
Tree &amp; Landscaping Service.
Also landscaping
remove &amp; spray trees.
19
Sheridan
Ave.,
Hwd.
Tel.
work.
2
H.P. 3918.
a

ILLINOIS
Starts

LAST
DAY
THURS.
Sidney Toler as “Charlie

TEL. L. F. 2106

THU.,

CASINO

THEATRE
k

LAKE

|

VALLEY
TREE
SERVICE
Pruning,
Spraying
Treating,
Trees
Removed
Dangerous
All property
Also cabling and surgery.
and men fully insured.
Highwood,
Illinois
822 Highwood
Ave.
Tel. H.P. 2653
Earl Reynolds

BARTLETT

SIGMA

Deerpath

DECORATING

SKOKIE

Highwood

“MR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY’
“SWEETHEART OF
CHI”

&amp;

One of the most attractive white
Colonial homes in east central Highland Park.
It is situated on threequarters of an acre of wooded and
landscaped
grounds
complete
with

. PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
Inside and Outside
e el. H.P. 3452 or 80538
E. R. Conger
\

late

SUN., MON., TUES., WED.
May 25-28
Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour,
Peter Lorre, Lon Chaney

REDUCED

from page 37)

WALL
WASHING
Window Washing
Storms and Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
R.F.D. No. 1, Box 246-A
Libertyville, Illinois
Grayslake 5414

THURS., FRI., SAT.
~ May 22-23-24
Joan Crawford, John Garfield
aa

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

“THE YEARLING”

CUB

HEAR |
BASEBALL GAMES

Wrestling every Monday
and
Wednesday nights, 8:30.
Boxing Friday nights at 9:00.
Harness Racing Saturday
nights at 8:00

P,

5225.

FOR SALE:
Late model office typewriter,
excellent
condition.
Tel. H.F.
4718.
FOR
SALE:
Mattress
&amp; springs
worth
$85,
perf.
cond.,
$35;
waffle
iron
&amp;
grill, exe. cond., $4.
Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.
only.
522 N. Linden Ave.
IN
PERFECT
condition
7
year
old,
2
story, 3 bedroom frame hse. with attached
garage.
1%
baths.
Oil heat.
S.W. Ravinia. Early possession. $17,500.

51

JOHN

Highwood
Tel.

We

Have

STOP IN!
Weekly Program

THE

LEONARDI
Ave.,

H.P.

2468

Highwood

or

596

SUMMER rental for employed persons. No
children.
Call evenings.
Tel. H.P. 2321
WANTED:
Salary

Hair
and

JUKE

Stylist

and

commissions;

Coiffure Shop,
Tel. H.P. 200.

870

manicurist.
5-day

Central

Ave.,

BOX

Snack Bar
Open Daily 7:30 a.m. to 11:00—Saturday night until 12:00

Sundaes
CARRY
961. Waukegan

- Sodas

OUT HAMBURGERS
Ave.

|

Tel. H. P. 1508

week,

H.

P.

�|

BUSCHS
Greatest

5 DIAMOND
Wedding Ring

PERFECT

$150

Soeuty 9 4-85

Perfect

Five Genuine
Diamonds
are in
this neatly engraved 18-k white
or
14-k
natural
gold
wedding
ring.
Ask for No. 11.

center

$3.00
Weekly
diamond

and

two

genuine side diamonds in
18-k white or 14-k natural
ring...

SEE

IN

SPECIALS

OUR

Ask

for.Perfect:

this
gold

‘150,”

WINDOWS

BENRUS

BULOVA

$33.75

$3 7°°

an

Choice
17 jewel

ladies’

or gents’

Bulova

Nationally advertised shockproof
17 jewel Benrus watch.
Small
&lt;'ze 10-k natural rolled gold plate

watch with small size 10-k natural
rolled
gold
plate
cases—
ladies’
complete
with
band
to
match.
No. 73.

cases.

No.

33.

IT

Matched

PERFECT
GENTS’

MASSIVE

RING

ze, $100

Rings

$69.50

$2.00

For Both

$1.50 Weekly
One

of

our

latest

style

matched

bridal pairs of 18-k white or 14k natural gold with eight genuine
diamonds.
Ask for No. 96.

Perfect
diamond
in this heavy
massive gents’ 14-k natura! gold
ring.
A ring every man will be
proud to wear.
Ask for Gents’
Perfect ‘100”.

MATCHED

BRIDAL DUET

GLASSES

Crs
FREE
Eye
Test

Near

eosin

gaa

WATERPROOF

Vision

i
SU:
WU

11;

$7.00
Five diamond
matching five
ring

gold.

engagement with
diamond wedding

in 18-k white

or 14-k natural

Ask for No. 951.

MOUNTINGS
AND
OIAMONDS
TO BRING OUT
ARE ENLARGED
OF DESIGN.

SHOWN
DETAIL

In
Dr.
Complete

with
as

Weekly

iinein

with

OPEN

MONDAY

E.

of
Bush

Why wear old out-of-date “specs”
when
the new modern
glasses
cost so little?
Fitted complete

50c

50c

Charge
M.

&amp;

first-quality

THURSDAY

toric

EVENINGS

IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY

Always
ae
KREDIT

NO CARRYING
CHARGE

lenses.

50c Weekly
A great value.
Sturdy
-shockproof sport watch
with sweep
second and easy-to-read radium
dial and
hands.
Non-tarnishable case.
No. 91.

JEWELERS

—

OPTICIANS

1624 Sherman Avenue, Evanston
Chicago
Also

4

Loop
Other

Store,

37

Conveniently

E. Madison
Located

St.

Stores

Include

ie tein
Tax

�Good way to keep
aHoney Happy
f bret back to the days when
your Buick stood proud, shiny
and new at your door. A touch of
your toe and that two tons of car
romped away gentle as a breeze —
and just as obediently glided to a
soft, sure stop.
That’s the kind of driving that’s
right in the heart and soul of

Se

.

Buicks. It’s there for
for years and years
when your car gets the
such a honey should

you to have
— especially
kind of care
have.

That doesn’t mean just filling her
up and seeing that the oil doesn’t
get low. Nor a periodic lube job
done with “one-kind-for-all” lubricants. It means competent care by
men familiar with every part of a
Buick — by men who know Buicks
best and have an interest-in seeing

x

eee

that you get the greatest satisfaction
from yours.
Every detail of our service is aimed
at this goal. The men are specialists
on Buicks. They work with Buickdesigned tools. They’re backed up
by a parts department stocked with
Buick-engineered parts that are
just made for Buick cars.
So you see the difference between
ordinary service and Buick car
care. It’s the skilful, considerate
care that keeps your Buick always
a Buick. It’s the kind of care which
proves that next to you. we like
your Buick best.

Suppose your Buick is crowding the
big figures in high mileage. Suppose
you don’t want to wait for that new
one. Here’s a happy answer.
If your Buick’s any model year from
1937 through 1942, you can make it

factory-fresh as far as power is concerned with the Buick Power Package.
This is all the major assembly of a
new Buick Fireball engine except carburetion and electrical systems. It
puts good-as-new zip and performance into high-mileage cars.
Changing over takes less time and
often costs less than a really thorough overhaul and replacement job.
Easy payments if you wish. Come
and talk it over.

in

NORTH SHORE BUICK CO., INC.
110 S. First St.

Highland

Park, III.

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Deerfield
be

Grammar

School

Board

Vernon J. Giss, president of the board of education, points
explained Friday, May 16, at 8 p.m. at a PTA meeting.

by

James

Kilcoyne

of Education
out

the

expansion

plan

which

Seated, left to right, are George Jacobs, Mrs. R. G. Heupel, Mrs. James Tibbetts and William
Standing, left to right, are Mr. Giss, Clifford E. Morgan,
J. B. Carson,
and
Superintendent
Sheehan.

is to
Jacob.
W.
FE.

�Gsell’s
Soda Fountain
NOW

Open

Daily

Sandwiches...

. Hot Luncheon

You
Our

Will

Sodas
Made

ICE
Ask

Enjoy
&amp;

Sundaes

With

CREAM

|

for

R77,

an FLAVOR-OF-THE-MONTR

Butterscotch
Royale
Chocolate

and

Vanilla

EARL

ICE

CREAM

available in one gallon and two and one-half gallons
for your deep freeze.

W. GSELL
1 S. ST. JOHNS

AVE.

&amp; CO.

�Volume

22, Number

7

Deerfield School Finances

Village Board
Seats 3 New
Trustees

Present &amp; Future, Will Be

Manufacturing Area Extended
packed

seats added
the

old

council

chamber,

in the north

and

new

with

side, greeted

members

of

the

Deerfield Village board on Tuesday
evening at their regular monthly session.
Mayor
Robert
S,
Alexander
presided
with
the complete
board
present,—Trustees A. G. Bradt, H. G. Cazel, A. J. Mercurio, G. T. Scott, F. D. Stanger, and P.
A.

Tennis;

Chester

Wessling,

village

clerk;

and Erwin Seago, attorney.
Committee
reports
on
finances,
water
department, etc. were read.
Trustee Scott
presented the report of Police Magistrate
Dan
Hunt
with
check
for $87
including
4 eases, one a drunken
driving
case of
a $65 fine.
f

,

Road and bridge chairman, Trustee
Cazel, reported five new street lights
now

in

passed

operation.

to

rescind

appropriations

tax

fund

and

A

to

resolution

was

previous

$500

two

from

the

motor

fuel

change

it to $1,700

to over cost of two new
street lights for the main

ornamental
intersection

of

Waukegan and Deerfield roads.
At
Mr.
Cazel’s’ suggestion,
the
board approved the hiring of an assistant for the superintendent of public
works, W. D. Johnston,
be selecte’
later.

Every taxpayer and citizen of Deerfield Grammar school District 109 is
invited to public meeting at the school
on

Friday

evening.

(tomorrow)

at

The petition of John Stryker for a 40
foot ‘street on Jonquil terrace was tabled
for further study by the plan commission.

Rezone for Manufacturing
The findings of the Board of Appeals,
which
appear
in the right
column, were read in full by Mayor
Alexander.
He made it very definite
that the question before the board
was not light or heavy manufacturing,
but—approval of the extension of the

present light manufacturing area.
Following
considerable
discussion
the board yoted to increase the manufacturing zone from 255 feet to 700
feet, (parallel with, Waukegan road
and the railroad tracks) by a vote of
4 to 2.
The board was given to
understand that the decision to allow
Tractomotive

corporation,

or

any

other factory to build in Deerfield,
was up to the building commissioner
to decide, according to the building
code.
The action of the board was
to grant a petition for the extensoin
of the manufacturing area for 700
feet

east

of

the

tracks,

parallel

with

Waukegan road, and the tracks.
Plan Commission Tabled
A
letter
from
the
plan
commission
stated that unless $3,500 was forthcoming
for this project for the hiring of a professional
planner
that
this
board
would
abandon
its study.
This was
tabled for
the new board at its next meeting.
The official approval of Hickory Woods
subdivision of Western
Homes,
Inc., was
given, subject to meeting
all requirements.

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

8

o’clock to hear a report of the present school situation and the anticipated needs in future planning.
by

The meeting is being co-sponsored
the Deerfield
Grammar
school

board

of

education

(pictured

on

this

week’s cover of the Review) and the
Parent-Teacher association.
Similar
to the “Report to the Nation” given
annually by the President
of
the
United States,—this meeting is “Reort to School District 109” by PresiMeas

Vernon

J.

Giss.

President Giss will tell of the plans
for the development
of the playground, disposition of bond money,
discussion of school financing, decorating of the classrooms, need of
new

desks,

and

last,

but

not

least,—

the school budget in which Deerfield
will learn of the basic salary scale
for its teachers, minimum wages, and
a possible comparison
of pay
for
teachers in surrounding communities
with Deerfield’s teachers’ pay checks.

Trustee Cazel RSs.
an ordinance providing for no parking zones
PTA Election
for the U.S. post office and for the
At
this
vital
school statistics sespolice department,
which
was approved and is published elsewhere in ‘sion the PTA will hold its annual
business meeting, with the election
the Deerfield Review.
of a vice president and a secretary.
Trustee Tennis reported that the Jewett
estate will allow Jewett Park to be used
The president, Mrs. Robert O. Clark,
again this
year
by
the
Amvets
as a ball
enters the second year of her term
diamond.

the

At the regular meeting of the Deerfield Village board of trustees on
May 13, the board of appeals pre- —
sented its findings in the petition ee
the Tractomotive Corp. of Findlay, |
O., brought before them on April 7.
Members of this board include John —
A. Benz, chairman; Hubert N. Kel-—
ley, secretary; H. C. Hawes, E.F,
Engelhard, and W. W. Lige, member.
This board by unanimous decision

Discussed Tomorrow Evening

Completes Old Business;
A

Board of Appeals
Makes Its Report
On Public Hearing

of

office,

Sturm,
ports

the
will

as

also

does

treasurer.
summarize

Mrs.

A.

Committee
the

year’s

F.

re-

work.

In addition to the business meeting, the PTA membership will vote on

a school project to be paid for from

the funds raised by the recent successful “Fashions and Fun” party.
This public meeting, in true keeping with the republic, is to impart
important fundamental financing of
the schools to the public in
i the school
gymnasium.

Firemen-Amvets’ Hold
Successful Benefit Dance
The annual dance sponsored by the
Deerfield-Bannockburn yolunteer
fire department had a co-sponsor this
year,—_the Amvets,
of Post 63. The

affair, given Saturday evening, was
a financial success, although the profit was not as great as in previous
years.
The firemen and veterans appreciate the help of the businessmen and
the residents of the two communities
in making the party a success.
Special Prizes

The Simplex ironer went to Allan
Adelman;
the Mixmaster, to Fred
‘ New Board Takes Over
Labahn; and the electric iron to J.
The three retiring trustees went Kilkenney of Highland Park. Mrs.
into the audience and each brought Carl Olson received the kitchen scale
back a successor to be introduced. and the cash prizes of $4 and $2 went
Homer G. Cazel present Trustee Eric to Howard McDowell of Park Ridge
land Mrs. Berry Devine, respectively.
. (Continued on page 39)

THURSDAY, May 15—
12:15 p.m, Rotary luncheon.
1 p.m. Spring luncheon, Presbyterian Woman’s association.
8 p.m. Amvets’ auxiliary.
8 p.m. Eastern Star.
FRIDAY, May 16—
8 p.m. Amvets in Masonic Temple.
8

p.m.

Board

of

Education-PTA

meeting at Deerfield Grammar
SATURDAY, May 17—
8

p.m.

Eastern

Star

card

school.

party.

MONDAY, May 19—
8 p.m. Legion auxiliary, unit.
TUESDAY, May 20—
8 p.m. Masonic lodge.
THURSDAY, May 22—
12-15 p.m. Rotary club.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce.
FRIDAY, May 23—
8 p.m. Holy Cross Family movie
night.
Future

Events:

July 11-12-13—Firemen-Amvets carnival.
August 15-16-17—Legion carnival.

Rotary Club Sponsors.
Book-Magazine Drive
For Veterans’ Hospital
The Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary
Club has undertaken a program in
which old books and magazines are
collected once a month and shipped
to Edward Hines Hospital distributing
center
from
where
they are
distributed to various veterans hospitals

in needof reading

materials.

This

program has been under way now for
two months and has been extremely
successful.
Members of the club, on the last
Thursday

of

each

ious books and
Johnson’s,—their

bring

var-

magazines to
meeting place.

month,

Phil
The

books are then taken over to Frank
Spannraft in Deerfield where they
are rubber stamped “With the Compliments
of
Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary Club.”
These books
are
picked up by Henry Bucher of Northbrook who transports them with no
charge.

Quite a few hundred splendid books

rejected the Tractomotive

the

manufacturing

more

room

com-

board,

but

a judicial

appeal board, and its decisions can-—
vot be based on the desires of any
one Or more groups which may want
changes made. Its function, in the
words of the ordinance creating the
Board, is to see that “the spirit of the
ordinance shall be observed, public |
safety and welfare secured and sub- —
stantial justice done.” The Board has — ws
felt, in a unanimous decision, that
finding for the Petitioner in this in-

stance, however desirable it might be &gt;
from many angles, is not in compliance with the Deerfield zoning regu-—
lations which, as presently set up, 4
cannot be interpreted except as a
restraint on the size and nature of ©
manufacturing permitted within the
village limits.”

“Stuart Bradley of the law firm of
Seago Pipin Bradley &amp; Vetter ap-_
peared on behalf of James
Flynn,
and stated that of the property in
question,
9.85 acres
are presently
zoned, and it is for the rezoning of |
this area
that
petition had been

A ge
Concluding Paragraph

board

meeting,

has

a

for these reasons —

a unanimous

resolution

re-_

jecting this petition, and the meeting |
was adjourned.”
f
\

passed away since release from sery-

Bonus Blanks May Be
Obtained from Earl Hurt

ice are now available.
Blanks and
complete information may be obtained

for

the

bonus

from

of veterans

who

ae

can Legion.

blanks

make

From Thair' Report:

a policy-making

“The

relatives

to

particular

ce

Excerpts

appreciative of the splendid monthly
contributions by the Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary Club.
Tom Adams of Northbrook is the
chairman of this Veterans’ Hospital
activity.

Application

area

this

The
procedure
of the
calling
of bie
witnesses to the stand to give their reasons,
for or against,
this
petition
wer
reported
in
the
April
issue
of th
Deerfield Review, so will be omitted here, |
Need Street’ and Industrial Area
The
appeals
board
felt
that
by
extension of this territory on County the
road it would block off the poapibiideeage:
a north-south road from Osterman avenue
to County
Line
road
to open
the light
manufacturing area, already zoned as such,
To
make
a
proper
beginning
for
industrial area to be opened, they sug. st
that a plat be made to lay out the :
industrial
area
with
streets
and
switch
tracks indicated to save considerable ex-—
pense later.

made.”

for

for

pany.

have been
collected
boys have been most

and
magazines
so far, and the

company’s

petition for extension of the ligh
manufacturing district from the 9.85
acres now zoned as residential.
—
Their. detailed report, too long to”
publish in full, does not deny light
‘manufacturing industries for Deer.
field. The petition presented to them
was not to determine if this factory
should be allowed here—but to extend

Commander

Earl Hurt, Ameri-

�i

-

May

15,

1947

PR

IMEET YOUR NEIGHBORS.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

AY,
i

Deerfield Fo

THE ROBERT E. JORDAN FAMILY

Vol.

22,

No.

7

Editor’s Note: Lincoln Pettis, now a resident
of
Weslaco,
Texas,
was
president
(mayor)
of the
Village
of Deerfield
in
1924
when
the
zoning
ordinances
were
drawn
up and put into book form.
This
book is still’ the authority’ by which
the
village
is patterned
and
whose
map,
so
small, has to be studied with a magnify-

year

ing

glass.

Mr.
Pettis was
asked
to interpret
light
manufacturing
code, as set up
his board.

the Editor:
Received your letter regarding the
zoning map and ordinances. I doubt if
there

ever

but

was

there

printed,

a

were

large

a

one

lot

explaining

of

the

ordinance

the will of the people.
As I recall the ordinance,

When you think of Deerfield’s future, we hope you will realize that the
great majority of us like Deerfield
because it is so rural—urban, not
suburban—so friendly, so lacking in
division lines of “silk stocking side”
and “cotton stocking side,”’—no demarcation for class distinction.
East side, west side, each has its
good and bad qualities, beauty spots,
and otherwise.
The
larger
the
community,
the
colder and less friendly is its population.
Here
in
Deerfield
everyone
knows what his neighbor is doing,
sometimes resulting in a buzz-buzz

provided
Appeals)

of comment,

but

this gossip

is greatly

Photo

Left.
Jordan,

to

right,

Jerry,

Susan,

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Jordan
and their five children live on South
Waukegan road in Mr. Jordan’s maternal ancestral homestead. The Jordan children
are
sixth
generation
Deerfieldians.
Their

is a good, clean, rural community
which to rear good, clean, rural

healthy

children.

home

contains

many

lovely

family heirlooms and furnishings in
keeping with the homestead, now a
century old.
A University of Illinois campus romance
brought.
Deerfield
a _ very
charming bride, Martha Hills, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred D. Hills
of Dallas, Texas, to preside over the
Jordan home with her new bridegroom almost fifteen years ago.

SHAME

ON

SOMEBODY!
Who

has

Holy Name Society

dumping

Has May Breakfast

someone

and

The annual May breakfast of the
Holy Name society was served Sunday by the ladies of Holy Cross
church.
The annual business meeting was
held and the officers to serve for the
year

president;
dent;

are:

Martin

Charles

Joseph

Hart,

Yous,

Wachholder,

vice

treasurer;

presiand

Jerry Clampitt, secretary.
Retiring officers are Vernon Meintzer, president; Joseph Wachholder,
vice president; Martin Hart, treasurer; and

James

Kilcoyne

Jr., secretary.

Fire Department Receives
Gift from A. J. Johnson
A. J. Johnson, 657 Deerfield road,
in a recent “thank you” letter to the
Deerfield fire department, praised the
firemen for their prompt and efficient
work
and sent them a_ substantial
check to show his appreciation of
their help in the recent fire at the
Roimmel house where the A. J. Johnsons

live.

been

tin

rubbish

cans
on

else’s

the

village

ac,

license

He

is

Carolyn,

to

such

should make
rubbish and
not done by
self-respect.

board

comes

done

soft

Mr.

in the pre-

vitamin

superintendent

capsules.

of the

Presby-

terian church school, active in Boy
Scouting, and president of the Sheridan Rifle and Pistol club. As a member of the Coast Guard Temporary
Reserve he served in World War II.
Both

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Jordan

are

ac-

tive members
of THE
STAGERS,
local dramatic group. Martha (Mrs.
Jordan) has played a variety of roles
ranging from straight to character
parts.

the

eee

olyn,

3;

and

David,

one year.

Absent from the photograph is Erwin B. Jordan, father and grandfather
of this family.
He is a practicing
civil engineer, located in Moline, IIl.

and

dog
May

licenses
1 and

ar-

rests are now
being made, warns
Police Chief Percy McLaughlin, and
he also states, “Tie up your dogs and
keep them home.”

changed

the

people

according
at

any

public

the committee
appointed by

board
of
change.

trustees,

it was

to

will

of

to the

hearing,—

(Board of
the village

approved

‘fhe

Frank Hempstead, Robert L. Johnson, or Seth M. Gooder, or any other
members
should have some of the
pamphlets or be able
idea of the ordinance.

to

explain

the

The weather has been cool so far
this season, quite windy
the past
week, Have had a long dry spell but
are having rain the past two weeks.
Have about 43 acres of cotton in nice
shape.

Not much to do at present,
finishing an aluminum boat
started laste October,
also
trailer to haul it on.
Boat
about 90 pounds, and trailer,

am just
which I
a_ light
weighs
about 50

pounds.

Hope this finds
Lincoln. Pettis
Weslaco, Texas

all

O.K.

Holy Cross Mothers’ Club to
Sponsor Family Movie Night
The newly elected officers of the
Holy Cross Mothers’ club to be installed at the June meeting are:
Mrs.
Charles
Killian,
president;
Mrs. Trenton O. Price, vice president ;
-Mrs.
Martin
Hart, secretary;
and

former

lieutenant

commander

in

the

Mts. Joseph Vogg, treasurer.
Family Movie Night
A family movie night is being sponsored by the Mothers’ club on Friday,
May 23, at 8 p.m. in the parish hall
to include all parents and children of

USNR,

has

very

in

cub

the

Mr.

sold

and

Mrs.

their

home

avenue

to

Mr.

Horace

Neill

have

at

Fair

Oaks

Arthur

Bor-

and

866
Mrs.

chardt (Margaret Galloway)
moving to Glenview.
Mr.

of

been

and are
Neill, a

active

Déerfield this past year.
is
the
former «Marian

Highland

Park.

Ned Wickersham
Returns
Ned
Salina,

Home
Wickersham

is

back

Kan.,

he

had

where

from
played

in eight of the ten games for the
Phillies farm team, the Salina Bluejays.
He has decided to remain at
home.

Eastern

Star

There

will

be

an

hour’s

H. R. Vant Attends

Grayslake O.E.S.
Harold
patron

with

R.
for

Vant

served

Friend’s

as

Night

worthy
at

the

the

Shrinefs’

band

in

the

near

future.

A card party will
be held Saturday
evening,
May
17,

at

the

\A
Masonic

Temple,

by

the

Deerfield

sponsored

parish.

entertainment of movies being arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hart.
The parish owns its own movie projector.
There
is no
charge
for
movie
night party.

Grayslake chapter of the Eastern Star
last Thursday evening.
Mr. Vant is planning a trip elst

Card Party
on

be

:

Their
interesting family
includes
Jerry,. 13; Diana, 12; Susan, 7; Car-

Huber

stoop

ST

delinquent

manufacturing

not

DELINQUENT
Vehicle

Kilcoyne

Mr.
Jordan
(“Bob”),
a graduate
chemist, is employed at Abbott Laboratories as head of the department

scouting in
Mrs.
Neill

caution: Refrain from dumping rubbish on parkways and vacant lots,
for it interferes with the village mower in cutting the weeds.

became

Jordan,

as Lura Jordan had
vious generation.

field? Surely the
good citizens
of
this village would
a lowly trick!
Common horse-sense
us realize that throwing
trash on any parkway is
those with an ounce of

SHUTS

Mrs.

James

Moving to Glenview

parkways and vacant lots in Deer-

From

David,

by

Diana.

over-shadowed by the genuine friendliness of its people.
Only a person
who has gone through illness and
sorrows, can really explain the true
meaning of “A friend in need, is a
friend indeed,” for the greatness of
Deerfield’s friendship is overwhelming.
The many friends of the late Mrs.
The majority of us prefer to reat Erwin B. Jordan
regret
that
she
our children in a community of homes, could not have lived to see her five
—not an industrial center.
‘grandchildren and to have seen the
Who
cares
if
Deerfield
“ever young bride grow to he such a capamounts to anything” as some people able mother, who
finds
time _ for
express it. Deerfield is 112 years old. school, church, and civic affairs, just

coming

and

its workings.’ The idea was that no
one would want to build and oppose

1879.”

and

printed,

pamphlets

Open Letter to the New
Village Board Trustees —

It
in

the
by

To

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press
Association
‘Entered as second-class matter Novem
ber 27, 1944, at the post office at Deerfield,
Illinois,
under
the
Act
of March
8,

rum

Lincoln Pettis, Former Mayor,
Answers Editor’s Questions

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
745 Chestnut St., Deerfield,
Illinois
Ruth Pettis, Editor
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday

Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate — $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
;
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave,
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone H.P.
4500

‘

Chapter, Eastern Star.
Mrs. Edward
Reagan
chairman,

is

general

Enroute

to Guam

Arthur Kress,
of Hazel avenue

son of B. H. Kress
and John Cashmore,

brother

Roy

of

Mrs.

Clavey,

and

son

of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cashmore
Sr., have goneto Guam for a year.

�Thursday,

May

Art

15,

1947

Page

Courses

Reveal Student’s Creative

Undertake Many
Art Projects
At High School
By T.
(Fart

The

her

color

sign

and

work,

perspective,

let-

theory

in different

me-

learris

the

use

of

value

in

materials.

inal

design

stressed.

and

cial advertising and posters, and make
designs for fashions, dress patterns,

wall

paper patterns.
Use

Six

Media

An art student at HPHS learns illustration and composition. The media
used are oil, .water-color, tempera,

Photo

basic training in the principles of art
and design and the use of materials
and

is the making of figures and household decorations from clay. A student

first

given

exploratory

in

These
Above

them

which

arts

a_

pictures

left, students

by their

course

student

were
are

instructor,

taken

also

during

sketching

Miss

is

receives

in

Lucille

In

of
two

Arts

III

principles
years

is

and

IV, appli-

learned

stressed

in

in

the

making

posters for school activities, class or
civic projects, composition of landscapes, buildings, figures, oil painting and still life.

time to set the coloring. The school
maintains its own pottery kiln on the
grounds.
An

media.

cation

wherebefore
second

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

Exhibits of pottery, leather, jewelry and textiles completed by art students
at HPHS are shown in the above picture.
The articles are displayed in a large
glass showcase located just inside the main doorway at the school.

pen and ink, chalk and charcoal. Perhaps one of the most popular subjects

moulds his model from clay,
upon it is fired twice, once
the color is added and
the

appreciation

handmade

silver
and

is

of good

and

also

many

of

chiefs and scarves has
in the department.

sketch-

ing from a model in costume or. school
apparel, receive training in commerand

are

materials,
ma-

a

popular

the

students

have created jewelry such as bracelets, rings, tie clasps, earrings and
necklaces. At another time during the
semester they bind books. Slippers,
hats, belts, purses and other wearing
apparel have been constructed from
felt. Painting
on textiles such as
luncheon cloths,
napkins, handker-

in the first year. Sketching is undertaken outdoors in the spring or fall
when weather permits. During the
do figure

design

with

other useful and decorative

Sterling

Students

Advanced
art
work concerns
the
application of the principles learned

year students

good

both

and many

may take art four years, and usually
those
who
expect
to go
into the
profession do so.

second

works

chine made articles.
Leather is a popular material for
crafts work. Students at HPHS have
constructed and tooled billfolds, camera cases, belts, purses, watchbands

material,

school.

own

of de-

student

working

learns

in

any

high

is a course
The

and

In

a student

design

articles.

in

her

Materials

at HPHS

proportion. This is a seven period a
week course and may be taken during

year

has

as an artist craftsman who plans his
article and then constructs it. Orig-

diums, drawing, design and composition. The student does figure sketch-

ing

Honolulu,

Design

in arts and crafts given

foundation

in

Crafts

tic qualities. He develops
a more
valid conception of beauty in learning to appreciate art in everyday life.
First year course in art is devoted
to

home

clay-making shop, and another, a recent graduate, is in the East to study
with one of the country’s leading
painters,

at Highland Park High school offers
the student
an
opportunity
to express and cultivate his or her artis-

tering,

Talents

made for two exhibits to be held in
Deerfield next year.
Many art students who have graduated from HPHS are doing commercial work. One student now making

Louise Anneaux
VI of a Series)

course

5

Murals on the. walls of chemistry
and
biology classtooms
at HPHS
were produced by members of the
art classes during recent years. In
their

own

painted

classroom,

four

large

students

have

windows

with

also been

done

Some of the most unusual and interesting results have been obtained
when the student worked with paper
mache

and

work

it is

so much

scrap

materials.

discovered

what

you

that

use,

do with the material,
Plastics, weaving,
and
also

In

this

it is not

but

what

you

that counts.
block printing

work in plaster and wood are
part of the crafts program
at

HPHS.
172

in

Arts

and

Crafts

In the advanced art class, a student
is encouraged to specialize in the type

pleted

just

of problem which promises to give
his individual talent the highest de-

Work

of the

throughout the year. An exhibit was
held last year at the Highland Park
Woman’s club and plans are being

There are 87 students studying art
at the local school. The arts and
crafts room are located on the lower
floor of the Industrial Arts building.
The art room has accommodations
for 26 students in a single class, each
having his own drawer for materials.
Students pay a small fee at the be(Continued on page 16)

supervision

“works

velopment.

a class
pastels

Wood.

period

from a

Above

in both
still

life

right,

arts and
model

a class

set

copies of French, Dutch and Italian
works.
The paintings were
finished
with imported material and were com-

before

the

department

recent

war.

is exhibited

Photos

crafts.
up

under

for

the

of

purses and belts.

Miss

Elizabeth

Bennett

with

by

leather

Percy

in

H.

Prior,

Jr.

constructing

�eh
"

Hall Wald!

=

Our Weeky

PRED one RED
Highland

Park

High,

Last

Merchant

Jim,

a

excursion

You Are Invited to Study

to

your

of her

sorority

at

musi-

The CHRISTIAN

OPEN

Illinois

BE SURE
DIARIES

DAILY-+-

TO

ee

;

ei

4

teat

GoW

bey

SEE

at the local
May 8.

hospital

on

born

Mr.

son

was

Mr.

ARE

and

Deerfield

Thursday,

to

and

Mrs.

Colors
Men’s

white,

I

blue

GIFTS

.. from $1.75
from

and

$1.95

black

or Ladies’

. from $5.00
ALL LEATHER BILLFOLDS
COMB &amp; BRUSH TRAVEL MILITARY SETS -... from $7.50
SHEAFFER, PARKER &amp; EVERSHARP PEN &amp;
. from $5.95
PENCIL SETS
COMPACTS

.. from $2.50

(leather, lucite or metal)

LEATHER STATIONERY TRAVEL CASES .... from $6.00
HOROSCOPE &amp; POETICAL BIRTHDAY BOOKS from $1.00

Attractive

Assortment
Rings,

ZIPPER

BRIEF

COSTUME

Necklaces,

CASES &amp;

JEWELRY

from $1.00

Bracelets, Pins, etc.
. from
NOTE BOOKS

Brown

or

of

680

Park,

are

Mr. and Mrs. Clark Gandy are the
parents of
a
son,
Robert
Wells
Gandy, born at the Lake Forest hospital on
Sunday,
May
11.
Mrs.
Gandy is the
former Rosalyn
W.
Smith, daughter of Mrs. Bradford
Smith. The father is the son of Mrs.
Wells Gandy of San Jose, Cal.
McKanna

A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. William P. McKanna recently
at St. Joseph hospital in Joliet. Mrs.
McKanna is the former Mary Dorick, daughter of Mr. ‘and Mrs. William Dorick, of Highland Park.
ternal grandparents are Mr. and

McKanna

of

PaMrs.

Menominie,

Wis.

.. from $1.25

brgwn,

Benke

Highland

—_—

WELCOME

BOOKS

Paul

Gandy

ROOM

ATTRACTIVE

Mrs.
avenue,

the parents of a son born
at the
Highland Park hospital on Monday,
May 12.

(

OUR

AUTOGRAPH BOOKS
PHOTO ALBUMS &amp; SCRAP

Accident

Series

Starts This Week
The
photograph
on page
4 is
the first in a series of official accident pictures to appear indefinitely
in The News through courtesy of the
local
police
department,
together
with specific information taken from
police

records

surrounding

regarding

the accident

conditions

in question.

This
feature
is presented
as an
educational effort in the hope that

Highland Park drivers will study the
facts in each case and attempt to
avoid

circumstances

duplicate

that

might

cause

accidents.

$3.95

black.

FLUORESCENT DESK LAMPS ..--.-------2:::--2--00-0.-- from $10.50
WEBSTER’S
3,350

NEW

pages;

Binding

of

INTERNATIONAL
600,000

buff

entries;

buckram

GRADUATION

DICTIONARY

12,000

terms

CARDS

illustrated.

now $25.00

(indexed)

from

RS

NR

he

hy

e

MW

Tel. H. P. 3100

eS

Quick. Service

5c

Chandler's Ine.

¥
¥&amp;

YOU

colors, red, brown, blue, green

525 Central Ave.

*

READING

and black

received permission

{

Nichols of 48 Beverly
parents of a son born

William

8.

‘

SCIENCE

a

‘

wD

are

Benke

IMI fe Git

contri-

from the publishers to reproduce it
in Highland Park .. . It appears on

g

of 902

Park,

The Robert
place are the

A

43 North Sheridan Road

An article appeared in the May
Womens Home Companion which attracted nationwide attention . . . It
was reproduced in condensed form
as an advertisement in Chicago newspapers . . . Believing that it would
be a public service to our own community if it received as widespread

page

Sutter

Highland

Earl Riddle, 330 Vine avenue, at the
Highland Park hospital on Sunday,

BIBLE, the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE textbook and periodicals containing testimonies of
healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at

and browse around?

here we

Robert

May 11.

and also made the school’s honorary
society
... By the way, Mr. Bolle
is coach of the Highland Park Golf
- team—one of the best high school
squads in the country.
Audrey Wessling, daughter of the
O.K. Wesslings of Glencoe Ave., will
be the June bride of Bud Amick of
Michigan.
Once again it’s Stetson Straw time
... We have a very fine selection of
. Panamas at $6.95 ...It may be a
bit early but now is a good time to
buy your swimming
garb... Our
collection of trunks, suits and washable robes is really outstanding...
Why not drop in some Monday night

attention

Mrs.
road,

Riddle

Thousands are finding health and peace far
beyond their expectation.
You may investigate
Christian Science at no cost to yourself. The

bution to the Highland Park Hospital
Building Fund.
Mrs. Harry Bolle of our children’s
shop is justly proud of her daughter,
Lois ... Lois was recently elected

president

-

ship.

make

and

the parents of a daughter born at the
Highland Park hospital on Wednesday, May 7.

Christian Science Textbook

26 years.
forget

Mr.

The Bible and the

William Einbecker has been teaching physics and general science at
the Highland Park High School for
Don’t

Sutter

Deerfield

’36.

cian and song writer by trade, has
just signed with a nationally known
summer

Year

370
175
376
1,471
5,371

Nichols

member of the
Fishers
Hill,
off the Dutch
caught fire on
last week after
duty with the

Marine...

This

\

for the show are on. sale in our women’s department.
Jim Clark, a crew
ill-fated tanker, S.S.
which was abandoned
West Indies when it
Doha 13, arrived home
a six month tour of

Week

Binermenicies attended ca. io. cok iy oe ieee
32
DGS COLIVOPOR isa chinese es
9
OGSrRtIONS
DEFTOTIOG: oo... hihi
se ids
24 .
¢ e=FOY EXAMINATIONS | o..nc-- io k ch
64
Laboratory examinations ..................... ps herceaee 335

Bob Moran of DeTamble Ave. is
home from the Army and is learning
the plumbing profession at his father Cliff’s establishment.
Fell’s clothes will be worn at the
Threshold
Players performance
of
Claudia at the Glencoe Central School
‘this weekend ... Incidently, tickets

-

of

HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL

It will be a wedding with an. interational
flavor
Saturday,
May 24
when John Sorsen of Gray Ave. mar_ fies Miss Mona Powell of England.
The recently opened Burnett Motor
Sales—New and Used Cars—at 300 N.
First ‘St. is owned by Charley Burnett,

Story

sma
397

Central

af

Avenue—Room

Highland
Telephone

Park
H.

P.

155:

12

�rs. Wetherton Cherry Named —
To Local Girl Scout Post
To Relieve Mrs. E.E. Alt, Jr.
As

Executive

Director

|

in Fall

Mrs. Wetherton
Cherry of 548
Central avenue will assume the duties
of executive director of the Highland
Park Girl Scouts next fall, relieving
Mrs. E. E. Alt Jr., present director,
according

to

an

announcement

week made by Mrs.
ow, local Girl Scout

This summer she will act as assistant director at Camp Timber Trail
near

Munising,

which

Mich.,

an

experience

will qualify her especially well

to direct the
and outdoor

expansion of the cabin
program
being empha-

sized

local council.

by the

this’

Leonard Davidcommissioner.

CAMP
Ellison

GREENWOOD

Bay,

*

Door

County,

26th

YEAR

Wisconsin

FOR

BOYS AND GIRLS
Ages 7 to 14 Years
July
They

of

will

real

to

August

enjoy

outdoor

ionship
and

4

with

girls

a

Greenwood

the

life
fine

under

and

Phone

MRS.

WETHERTON

CHERRY

Mrs. Alt has tendered her resignation since she will accompany her
/ husband to another city where he is
being transferred by his firm.
Mrs. Cherry has been a resident of
Highland

Park

for

10 years

and

has

been active on the boards of several
local organizations, among them the
Presbyterian church, YWCA, Family
Service of Highland Park, Ravinia
and Highland Park Woman’s clubs,
and
the
Lincoln
and Green
Bay

-

school

PTA’s.

For the past three years she has
been a member of the local Girl Scout
council, acting as secretary and publicity chairman, and at the present
time she is also leading a fourth
grade Brownie troop at Elm Place
school.
Highland Park children: are well

advantages

and

compan-

group

able

of

boys

guidance.

is ideally situated with

all the facilities which
front

15

natural

woods,

beauty

water-

can

or write
for folder
detailed
information.

offer.
and

CAMP GREENWOOD
Mrs.

Bertram

1885

A.

Weber

Groveland

H. P. 1782

Little Things
Are Important

A great artist once said that
little things
are required
to
achieve
perfection,
and
that
perfection itself is not a little
thing.
|
So with good health.
The
acquainted with Mrs. Cherry through
heart itself rests between each
her work as substitute teacher in the | beat and thus provides a rule
elementary schools and staff member
for living.
of the Presbyterian church school.
Relax when you can. Do bet-.
+
ter than that; provide in your
daily living, a time for relaxation, for recreation.
Pian Ladies’ Opening Luncheon
Provide, moreover, a regular
At Sunset Ridge Club Tuesday
time to see your. doctor for a
systematic check-up
of
how
The ladies’ opening spring luncheon
you’re doing. Is your heart perat Sunset Ridge Country club will be
forming without
a
murmur?
held Tuesday, May 20, at 12:30 p.m.
Are your red corpuscles holding
According to Mrs. E. N. Johnson of |
their own?
That little cough!
Highland Park, a member of the pubWhat does it mean?
licity committee, a record number of
Regular
attention
to your
reservations have been made by both
good
health
pays
dividends.
old and new members.
Carefully compounded prescriptions are good investments too.
A “get
acquainted”
afternoon is
planned, and interesting highlights of
an active summer ahead will be made
known by various committee chairmen.
—Pharmacists—
Following the luncheon, progressive
Highland Park
Ravinia
bridge under the direction of Mrs.
Phone 2600
Phone 2300
B. Burt and Mrs. H. L. Brainerd of

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

_ Evanston will be played.

\

Yolande...

|

Magic Name in Lingerie
She
of

walks in beauty in this dreamstuff
sheer white cotton by Yolanda.

Handmade,
-and

lace.

with

delicate

embroidery

Sizes 32 to 40..

CSAS ae
$7.95 to $10.95
I
ood
ccteurdgtna nd $5.95 to $7.95

�By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE, D.D.
Pastor,

Marble

Collegiate

Church,

New

York

City

4
.

Suppose

you overhear

him make a barbed remark about someone’s race, color or religion. Should you reply to him? If so, what
Here’s a practical way to squelch a bigot — a way of answering him and, often, of removing his intolerance.
It is condensed from the article in the Woman’s Home Companion, now on sale.

should you say?

Racial and religious intolerance are increasing
in this country.
After two scant years of peace,

with

our

war

wounds

not

yet

closed,

made a vicious and dangerous remark, but you
can
say,
‘Prices are
high,
aren’t they?
I’ve
noticed that the Jew is not a bit worse about

‘4 scourge

of bigotry has broken out.
If we fail to cope with
it, the disease rnay undermine the health of our

whole

national

Interfaith
citizens, are

being.

committees,
comprised
in arms against bigotry.

ings are taking
rection—but

looking for bargains than any of us.’’

place.

they

All

don’t

steps

go

far

Chances are the woman will smile a bit shamefacedly, agree and be more careful in the future.

of
leading
Mass meet-

in the

Another

right di-

with

enough.

joke. But, like invisible germs, they spread the
virus of intolerance more effectively than organized propaganda.

Fortunately,

are

two

simple

ways

for

everyone to help fight the disease.
First, we can
nip intolerance in the bud by expressing our disapproval whenever hate-mongers utter anti-minority remarks.

groups

whenever

we

Let's take the first method.
man’s voice growls. ‘’This

a

have

the

strike

to

back

member

Not

is

any

with
ago

a

race

a

or

dealing

or tells

religion

you

story

a story

can

often

about

some

group.

a young

friend

made

no

woman

whom

| know

direct

reply

but

told

After his last day with them, the child came down

for Niggers.’’
In your office one worker whispers to another, “I wouldn’t vote for him—a
Catholic, you know.’
In a busy grocery store, a
housewife looking for a bargain comments, “I’m
feeling Jewish today.’

on

Then, on the third evening, there came a tap
the door.
It was the friendly-faced woman

The people who make such remarks are all
disease-carriers, consciously or unconsciously. They

who lived down the hall. ‘“You go to sleep now,’
she said in imperfect English. ‘’I sit with the baby.

need to be answered

| have raised four of my own.”’

promptly,

firmly and calmly.

In the case of the Negro-baiter,
and
can

say quietly, ‘|
way to talk.”

If the

don’t consider

hate-monger

snaps

you speak
that an

back,

‘‘It’s

up
to

Ameri-

none

of

may

not

silence

the

hate-monger

Squelching

the

anti-Catholic

bigot

will

for

sary.

turned

even

bigot

‘‘many

of this country’s

ers have been Catholics.”

As to the anti-Semitic housewife

store
that,

. . . it would achieve
in an attempt to be

greatest

my

The

red
was

mind;

minority

lead-

And

in the grocery

the

in

woman

a

war

came

factory
but she
her own

woman

who

and

later

had

reformed.

| never

remark

these

feel

is made

simple

it wasn’t neces-

said she hated

apologized.

unarmed
in my

stories

[= ie

L

most

are

when

an

anti-

presence.

much

L

are, first, the ‘“American

which

tradition’’

argu-

appeals to the sense of fair play of

both bigot and bystanders; second,
makes use of ‘‘situational logic,’’
pending upon where you are and

the reply which
and varies dewho your aud-

ience is; and third, the answer based
sonal experience—the story out of life.

upon

per-

In every case, though, the psychologists found
that the manner in which you reply to an antiminority remark is just as important as what you
say. Keep calm and poised, they advise, never try
to shout anybody down, and don’t sound as if

you are making a Fourth of July speech.

But the squelching
of the hate spreader is
only one way in which we, as individuals, can

check

the

epidemic

of

prejudice

which

is

en-

dangering us. Almost every day, most of us have
the opportunity to say something or do something
which will result in greater good-will toward minorities.
If
race
you
your

you have an acquaintance who belongs to a
or sect different from the one with which
usually mingle, you can invite him to meet
other friends.
If your daughter has a school

teacher named Miss O’Brien or Miss Cohen whom
she is crazy about, you can spread the news. The
thing to stress, however, is not that they happen to
be Jewish or Irish or German

or Spanish or Swedish,

but that they are fine people.

Millions

of

Americans

might

well

cultivate

this _attitude—especially
parents.
No
child
born with either racial or religious prejudices.

is

If you have a little boy in school and he brings
a playmate horhe who looks a bit different from
the other children make a point of not asking
your

son

if his

new

Polish or Russian.
if

again.

he’s

In

good-will

friend

is

Italian

Treat his guest

a

nice

that

way

instead

of

boy,

you'll

invite

be

or

Jewish,

like any other
him

sowing

to

come

seeds

of

intolerance.

Italians

A _ potential

more

J
by

They

ment,

child;

ef-

fective than any amount of heated argument.
Psychologists
who
have
made
scientific studies
of
intolerance
have
reached
similar
findings.

no good to tell her
humorous,
she had

This Space Donated

night,

worked

True stories like that, whether they happened
to us personally or to someone else, are about the
best ammunition we can use.
| keep a stock in

intelligence would let a difference in religion influence his political thinking. ‘After all,’’ you
add,

after

She

My friend didn’t moralize, and

easier.
You would probably accomplish little if
you flatly told him he was a bigot.
But you can
express genuine
surprise that a person of his

might

night

derful Italian woman!”

inspire

is

that,

sickroom.

‘She was just about the finest person | have ever
met,’’ my friend concluded. ‘I don’t know what
|_would have done without the help of that won-

good, but if he insists on being argumentative,
you'll have the satisfaction of knowing that at
least ninety per cent of the other people on the

bus are on your side. Your courage
“many to act similarly in the future.

the

rest every night to give the exhausted. mother
the sleep she had to have. Nor would she accept
a penny.

\

That

After

during the day and was tired herself
insisted upon giving up several hours of

your business,’’ you can reply, again quietly, ‘’|
feel it's everybody's business.
| know many fine
Negroes. Stop and think a minute, I'll bet you do

too.

a

with double pneumonia.
Because hospitals were
overcrowded and nurses scarce, it was impossible to
get skilled assistance.
For two days and nights,
the mother sat by the little girl’s bedside.
She
was close to physical and emotional collapse.

bus,
day

The experts
have
decided
that
the
effective comebacks fall into three classes.

counter-propaganda.

remark

favorable

of the same

long

using

makes

in

story of her own.
During the war, she said, she
and
her
three-year-old
daughter
went
to an
eastern city to see her husband off for overseas.

chance.

In a crowded
must be push

derogatory

My

Secondly, we can take positive steps

by implanting seeds of friendly feeling toward our
minority

a bigot

technique

attended a club meeting where another woman
_told a highly prejudiced story about an unfortunate experience she had had with some Italian. Americans.
Because of her own little experience,
she blamed the whole race. ‘’l simply can’t stand
Wops!’’ she exclaimed.

;

there

effective

hate-mongers

When

Hate is a communicable disease.
To check its
spread, we must act as individuals in our daily
contacts and associations.
These seem trivial on
the® surface—a
careless remark or a thoughtless

highly

It has been found that the anti-minority remark
which goes unchallenged
tends to deepen prejudice in the minds of people who hear it. Likewise, the slur which is promptly squelched falls
flat or boomerangs against the hate-monger.

Another way to take positive action against
the spread of hate is by being alert to lend a
helping
hand
to members
of minority
groups
when the opportunity presents itself.
There are
countless occasions on which we can be of service.
Hatred and happiness are not compatible.
Intolerance and democracy
cannot
live together.
We must act as individuals in our everyday lives
to wipe out this disease if we are to fulfill our-

selves

and

brotherhood

make
of

the

man

by a man or woman

nation

is worth

of any faith.

7
S

great.

a

As a Public Service

few

Surely

daily

the

efforts

�Treasurer Reports Thrift Shop
a

Radio Artists to
Appear on Program
For Downey Patients

Sales $11,616 During Past Year

When Infant Welfare members’ enthusiasm for the Thrift shop and the
loyalty

of

the Highland

of Northwestern
to

the

land
tal

staunch

Park
sum

support

Hospital

in

Park

branch

settlement are added
of

the

auxiliary,

annual

profits

High-

the tofor

the

Thrift shop is a substantial figure.
Exclamations of surprise were heard
at Monday
morning’s
Thrift
Shop
board meeting when Mrs. Jay Glidden,

treasurer,

contributions

read

made

year.
Shop sales
At the end of
Thrift Shop board

the

figures

during

the

and

This

year

Agencies

the Allendale farm, Amer-

Community

center,

Highland

Park

Hospital
Building
fund,
Highland
Park
Social
service,
high
school
scholarship fund, Illinois Industries
for the Blind, Lake County Tuberculosis sanatorium . auxiliary,
Morgan
Playground trust, Park Ridge School
for Girls, Ridge Farm preventorium,
Seeing Eye,
UNRRA
Food
emergency and veterans hospital at Downey,

Ill.,

Serving
with five
presidents

were

In July, 1946, the office of honorary
second

given

vice

to

president

Mrs.

was

Roswell

honor of her untiring
help to the Thrift shop
of years.
Annual

» Shop

stock

created and

Swazey

in

devotion and
over a period

sales

given

by

entertainers
auxiliary in

were
March

so

repeat

much

a

ganization:

have

present

an

hour’s

presented
and were

by the
enjoyed

performance

Mrs.

Helen

been

supporting organizations.
Mrs. Francis Knight, who is beginning her second year as president, will be assisted

in the coming year by Mrs. Edwin

M.

Walker's

Privilege
Blend of
str. whiskey

5th

knowledge
board

cannot

and

be

customers

and

her

cooperation

with

the

measured

in words.

With her help and the help of each of
our board members,
I am sure this

coming year can equal, if not surpass,
the year just completed.”

OLD
Immediate
Typewriters,

Service

Adding

Calculators,

COST

5th

Machines,

Pick up and delivery
511 Waukegan, Highwood
Tel. H. P. 5505

TRY

‘Tel. Highland Park 630

MONDAY

wen

4

Meme

$4.79

Save on Scotch
Martin’s VVO ............
White Horse ................
Old Smuggler ............
Sandemans ................

$5.95
$5.95
$5.85
$5.85

Teacher
Johnny Walker, Black

$5.95
$7.95

Bellow’s
Partner’s

Choice

CREAM OF
KENTUCKY

FOUR ROSES

IMPERIAL

US TODAY!

PABST BLUE RIBB

TOMORROW
EVENINGS

7 TO

BEER

RD.

Case

MILLER

of 24 yepn

© HIGH

of 2

H. P. 206

$360

LIFE $350

FI VERMOUTH

9

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE
6 NO. SHERIDAN

Arelelted,

“oe Yoscgu se iowt Y

HILL &amp; HILL

WEEKLY

Jewelers &amp; Opticians
Across from the Bank
Same location 35 years

4

Registers,

Case

I. H. NEMEROFF

“2 BOURBON”

LESS

GET PICTURES
OPEN

ZLust

ROSE

Bourbon
4 year old

24 HOUR SERVICE
INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION
BETTER PICTURES
@

TERMS
Special
Values
in
Diamonds
Price
Comparison
Invited
This store open evenings
Until 9 on Mondays.

stock

5th $471

YOUR
PICTURES
DEVELOPED
BY EXPERTS....
2
@
®
@

———y

Private

of her

cheerfulness

$4.19

ere

In reporting to the board on Monday, Mrs. Knight acknowledged the
splendid help of Mrs. Simpson, paid
sayher

$4.97

(1 limit) 5th

Park &amp; Tilford

Northwest-

ern settlement.

manager of the Thrift shop, by
ing, “Her
devotion
to
duty;

Deluxe

6-yr. Str. Bourbon

Sneeden,

remembered.

on the Thrift shop board
executive officers are the
and two members of the

was

Mrs. Loretta Werhane, Mrs. Kathleen Gerkin, Mrs. Patricia Koon and
Mrs. Jerry Nicholas.
It was announced that future business meetings are to be held the first
Monday of the month at Witten hall
beginning at 8 p.m.

“Back to School” sale in August, the
Infant Welfare “Tea for Toys” in October, the Thrift shop “White Elephant Tea” in February and the June
party

will

Five new members were initiated at
the. last business meeting of the or-

Events

and

artists

requested.

stimulated throughout
the
year
by.
parties and special events such as a

rummage

ican Red Cross, Arden Shore association,
Girl
Scouts,
Highland
Park

The

program in which they will play and
sing and.conduct group singing. The

members.

past

totaled $11,616.49!
each
month,
the
divides shop prof-

its four ways: one fourth to each supporting organization and the remaining fourth to other worthy organizations and charities.
Aid Many

Hadley Jr. as vice presidwent; Mrs.
Horace Vaile, secretary; Mrs. Jay
Glidden; treasurer and Mrs. Earl Wallis, publicity. Mrs.
Howard Detmer,
Mrs. Benjamin F. Lewis and Mrs.
William
Jones
are retiring
board

RESERVE

©

Many Worthy Enterprises Are
Aided by Thrift Shop Profits

SCHENLEY

The
Woman’s
auxiliary
of
the
VFW of Highland Park will sponsor
an entertainment at Downey hospital
on Tuesday, May 20. The program
will feature Miss Marion Renaldo, accordian player and Miss Marie Cater,
violinist, both from WGN radio station.

$] 25

5th

Liquor Service Co.
337 Waukegan
Highwood . . Phone

DAILY

FREE

Ave.
H. P.

1500

DELIVERY

|

�On
a recent safari
into Kenya colony, Africa, E. O. Sessions of
2194
South
Sheridan
road
shot
the
water
buffalo with which he
is seen at the right. Mr.
Sessions will show colored movies of his expedition Monday night
at the annual meeting
of the Braeside ParentTeacher Civic association,
starting
at
8
o’clock in the auditorium of Braeside school.
Mr. Sessions flew to
Kenya colony via tIreland
making
the trip
in 50 hours.
He also
bagged elephant, rhinoceros,
lion,
leopard,
an 18-foot python, and
30
to
40
kinds
of
plains game.
The community is invited to view this unusual movie.

STORAGE
Time
Don’t trust your closets!
Have your furs cleaned and
revitalized by “VOGUE” and then stored in our refrigerated

storage

@

FIRE
@

vault

for positive

protection

@

DUST

@

from

THEFT
MOTHS

s

DRY CLEANERS

FOR

SE*2

PARTICULAR

PEOPLE

Trinity Guild Members Plan
Summer Fashion Show May 22

OOUE
CLEANER/
AND DYERS
327-329 N. Green Bay Road
391 Roger Williams Ave.
44 Green Bay Road
Glencoe

b

Highland Park
Highland Park
Winnetka

3906
3903
3360

1900

Masters in the art of rug and furniture cleaning.
Prompt attention given to mail orders. Beautiful
new carpeting.
Carpet Binding, Serging and Repairing of all types
;

Alterations and
Linoleum

—

HIGHLAND
Rubber

OHN

Padding

rens,

Relaying

Asphalt Tile

—

PARK

3500

Highland

Pads
Stair

Park

SUMMER LEAGUES ARE
NOW FORMING
TO ‘As

I.

MAY

15th FOR

Men’s

League,

Ladies

Mixed
f

es

:

Tues.

Nights,

8:00 p.m.
League, Wed.

Nights,

average

or improve

HIGHLAND TEN PIN
PARK

is

of

Park

particular

because

TEL. 319

mands
of
wardrobe,

the
and

on the North

well-rounded summer
will range from styles

for the debutante
the

_

mature

age

to fashions

for

woman.

Mrs. Charles Perrigo is president
of Trinity guild.
Committee members in charge of arrangements for
the event include
Mrs.
James
M.
Cuthbertson, general chairman; Mrs.
R. F. Ahrens, fashion show; Mrs. J.
Mills Easton, prizes; Mrs. C. J. Haynes, refreshments;

FOR
DOGS
The Waataat
6 NO. SHERIDAN RD.

interest

it will be

Shore of the latest fashion arrivals
from the country’s leading fashion
centers.
Clothes to be shown have
been selected carefully to meet de-

(Continued

Mrs. Vernon

on page 46)

We

will pick up your

dog

every

larly and

week
keep

reguhim

perfect condition for

$1.90 WEEK
v

your average.

ST., HIGHLAND

Marjorie

event

one of the first showings

it

An excellent opportunity to establish

139 N. SECOND

and

The

in Highland

WASH — TOE NAILS CUT — TRIMMED
EARS CLEANED — TEETH CLEANED — ETC.

:00 p.m.
Leagues, Fri. Nights,
8:00 p.m.

your

Blessing

and will be followed immediately by
the parade of fashions. The bridge
party will begin after the style show.

12 WEEKS

at the coolest spot in town.
Air conditioned for your comfort.

a

aA

Keep

Barbara

Fuller.
Stage settings for the fashion show
are by Anne Hoyer.
Music will be
piano solos by Mrs. T. E. Barton.
Dessert will be served at 1 o’clock,

Rubber Tile

B-NASH-

||_19.N. Sheridan Rd.

An outstanding event inthe year’s
program of the Woman’s Auxiliary
and Guild of Trinity Episcopal church
will be the dessert bridge and fashion
show to be given in the parish house
of the church at 1 o’clock Thursday
afternoon, May 22.
Summer afternoon and sportswear
will be shown in the colorful fashion
show in a wide range of smart styles
from Hein’s Smart Wear shop, Waukegan.
On the runway, as models,
will be the Mesdames Samuel Bingham, John Newey, Arthur Rooney,
Hugh Seyfarth, Claburn Jones, George
Ross, W. Harold Rutherford, and the
Misses Catherine Jones, Lynn Ah-

in

Mor-

�Summer Session to Start at

permits the ‘poor student to
some courses and raise grades
out falling behind his regular
ating class.
Many
elementary school
learn to swim during summer

H. P. High School Next Month
“Academic Subjects, Typing and
Mechanical Drawing Offered
Summer

school

at

Highland

ara

fees)—Mr.

Kendig

and

Mr.

Park

Summer
school offers pupils an
opportunity to broaden their regular

registration

four

the

auditorium,

announced Monday.
A student may register
subjects

if

one

or

it was

for

more

three

are

review

subjects. A fee of $10 will be charged
for each subject, and no refunds will
be made. after classes are started.
Registrations will be accepted until
June 19, when they will close.
Classes of one and one-half hours

duration will be held in the mornings

only, and the summer school, which
will last eight weeks, will end August
8.
Can Plan Special Work

year

are

drawn

from

the

subjects

European

history—Mr.

Latin 1,
Stewart.

2,

3, 4

be

of-

DANCE

other
school

subjects
term.

during
Summer

THE

LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE

1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Highland

Park,

review only;

5 open

Mr.

and

Stunkel

Mechanical

24

Music by Bob Norwood’s Orchestra
Members
&amp;
Public
Invited
Tickets
at
the
Door
74c
per
Person

Mr.

1,

3,

4

William Penn 5th. ........ $3.39
IMPERIAL 5th ........... $3.39
50 GRAND 5th ............ $3.39
Calvert Reserve

Bohn pte

20% REDUCTION

Schenley

TWENTY

PER

CENT

REDUCTION

¢

i

GTS. ecient
ssseceees $4.42

~ OLD
5th

FRIDAY and SATURDAY,
MAY 15-16-17
Alterations Without Charge.

(new

and

review)—Mr.

UNDEROOF
$4.09

See tenewndenenes

HILL &amp; HILL
PR esa $4.09
Pg

Faye Barkley Dress Shop

Sunnybrook

$4.09

BLACK GOLD
DEB decd $4.09

926
call or drop

5th ................ $4.23

Seagram's 7 Crown 5th $3.94

THURSDAY,

Phone

FINE ART
Blend

of Straight
Whiskies
90 proof, 5th $4.46

in for
OLD

3

GRAND

Bonded,

Pint

Bonded,

Sth... ks

OLD TAYLOR

$675

Pee

$425

FLEISCHMANN’S
Bond,

and

Bur-

well and Mr. Eiker.
Swimming (special classes and sep-

"67,

5th

TAYLO RS
New

THE

York

BEST IN

State

PETRI
California

Company

Gutters

Cleaned

- Coated

Siding — Insulation
Tuck-Pointing

317

Grove

California

PARK

$1.75

F.

I. Port,

Sherry,

Muscatel
We

iON

cere

BEER
‘MEISTER BRAU

&amp; DUFFY

OF

GOLD
CABG

WINNETKA

$790 :

CROWN

MILLER
Cash’

$2.39

2465.

Of 24

ie

HIGH

of 26

PABST

Cleaners
HIGHLAND

BROS.

Wine

Sth

Case

St.-

Highwood
B. AMIDE!
Cc. MORDINI
Highland Park 1203

CHRISTIAN

Case:

DUFFY

~
Wine

SE tines $0.68

DRAPE
CLEANING

Shoreline

(repairs-renewals),
Asphalt Shingles—Roll Roofing
Wood
Shingles
repaired
and
preserved with HOT Asphalt or
Stain

—

of Straight
Whiskies

FOUR ROSES 5th ...... $4.25
HUNTER’S

for

.

|

Reserve

PRIVILEGE
Blend

review)—Mr. Zipoy and Mr. Swan.
United States history and ecconomics

$3.89

Sth chs: $3.90

Acting on our President's suggestion
that we all lower our prices, we are offering
our entire dress stock at a

Pertz.
(mew

4579

LORD CALVERT |
Sth
$4.52

Winkley.

2,

Phone

Preferred
OUR ie aati $3.78

to seniors only—

drawing—Mr.

Typewriting

and

Ave.

Highwood

Illinois

Saturday, May
8:30 p.m.

the
regular
school
also

For Spot Reducing

only—Mr.
(1

335 Waukegan

No. 446
At
Masonic Temple, Second Floor

an appointment.

Mathematics

STORE OF FRIENDLY SERVICE

a col-

By taking academic subjects such
as English and history during summer
school, students
can schedule

aca and

Eiker.

(review

example,

regular

will

English 12,3; 4.5, 37,8
review)—Mr. Mason.

For

Fleischmann’s

staffs of the Lake Forest and Highland Park schools.
Students from elementary
schools
within the district and students from
high schools outside the district also
are admitted, if they receive approval
from Mr. Einbecker, director of summer school.
The following
fered this year:

course.

lege preparatory student may not be
able to take mechanical drawing or
typewriting during the regular school
year, but can take these subjects
during summer school,

Those taking a course for the first
time must attend the full summer
session of eight weeks; but students
who wish to finish a partially completed course or raise a grade in a
course previously studied, may contract with the teacher to complete
the work in a shorter time, provided
his work is kept to a satisfactory
grade.
Summer sessions are open to all
students
of
the
Deerfield-Shields
Township High School district. The
teachers

pupils
school.

Danakas.

High school will start the morning
of Monday, June 16, at 8 o’clock with
in

repeat
withgradu-

$ 370
eas:

LIFE

$350

3a

BLUE

‘

RIBBON

$360

Of O66

Phone

FREE

4579

DELIVERY

�is

New Officers of Women's Club
Take Over at Meeting Monday
Following a luncheon at the Moraine hotel, the first meeting of the

Mrs. MacArthur Is

new

Guestat Meeting of
Orchestra Group Here
Mrs.

Telfer

MacArthur,

chairman

of
the Women’s Committee of the
+ Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, was
the guest of honor and speaker at
the first spring meeting and tea of
the Highland Park group which took
place oy Tuesday afternoon, May 13,
at the home of Mrs. L. F. McClure
of Woodland road, who is co-chairman with Mrs. William W. White.
Mrs.
MacArthur
discussed
plans
for participation in the sustaining
_membership drive which was recently
launched by the trustees of the Orchestral association.
Highland Park women deeply interested are the Mesdames Charles
Boand,

Harold

J.

D’Ancona,

DeLeuw, John Garcia,
David Levinson, Walter
Richard J. Loewenthal,
James
MacMurchy,
quette

of

directors

new

season

various

were

discussed

activities

and

chairmen

the

acquainted with the duties that
confront
them
in the work
of

club during the
New
officers
are Mrs. James

will
the

coming year.
besides
Mrs. Lacy
M. Cuthbertson, first

vice-president;
Mrs.
Tom
second.
vice-president;

Leeming,
Mrs.
C.

Fritsch, recording
secretary;
Mrs.
William C. McCulloch, corresponding
secretary; Mrs. JesseE. Ham, treasurer,

and

Mrs.

Guy

cial secretary.
Directors and
which

they

are

B.

the

Finlay,

committees

chairmen

are:

Carl L. Wolf, hospitality;
field W. Day, furnishings;
M.

Mannings,

G. Maus,

fine

finan-

arts;

Mrs.

Mrs. GarMrs. John
Mrs.

philanthropy;

George

W.

Miss
Jane
Roberts of Highland
Park is serving on one of the committees for the informal dance to be
given
by the sophomore class. of
Ferry Hall, Lake Forest, Saturday
Proceeds

of

the

affair

will

education;
gram, and

Mrs.

Mrs. Sidney
Mrs. Leonard

Roland

Herbert

The annual Garden Mart
Rayinia Garden club will be

social

activities

half flats and

ae EP

peppers,

Ferry

to

Announcement

has

been

made

Hunter,

614

Westgate

also

of

be

on

the

this

orders
Mart

been

year.

added

Mrs.

Mrs.

Arthur

to

fashion

hand

during

Garden

have

James

Baldauf

will

corsages

solving planting problems.
To add to the fun of

of

mar-

road,

Deerfield.

Dr. Davis is the widow of Dr. C.
Johnson Davis, a physician who practiced in Highland Park and Deerfield
_and was on the staff at Highland
Park hospital for many years.
In 1930 “Dr. Dorothy” was resident

A

MISS

DEBORAH

MOSELEY,

Mrs.

Earl

Johns
from

Moseley

avenue,
Southern

college,

ELIZABETH

daughter

Buena

of

of 710:

will

be

Seminary
Vista,

Va.,

Mr.

and

North

St.

graduated
and
in

Junior
June.

Miss Moseley is active in many of
the campus organizations, and will
take part in the commencement play,
“Spring Dance,” which
will be presented by the Dramatic Art Club.
physician at the hospital.
brother, Dr. Sugden, is on the
pital staff.

Her
hos-

to
accommodate
wide assortment
will be on sale.

of

to

the

day,

plan a family
Ravinia vllage

picnickers,
and
a
homemade foods

a

Elmer

L.

Highland

buffet

pliment

supper
to

Clavey

Park,

on

Miss

of

Clavey

entertained

Sunday

Elaine

Yesterday
was

at

Jr.,

in

at

com-

Bohnert

hostess

afternoon

the
at

Libertyville

former
tea

in

for

Miss

of

Mrs.

Frank

Bette

Clavey,

her

new

D.

in

Moseley

fat
of

New

York

City, son of George C. Moseley of
Highland Park and
the
late
Mrs.
Ethel Spencer
Moseley,
and
Miss
Virginia -Gillette Kleitz, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. William Lambert
of Rye,

N.Y., were

church,

Rye,

The
the

married

Saturday

Rev. Wendell
church,
and

A reception

was

Kleitz

in Christ’s

at

4:30

p.m.

Phillips, rector of
the
Rev.
John

Schroeder of Yale university
ted at the ceremony.
held

officia-

in the Apawa-

mis club following the wedding. The
couple will make their home in New
Canaan, Conn.

Wess

Dorothy

bs

Dorothy,

Gillette, Ark., wkose marriage to Gordon Clavey will take place next month.
Reach

Spencer

pan

Be

Bride Sune

14

Mr. and Mrs. David Evans
are
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter,

Prenuptial Parties
Mrs.

Moseley

Sckonbiteds

Ss

Miss Elaine Bohnert
ls Honored Guest at

road,

Kbit:

gar-

A. G. List, H.P., 3883.

features

fair

sale

Advance

to

Mrs.

of

green.
Mrs. John Wilbor and her
committee are arranging for tables

Deerfield.
The
wedding
will take
place on May 29 in the Deerfield
Presbyterian church.
“Dr. Dorothy” is the daughter of
Mrs. C. E. Sugden and sister of Dr.
- C. Russell Sugden of Deerfield.
Mr.
_ Hunter is the son of the Paul Hunters,

variety

event.

and

on

a

everyone is invited to
picnic luncheon on the

riage of Dr. Dorothy Sugden Davis,
924 Deerfield road,
Deerfield, and
Kenneth

will

given
new

the

be

ait

and approaching

be

and

order.
There also is to be an information table, where Mrs. Leroy Harza
and her committee
of specialists in
gardening will be glad to assist in

harried in Deerfield
~ the engagement

yearly

Ewell

Kenneth Hunter to KK
2)

the.

chairman,

Hall.

Dorothy wis

gadgets

Two

single plants, tomatoes,

herbs

den
may

class
advisors,
and
Briggs,
director
of

at

of the
held in

the triangle at Ravinia May 24, from
sun-up to sun-down.
Flowers in flats,

BE GRADUATED

be contributed to the school’s Benevolence fund.
:
The planning committees have kept
secret the theme of the evening, including the program and the door
prize.
Faculty sponsors are Miss Patricia
Rowe and Miss Mary Leslie Wheeler,
the
sophomore
Miss
Winifred

Ravinia Garden Club Members
Busy with Garden Mart Plans

Frisch, proW. Keaster,

at large.

TO

Photo by
James Kilcoyne

of

Armand V. McPhee, budget; Mrs. C.
Edward Thorney, press and publicity;
Mrs. Vernon §. Mortimer, home and

G.

These Highland Parkers took
honors
in a
riding
exhibition
held
Sunday,
May
4,
at
Brown's
riding
academy.
A
cup
was
awarded
Miss
Marsha
Harrison,
1733
Pleasant avenue,
mounted,
for placing first in the
junior champion horsemanship
event,
while
a reserve championship
was won by Miss Pat
Pierce,
right,
of
583
Kimball road.

were

Roberts on Dance

Nichols,

Harold

Committee at Ferry Hall

_ evening.

board

Alexander,
social;
Mrs.
Mark
G.
Brown,
house
and
grounds;
Mrs.
Archibald Abercromby, finance
;- Mrs.

Jr., and

Miss Jane

and

Schick.

Donald

Ross,

Charles

L. F. Harza,
E. Lilienfield,
S. J. Lunding,
Arthur
Mar-

president

of the Highland Park Women’s club
was held on Monday, May 12, at the
home of the president, Mrs. Kenneth
B. Lacy, 1645 Dato avenue.
Preliminary plans for the coming

home

Bohnert.

to

Eugene

W.

Shannon,

son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis C. Shannon of Blossom Heath road, Dayton,

O.

The couple plans to be married on
Saturday, June 14, at the Evans home
on Ridgewood drive.
Miss Evans attended the University
of

Iowa,

and

Mr.

Shannon,

three year’s service in
forces, attended
Miami
Oxford, O.

prior

to

the armed
university,

|

�[UCILE H, HILBORN, INC

Mrs Albert J. Bushey Receives
Ravinia Woman’s Club Gavel
The Ravinia Woman’s club terminated its club year with an annual
spring
luncheon
yesterday
at the
Ravinia Village house.
During
the
business

Mrs.
as

portion

Albert

the

J.

of

the

proceedings,

Bushey

organization’s

was

inducted

new

president,

Mrs. Francis P.* Eanes
joins Mrs. L. L. Howe
of the club.

succeeding
mann, who
as director

Other new officers and committee
chairmen for the 1947-48 year introduced
at the
luncheon
include
the

following :
Mrs.

H.

president
ship

Bowen

and

and

Stair,

chairman

hospitality;

Schramm,

second

vice

Margaret
present

president

R.

and

secretary;

Mrs.

Wetherton

Cherry, treasurer;
Mrs. A. C.
merdinger, program committee;
Wyatt Jacobs, arts committee.

maintenance

committee.

Following the luncheon and introduction of officers, Miss Lois Fisher,
cartoonist,

titled

presented

“Secrets

of

a

the

program

en-

Subconscious.”

Woman's Club Group
Gives May Party for
Ridge Farm Children
The

social

service

committee

of

the Highland Park Woman’s club not
only
sewed
for
children
of. Ridge
Farm
on
May
7, but gave
a gala
party for all the youngsters.
It was

one of the happiest events of the
month at Ridge Farm.
Cobwebs strung in the senior school
room meant a prize at the end for
each

child,

and

everyone

ing and caught a gift
variety of games was
whistles,

horns,

went

fish-

package.
A
played, with

“squeakers”

party.

GROUP OF DRESSES, COATS
AND SUITS

form

Cree
the

Evans,

$10.00

’cellist,

M. Jones,
C. Vaaler

Kendall L. Mertz, Walter
and Miss Jane Hymers.

PERCY

H. PRIOR,

SKIRTS
Some

Tel.

H.

P,

3199

SWEATERS
CASHMERES now $10.00
Slip-overs and Cardigans included
SHETLANDS now $5.00
PURE WOOL SUIT SWEATERS $2.95

ACCESSORIES

II.

G

J.

R.

Thompson,

~

itetlinlalena
a 4 44’ * eae

SALES
—

May

riding

eeaae
7: NOW
3.95

-

~FOOD

,

FINAL
15

through

24

oe

eee
Beescee
ceseee

We

deliver—Deerfield - Highland Park - Northbrook - West
Lake Forest. Call Enterprise 1215 for. Highland Park
&amp; Northbrook.
For Deerfield—Phone
860

If you don't have a Home Freezer, order yqurs today.
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Also A Complete Line of Supplies.

Dairy

Fruits

Size

Turkeys - Ducks - Geese
Chickens - Capons

Lloyd

J. Harriss’ Frozen Pies
Ready to Bake
Strawberry, Apple, Blueberry
Cherry, Boysenberry, Peach
ORDER TODAY!

Us

Squabs

Meats

Pork

- Beef

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Pet Foods
Fish &amp; Sea Food
Frozen Pastries,

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(Lowest

PHOTOGRAPHY

-

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Tenders

Beef Tenderloins, - Steaks
~ Chops

Chops

Foods

- Veal

-

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- Also Whole
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May

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~

$2.00

RIGID FREE, f|
F esesantt’

You See Us

See

Value

Only

EARRINGS
up to $18.00

Now

ALL
10, Days

Frozen

When

PINS &amp;
formerly

handbags

to $28.50)

COMPACTS
20% Discount

Route 22, Deerfield, Ill.
LAKE FOREST 796 Y2
Mrs.

of

up

greatly reduced

€

Sunshine
Valley
Mr.

|

(values

JEWELRY

Leather)

Assortment

|

Park,

crafts - nature study in wooded
playground..
Transportation
provided - Call or write for folder.

On

$7.95

(Morocco

Full, exciting program of summer activities for BOYS, ages 4
to 9 and GIRLS, ages 4 to 8.

- horseback

woolen

PURSES

ST.
natural
of your
reception

SUMMER
DAY
CAMP
Swimming

BLOUSES
$5.95 and $2.95
Formerly $10.95

Hand-Loomed

Jr.

Highlond

$6.95

English

Photographer
1026 WADE
Specializing
im
unposed: pictures
party, wedding or

Reduction

SPORTSWEAR

program.

the Mesdames
Frederick
R. H. Debenham,
Gordon

and

sparklers adding to the fun. Serving
of ice cream and cake concluded the

the

committee,
G. Bauer,

Mrs.
John
Kuiper,
philanthropy
committee; Mrs. James Barton, publicity chairman; Mrs. J. A. Nelson,

Willard Ewing, auditing and revisions
committee;
Mrs.
Russell
Johnson,

‘
in

be

Tea arrangements are being made
by Mrs. Wilder M. Morrison and her

HeiMrs.

Holly Hop committee;
Mrs. Darrell
Beam, civics committee;
Mrs. Bruce
Krasberg,
social
committee;
Mrs.

Quality Merchandise at
Remarkable Reductions

of a musicale tea to be given at the
home of Mrs. Thomas B. McMartin,
525 Sheridan
road,
Winnetka,
at 2
_p.m. Mrs. Frank H. Towaer, pianist,

and

A.

Fine Apparel and Accessories

Shore alumnae chap-

William K. Spence.
The meeting will

Clearance
of

ter of Kappa Alpha Théeta Wednesday, May 21, when she will turn her
gavel over to the new president, Mrs.

will

chairman
of the
house
committee;
Mrs.
Gordon
Leonard,
recording
secretary; Mrs. Robert Spahr, corre-

sponding

Evanston-North

vice

Mrs.

Store-Wide

Mrs.
Frank
M.
Suttle will close
her two year term as president of the

member-

first

of

Theta Alumnae to
Close Year May 21

Carcasses

Chefs

Ready for

Prices)

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
Park

724

Deerfield

Rd.

Clarence

S. Wilson

Deerfield,

III.

�‘ Pick Up ead Baia .
|

Have

RADIO SERVICE
Williams

Ave.
H. P.

icc

‘he

“CLEAN UP”

| Husenetter &amp; Cronkhite
365 Roger
Ravinia, Ill.

You

SLOGAN CONTEST?

609

More than 225 friends, fellow workers in the field of education and distinguished guests attended a dinner
honoring Wayne A. Thomas on the
occasion of his silver anniversary as
principal
of
Oak
Highwood,
Tuesday

ALL THE FAMILY
“SIS,” YOU'RE NEXT

the

Your heavy dress coats and those
in

now with those woolly sweaters.

Call
And

H.

P.

177

or

178

we'll be ready to call for them
them thoroughly——finish

—clean

them

perfectly—moth
proof
the
added protection for

ones you wish
—returning
when

you

them
want

in moth

bags

them.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618

N. Green

general

Enough

-

weeds—kills them
roots. At the
time your grass is

to the

#3.90

to treat 10,000 sq ft

reception

$12.75

SCOTT SPREADER for easy application

-

are

as

PROMPT

‘

7.85

to the
Highland

Park

$525,000

Building

Funeral services were held in Evanston Thursday, for Albert J. Valiquet,
54, of 2230 Lakeside place, who died
Tuesday in Augustana hospital, Chicago.
Mr. Valiquet, an investment broker
with offices in Chicago, suffered a
ruptured appendix while on vacation
in Daytona, Fla., a month ago and
was returned to Chicago for treatment.

i

A native of Chicago, he attended
public schools
there and attended
Northwestern School of Commerce,
Chicago.
He had been a Highland
Park resident for the past 10 years.
Surviving are his widow, Helen; a
son, Robert W. Valiquet; a daughter,
Joyce Valiquet, all of Highland Park;
two
brothers,
James
Valiquet
and
Lawrence Valiquet, Chicago; and four

570

Highwood

sisters, Mrs. Ruth Lange, Mrs. John
Knapp and Mrs, William Allis, all of
Chicago and Mrs. Ralph Kessinger,
La Porte, Ind.
Burial was in Memorial Park cemetery, near Wilmette.

Complete Line of
EVERSHARP PENS AND PENCILS:
@
@

WATCHES
PINS

RINGS.
BRACELETS

JOHN RUTTKAY
Successor

314 RAILWAY

HARDWARE

AVE.

Tel. H. P. 2041

HIGHWOOD,

to

Polk’s

Jewelry

2 N. SHERIDAN ROAD

ILL.

Fine

Watch

Fund

Albert J. Valiquet

JEWELER

SHERONY

Hospital

Graduation Gifts
@

Margaret

Services Held for

SERVICE

Ave.

Miss

Make A 3-Year Contribution

3

National Delivery
Service
212 Railway

Monroe

Re-

follows:

Phone
Highland Park

@
@

-

Hall,

sponses were made by many of the
guest officials ahd by Miss Dorothy
Spink of the Oak Terrace faculty
and Mrs. Francis McCormack of the
PTA.
Mr. Thomas then responded
with a short talk. Grace was offered
by the Rey. Herbert Linden of Zion
Lutheran church.
Committees
which
planned and
made arrangements for the dinner

nourished to bring about
richer color, thicker growth
to help fill in bare spots
vanquished
left by ‘the
weeds.
Box to Weed/Feed

chairman.

Roland

Sweeney, Miss Rose Opitz and Miss
Hilda Pugh.
Reception:
Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar
Benson,
chairmen,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George C. Kenry, Mr. and Mrs. Alex
De
Bartolo,
Miss. Dorothy
Spink,
Miss Margaret Sweeney, Miss Rose
Opitz and Roland Wirt.
Finance and gift:
Monroe Hall,
chairman.

was president of the school board
when Mr. Thomas came to Oak Terrace.
Guests Offer Responses
J. C. Frehner, school board member and master of ceremonies at the
dinner, was introduced*by Mrs. George
Kenry,

Chairman,

man,

the

LOCAL
DELIVERIES

double duty comready to spread
is
pound
as it comes from the box.
It clears out ugly broad

2500 sq ft

followed

Sampson,

Ella Rasmussen.
Roland Wirt, chair-

FOR

This new

same

which

Ruth

Wirt and Miss
Invitations:

Planning:
Mrs. George C. Kenry,
chairman, Mrs, Francis McCormack,
Mrs. V. William Briddle, Mrs. Chris
Roske, Miss Margaret Sweeney, Mrs.

SCOTTS LAWN FOOD
puus WEED CONTROL

right

reception

@

F. Patton;
Mayor Thomas
Mussato
of Highwood; Nello Ori, president of
the school board, and Mr. Swan, who

and

IN A FEW MINUTES
NOW
WEED/FEED YOU R LAWN

leaved

school,
at the

Alex De Bartolo, Roland Wirt and
J. C. Frehner.
Other Committees
Dinner:
Mrs. Chris Roske, assisted
by six home room mothers.
Tables:
Oak Terrace faculty.
Decorations
and
flowers:
Miss

dinner.
Among guests were Lake County
Superintendent of Schools Petty and
Mrs. Petty; A. E. Wolters, principal
of Highland Park High school, and
Mrs. Wolters; Dr. Casper O. Dahle,
superintendent of District 107, and
Mrs. Dahle; Mayor and Mrs. Robert

C.

H. P. 177

Bay Road
Highland Park

Terrace
evening

school. An additional 200 well wishers converged upon the school for

come

wo

ee

For

‘sports clothes too—should

Tribute to Highwood Educator .
Honor Wayne Thomas at Dinner
And Reception Tuesday Night

DRY CLEANING

~

. More than 400 Take Part: ine

and

Jewelry

Telephone

2028

Repairing

�To Attend Jamboree
Bill Fox of Troop 2 of , Wilmette
was the first Scout to sign up for
the

World

Jamboree.

Reese

Troop 3 of Wilmette

ane
.

Pair of

and Bud

Rolfe

The

of Troop 35 of Highland Park followed in close order.
Henry Peddle

of Troop

30 of Highland

indicated

that

he

will

have also been advised
one and possibly two

Winnetka

and

one

Park

Tailor
°

has

attend.

7%

y
Fire

ALTERATIONS

We

on

that at least
Scouts from

from

|

ne

Men’s

and

Glenview

“i re
;

Women’s

Clothes

will attend the Jamboree. .
Early
registration
will insure
al]
place for your Scout on this adven-|}
ture of a lifetime.
Scouts from the
North Shore Area council will be a
part of the Chicagoland troop which
will attend the World Jamboree under
adequate adult leadership
recruited||
from neighboring councils.

bee:

Without Delay
,
Suits Made to Order
Also Cleaning and Pressing
4
&amp;
hie
Pick up Tuesday before
4
10:06 a.m. and Delivered
.
on Fridays
22
8 N. Second St.
H. P. 1712
|
re

i

HOW

THE HIGHLAND

‘
Sista tor Perey: Hi: Pitan ode
PARK NEWS WAS AWARDED a trophy by the North|]

June N. Jackman, editor of The News, while
of the council, witnesses the proceedings.

Seiags

Sale

The Guild of Redeemer Evangelical
Lutheran church is conducting a rum-

mage

sale

in the

church

hall

od

Boardman,

the
Scout

trophy

&gt;

o
Or

Pantle

Fe cae

Have

from 9:30 a.m. until 12 noon.
\A
variety of material is for sale.
Mrs.!

Welcome

‘
if

screens

executive

prefer

with

we

bronze

CALL

is

chairlady

of

H.

the

:
will

POR

or

e
:
rewire

your

galvanized
T

oe

present

oe

wire.

hs

“ESTIMATE

F. H.

You

S.

First

A.

Terms

St.

Entered the

ai

GAMLIN

N.

ia

H.

P.

5102

Deerfield 416

“CLEAN
UP”
SLOGAN
CONTEST?

To Our New Modern

We wish to thank all our customers
patronage

you

to

150

today

.

\

Charles

Morning

This

George

presents

SCREENS?

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combination screen and storm sash.

Spore Area council, Boy Scouts of America, for aiding the Boy Scout movement
through its news and editorial columns more than any other of the 13 newspapers
in the council area during the first four months of 1947, at the council’s recent

first annual Editors’ dinner held in Lake Forest.
M. Warner Turriff, public relations chairman,

ARE YOUR

while we were at our temporary

Plant

for their continued
location

and

will be

very happy to welcome Reais to our new modern plant at the old

address, 25 N. Sheridan Rd.

We

will continue to give he

best

in cleaning and service as we have done in the past.

25 N. SHERIDAN

ROAD

|

INC.

JOHN ZENGELER,
:

TEL. 2801

:

�Plan Outdoor Class
For YWCA Art Group
A

series

of

four

outdoor

(Continued

painting

classes to be held on the Saturday afternoons in June is announced by the
YWCA, sponsors
teurs group.

Tom

of the Art

Wilder,

for Ama-

instructor

group, will be gone during
August
and has consented

of

the

July and
to teach

during June. The group will sketch
on Saturday afternoons from 2 un11-5: mM,
The first class will meet June 7, at
1:45 p.m. at the YWCA where fees
not previously paid can be taken care

AT:

YOUR

of and members with cars will take
additional
passengers.
Enrollment
will be limited. Those interested are
asked to call or write the ‘Y’, High-

DEALERS

land

SOME

ONE

Park

OF THESE

675.

garden.

SHRUBS

Whether

or PERENNIALS,

it’s

we have a

A
to

course
be

in

offered

the first time
club

at

the

Monday
trips

history

EVERGREENS

ROSES,

(olotal

Garden

EXTERIOR

IN

local

schoo]

institutions,

meets

every

tours,

papers.

for many

from

she

the

in'fine

and

James

years.

Highland
$525,000

of

Buddy

McLeran

Mrs.

Buddy
Roger

is chairman

and

Vignocchi

of the

Evanston

to Waukegan

inclusive,

is in

a

position

Russell

and

Whitney

of

Ridge

Super

Service

on

Women’s

Receive

DELUXE

Garments

All Dresses Measured Before Cleaning Then
Pressed to the Original Size.
Specially Equipped Steam Hand Irons—
ean Perfect Work on Women’s Delicate
Garments

wood

Five

and J. Sigurd Johnson.
Mr. Skidmore has announced another camping trek starting May 30.
A two nighter, this trip will take the
boys to Apple River canyon, returning to Highland Park June 1.

INC.

SATISFACTION

in the FINEST QUAL-

SERVICE
Different Inspections—
On All Garments That Go Through
light Plant.

Our Day-

Men's Suit Sponged and Pressed—
All Visible Spots Removed.

Your clothing is handled with extreme care and skill by our expert craftsmen all of whom reside in Highand Highland Park and have proven their loyalty through many years of experience with us.
When your garments are in our care we assume full responsibility, as our motto for all these years has been

SATISFACTION

GUARANTEED

ERMINE CLEANERS,
OTTO

'Weukegon

and Webster
Highwood

F.

FISHER,

INC.

Pres.

Aves.

Telephones:
H.

P. 3710

Sages

eget

and

com-

Skidmore, troop leader, included Gilbert C. Hallawell, Warren A. Peterson, H. F. Hendrickson, Philip Gould

ITY WORK.

You

road,

mittee member and expert camper.
The
transportation
committee
assisting
Mr. Whitney
and Harry

Park Hospital
Building Fund

to GUARANTEE

aux-

Last Saturday six carloads of boys
from Scout Troop 324 went to Starved
Rock for the first of a series of overnight camping expeditions planned by

one of the DRY CLEANING plants established for 27 years in Highwood under the same ownership of Mr. Otto
F. Fisher, serving many homes along the North Shore through six well managed branches, which are located
from

the

To Starved Rock

in-

Wausau,

CLEANERS,

of

Poppy day, assisted

Beware To Whom You Entrust
Your Valuable Clothing
ERMINE

Poppies,

Six Carloads of
Scouts Makes Trek

to the

132

sale

Church

Make A 3-Year Contribution

Winnetka

the

Highwood

BETTER HOSPITAL
MEANS BETTER HEALTH!

DECORATORS

No.

a sick fund is created in VFW posts
in all the nation for care of disabled
veterans in hospitals from coast to
coast.

in Chicago, and
atart school at Penn

majored

Post

Through

iliary.

graduated

of Highwood

Wars,

art

by

was

Comrades
Foreign

The

is

of the art department

She

of

desigHigh-

for

art

to plan
read

the

23, has
been
Poppy day for

Park

semester.

school

by

Veterans

study
modern
art.
Miss
Barbara
Shamberg is president of the club
this year.
Miss Lucille Wood has been head

A

Shop

Bay Rd.

wood

dustrial art. Before coming to Highland Park High school this year she

lovely selection to

NOW

Friday,
May
nated as Buddy

4741.
‘Buddy Poppy day is an event sponsored all over the United States by
the Veterans of Foreign
Wars.

of

Highland

next

after

to

the
at

was art supervisor at
Janesville, Wisconsin.

CHOICE

Buddy Poppies May 23

5)

crafts.

where

show you.

60 Green

page

Miss
Elizabeth
Bennett
teaches
crafts and has one class of first year
art. She was graduated from University of Wisconsin and attended
summer school at Columbia university

DAYS...

EVERGREENS,

from

ginning of a semester, and materials
are furnished by the school. Both arts
and crafts are academic courses and
carry a full credit toward graduation.
Eighty-four
students
are _ taking

School
of
Art
tended
summer
State college.

Spring will be here and we’re ready to help you beautify
your

Highwood VFWTo Sell

|Art Department

Winnetka

3330

|

�Thursday,

May

15,

Page

1947

It’s Fun to Be a Model!

OUR

MONEY

YOU

SAVE

CAN

WE

PLANTS

WILL

GROW
Trees
Vines

Shrubs

Evergreens
Fruit Trees
Perennials
Fertilizer

Roses

Annuals
Peat Moss

Locally grown, each plant carefully selected
in the fields to bring savings to you — CASH
Open

ELMER
&amp;

BLVD.

SKOKIE

17

daily until dark.

CLAVEY,
Shrub

INC.
ILL,

PARK,

HIGHLAND

RD.,

CLAVEY
“One

and balled
&amp; CARRY.

or a Forest”

RETTIG

BROS.

CLEANERS
:
RPETING CLEANED
Alden

“MONIE’”

MAY

TALKS

THINGS

OVER

with

Rudy

Harris

Vallee

Photography

prior

to

@® Rugs
@ Carpets

Ai, I] ty

the

contest for the title of ‘“Miss Junior America’ held last Friday night at the
Continental hotel, Chicago.
A high school junior and a model of teen age
clothes, Miss May competed as ‘’Miss Highland Park,” winning fourth place in
the beauty division.
Amwng the roster of judges was Highland Park’s Mayor
Robert F. Patton.

guided this group
through
an_ extremely successful and profitable year
of work and fun.

Brownie Troop Gives
Mother's Day Tea

Members

Brownie Troop 18 of Lincoln school
gave their mothers a Mothers’ day
tea
Carol

April

30,

Baker

at

the

home

Summers.

of

the

Members

as hostesses.

refreshments

During

and

the

well,

Angela

Jean

the

troop

Brace,

as

Elspeth

Scornavacco,

Youngs,

are

Beth

acted

KEEP THAT

Fly”

Murray,

Brownlee.

304 Railway Ave., Highwood
Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

SPRINGTIME

Phone H.P.

676

grass.

HERS

HUSENETTER
Roger Williams

v7

We

have

been

appointed

exclusive

North

Shore dealers for the famous English—

RUDGE WHITWORTH BICYCLE

SPARKLE

WITH

|

Follow this simple beauty prescription:
Banish
dandelions,
plantain, buckhorn and the like
with Scotts Weed Control. Retain
grass health and color with a
meal of Scotts Turf Builder. Fill
in thin, bare lawn spots with vigorous grass from Scotts Seed.
SCOTTS WEED CONTROL
—Quick
destruction
of
weeds without harm to the

365

Buv

Carol Sum-

Susan

The Easy SCOTT WAY!

Aplinisetarne

to

Is Before They

Max-

ELVIRA
HEALTH
SALON

leaders,
Mrs.
Arthur
Mrs. Louis Nathan, have

SE

Time

tea-time

little Dutch girl.
This represented
one of the projects of the year.

wt

MOTHPROOFING
“The

fol-

ot | Julie Patton, Sherry Howard, Maryln
Nathan,
Patsy
Oppenheimer,
and

hour, each mother was presented with
a hand-made needle holder made of
felt and fashioned in the form of a

The troop
Howard and

Betty

Mrs.|mers,

the troop arranged the entertainment,
planned

lows:

of

Furniture

@

$1.25, $3.85.

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—
Complete
food
for grass.
25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2500 sq.
ft. 100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds
10,600 sq. ft.
SCOTTS
LAWN
SEED—
Triple clean. 1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. - $6.25
25 Ibs. $29.85.
Scotts
for
Dense
Shade, same price.

Our first shipment has just arrived
for the cycling season.
‘ COME

IN AND SEE THEM

GOLDEN MOTORS INC.
Send
ZQN

5S,

S A

HARDWARE
Tel. H. P. 4387

THREE-SPEED TRANSMISSION

106 SOUTH
Highland

Park

| es E

FIRST ST.
2500

�Page

18

Thursday,

May

15,

1947
—_—

Shirley

alt

Coronation Scenes from “Fashions &amp; Fun”

aid.

Lyle Sacobs Wi B.
Married

on Aune

Whe Chesney. Mentzer
Vuptials

¥

iikied

Miss Shirley Scott will become the
bride of Kenneth Lyle Jacobs on Saturday,

June

7, at 8 p.m.

in

The
zer

a candle-

light service in St. Paul’s church. The
Rev. Hugo Leinberger, pastor of St.
Paul’s church will be assisted by the
Rev,
Francis
Boelter, minister
of
Bethlehem

church,

the

latter

The

the

bridesmaids

are

to

church

be

pair, King Irl and
Queen
of

Miss

Lange,

and

Alvin

cousin

Hertel

Mar-

shall.

will
will

of

-of

the

of Deerfield,

and

Mr.

Jacobs

is

the

son

evening
Central

home

floral

arrangement

for

a

bridge table and prizes were awarded
to the winners.
During the first several years of
the club’s May breakfasts members
filled May baskets and the most artistic

arrangement

a_

received

King and Queen

on

were

Mr.

James

Tib-

betts

at the

mic-

May

Photos

From Mrs. James Fitger, mother of
Mrs. Walter Headrick, comes word
from Soddy, Tenn., telling that Mr.
and Mrs. Fitger expect to be returning to their Deerfield home the early
part

of

June.

They

have

been

gone

a year.
Mrs. Fitger writes that the fields
and woods are full of mountain flowers such as dog-tooth violets, honeysuckle,

sweet

shrub,

and

that

the

R.

Hamill

home

Merner

(Ruth

John-

Richard

Kamminga

were

the hostesses

of Oakley avenue
shower to honor

enher

by

James

Kilcoyne

Horenberger-

at

are

to

be

8:30/p.m.

with the
ciating.

Rev.

married
in

Hugo

St.

June

Friday,
Paul’s

church

Leinberger

Chicago,

room
with

in

lead-

chairman.

Dr

Ruth Schmidt, daughter of
Fred Schmidt of Saunders road and
Edward Horenberger, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Horenberger of Wilmot
road,

Thursday,

Field’s,

Honored

6

Miss

6,

luncheon

Wedgewood

Dr. Dorothy Davis

Schmidt

on June

Wedding

at

the

ers from the Chicago, Plant, Flowers,
and Fruit Guild telling their needs
for the summer.
Miss Hariet Vittum of Northwestern Settlement was
the principal speaker.
Attending the luncheon from Deerfield were. Mrs. Ambrose Cox and
Mrs. John Silence, garden department
chairmen, Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture,
president, and Mrs. F. W. Nolde, program

The engagement of Miss Marjorie
Leaming of Highland Park to Erwin
B. Jordan of Deerfield was announced
last week at a party given by Mrs.
John
McGuire
(Harriet
Leaming)
sister of the bride-to-be.
The wedding will take place in mid-summer.
Miss Leaming, daughter of Joseph
F. Leaming of 1540 Dean street, Highland Park, and the late Mrs. Leaming
teaches in Evanston.
For a number
of years, the Leamings spent their
summers in the Robert Brown home
on Chestnut street and the Beckman home on Woodward avenue.

at the

Russell)

8, at

Marshall

ter of ceremonies.

Cngagement

News of Tennessee Friends
From Their Mountain Home

Mrs.

L. T. McChesney

road.

Mrs.

entertained

rophone was mas-

‘bear

1,

Miss

Garden
department
chairmen
of
the Chicago area women’s clubs were

prize.

retiring
by Mrs.

May

have

in

Garden Department
Luncheon in Chicago

table.

Mrs. W. L. Keady, the
president, is to be succceeded
Harry Wright.

On

Mrs.

Milton

and

month

niece.

and Mrs. Irl Marshall.

Masonic

showers

past

A. Tennermann
tertained at a

PTA

show

the

at the shower held last Wednesday
at the Merner home
in Highland
Park. On Saturday evening Mrs. W.

Later, floral arrangement in other
containers and for various seasons,
were the order of the day. This year
luncheon
the
was
innovation
the
bridge

this
honor.

(Florence

3,

at

miscellaneous

co-hostesses

Mrs.

Fun”

luncheon

follow

Stratford

son)

May

McChesney

avenue.

will

given

were

the

be

It will be a very simple service and
their only attendants will be Mr. and
Mrs, Lawrence T. McChesney. A re-

on

“Fashionsand

The annual May breakfast of the
Bannockburn Garden club was held
yesterday noon at the home of Mrs.
William
L. Keady.
Each member
brought the complete settings and

of Lawrence

F. Hamill and

for

Bannockburn Garden Club
Annual May Breakfast Held
Yesterday at Keady Home

is a brother
of Greenwood

Mentzer’s

of

on

Mentwill

street. The bridegroom, who has completed 20 years of service in the navy,

Three

a miscell- |
Scott last

at the Brandwein
avenue.

Arline

McChesney

solemnized on Saturday,, May 24, at
§ o’clock, in the Deerfield Presbyterian church with the Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek reading the service. Miss
Mentzer is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Christ
Mentzer
of Chestnut

been

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jacobs Jr. of
Central avenue.
Mrs. Fred Brandwein (Edna Johnson)
and her sister, Mrs.
Milton
Merner (Ruth Johnson) of Highland
Park were cohostesses at
aneous
shower
for Miss

of Miss

Clair

24

They Will live in the apartment at
944 Osterman
avenue recently vacated by the. Kriesant family.

and Harlow Wiles of Waukegan.
Miss Scott is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Scott of Todd
court

’

May

wedding
and

ception
Temple.

Shee’

Walter

groom,

of Deerfield
and ushering

Royal

on

be

Scheskie
best man

Marjorie

the

House

Patricia
Nelson
of
Sunset
court,
Deerfield, Miss Mary Schoonover of
Highland
Park and
Miss Dorothy
Woodbury of Lake Forest.
Arthur
serve as

coronation

scene of the royal

of which the bride-to-be is a member.
The bride will be attended by her
sister, Barbara, as maid of honor,
and

“Ny K

offi-

at Shower

Dorothy

honored

afternoon

at

Sugden

a

Davis

shower

by

on

members

of

was

Tuesday

the

Just

Sew club at the home of Mrs. David
Inman Sr. of Deerfield road.
“Dr. Dorothy’s” .marriage to Ken-

neth

Hunter

will

be

a

very

quiet

service in the Deerfield Presbyterian
church on Thursday, May 29, with the

Rev. Bernard
ing.

E. Vanderbeek

A reception

for

the

officiat-

relatives

and

close friends will follow at the bride’s
Heather

Frederick

rhododendron and azaleas will be in
Arrives May 9
full bloom in another week.
They
Mr.
Jordan,
whose
home
is on
A daughter, Heather, arrived Friare starting to pick strawberries.
South Waukegan
road, Deerfield, is
She reports that the Headricks and a civil engineer employed in Moline, day at the Highland Park hospital for
McDevitts are all well.
She won- Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. William Frederick of
ders if our telephone strike is over
865
Deerfield road. The Fredericks
and that they have no phones up in Clayton
Orcutt
(Jean
Nygard)
of
live
in the apartment.in the Aksel
their mountain home in Tennessee.
Milwaukee’ were visitors at the Pedria
From her other daughter, Mrs. C. home of the Harlans.
Petersen
house.
Mr.
Frederick is
Mrs. Orcutt
L. Harlan (Louise Fitger) of Peoria, taught in Deerfield for 23 years, until employed at the Duraclean company,
Ill, she heard that Mr. and Mrs.\her resignation two years ago,
Deerfield.

home

on

Deerfield

road.

Presbyterian Choir
Giving Shower Tonight
Dr. Dorothy Sugden Davis is being honored at a shower this evening at the home of Miss Helen Engstrom of Central avenue being given
by the Deerfield Presbyterian church
choir of which she is a member. The
group is giving her a silver cake”
plate.

�ry
/

es

4

‘

atl

New

‘

.

&gt;

:

cept

sire

BR

|

Hold Open House at

sy

P

.

Fast Action

Top Notch Players Are
Included in Rambler Squad
Some

of

the

most

“kittenball”

prominent

and

players

ap-

to

pear
on_local diamonds
in recent
years have
been included in the
formation

of

Russell’s

Ramblers,

sponsored by Tom and Charlie Russell proprietors of Russell’s Huddle
in -Highwood.
The new team is expected to serve
up

a

season

of

fast

action

land
Park,
North Shore

Highwood
fans. Some

teams

Midwest

in

the

for

High-

and_
other
of the top
are

presently

being contacted with an eye to arranging games
during the coming
season.
More than 15 players have attended
the first few practices, and it has
been emphatically stated by Manager
“Red”
Therrien that he desires a
wide open contest for all positions
and that anyone interested in making
the Rambler roster report for practices, which will be held every night
this week at the Highwood diamond.
Aspirants to the team may also notify
either Tom or Charlie Russell.
Assisting
Therrien
will be Tom
Russell as assistant manager; Bruno
manager,

and

Nello

A program honoring the anniversary of the birth of Florence Nightingale was held by staff members at
Downey
Veterans
Administration
hospital Sunday,
May 11, from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. in observation of Hospital day. Dr. Byron §. Cane, manager,
invited the public to visit the hospital.
Tours

of the

drum

a

Music

was

by

the

Canteens

patients’

were

open

:

eoccedsecccose

Consider Your Health

hour in the Newton Dubbs room
the church, Tuesday evening, May

How’s your health this Spring? A good food to
help keep you and your family in tip-top condition
is liver. Liver is so nutritious you’re wise if you
serve it in some form once a week. A variety of
recipes for preparing it will help immensely. Here
are two. Watch for others.

at
20,

at 8 o'clock. All members are urged
to be present.
Hostesses for the evening will be

J.

Mrs.

Wells

Raymond

and

Sievers,

Miss

Lila

Kelly,

Mrs.

John

chairman,

Ditmer,

Mrs.

A.

Mrs.
Judson

Zenko.

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION
322 N. First St.

Tel. H. P. 37

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A SPECIALTY

2 Rector Recipe 3

Se

ce

cee

ee

is better

ENLARGED

pene torn

(L

7 So.
Highland

ee

St. Johns
Park,

Ill.

ee

oP

ae

oe

ee

we

oe

ee

ow

oe

oe

oe

en

ee

oe

}

10 slices CERTIFIED BACON until crisp. Drain
Pan-fry
on paper toweling and keep warm.
1 Ib. liver, sliced thin (% to % inch),
Meanwhile, dredge
soned flour (1% cup flour, 1 tsp.
in
-4cup
salt, % tsp. pepper).
Pan-fry liver over moderate heat in about 3 tbsp. of hot bacon fat
about 5 to 10 minutes, or until brown and slightly crisp on both sides,
turning only once. Serve on a hot platter and top with the cooked
bacon. Serves 5.

Hospital

CieYol- Masia

ee oe

'

Which Shall I Buy!

Iva

ee

Liver and Bacon

os

Park

H. P. 181

Park

concert

Philathea class of Bethany Evangelical church will hold its regular
monthly business meeting and social

Richard

to the

corps

LINES

AGE

STOR
374 Central Ave., Highland

* Philathea Class Will Meet
At Church Tuesday Evening

Players who form the present squad
include Ernie Giarelli, “Ziggy” Zanotti,
Bobbie
Turelli,
Primo
Palmet,
Pete Castelli, Gene
Ugolini, Charlie
Russell, Don
Ugolini,
Pat Pasquesi,

Highland

AGENT ALLIED VAN

}

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.

by

Contribution

provided

dance orchestra.
all day.

assisted

3-Year

bugle

HOUSEHOLD GOODS

at the athletic field preceding a baseball game were a part of the program.
At the conclusion of the tours,
guests were invited to atténd a tea
sponsored by the American Legion
auxiliary in the recreation buildings.

Silverstrini, coach.

A

and

OF

a

grounds,

and

booking

A GOOD HOSPITAL IS THE
WATCHTOWER OF HEALTH!

and

by Gray Ladies and cadet
of the staff. An organ recital

“Scabby”

Ben
LaBuda,
Jim
McKillip,
Marty
Kiskilla, Jim and Red Kane, and Joe
Cameron.
Some of the players on the present
Rambler squad were seen last year
with Cooney’s Rockets.

buildings

guided
nurses

Bertucci,

Make

| MOVINGR ANDE PACKING
p D

Hospital Day

Kittenball Team

talented

|

Downey Sunday for

r

Take your choice of beef, pork or
calf liver . . . or liver sausage. They’re
all high in food value.
Whenever liver is mentioned the
comparative merits of beef, pork and
calf liver and liver sausage are always
discussed. Calf liver is highest in vitamin A, but one serving of any liver will
furnish more than a day’s allowance of
vitamin A. Pork liver is highest in iron,
one serving furnishing two day’s allowance, liver sausage (% Ib.) furnishes a
day’s allowance and calf and beef liver
furnish one-third and one-half of a
day’s allowance, respectively.
The important thing to remember is
that any liver is exceptionally nutritious, being especially valuable for
iron, vitamin A, and the B vitamins,
riboflavin and niacin, as well as for
high quality proteins.

ge

wee

gR

~

;
a

ee pean
oe

bis

‘

erage

i

de OS

t
I
I
1
I
i
I
I
I
I
I
i
I
I
I
I
‘
I
i
I
I
t
I
I
I
t
1
I
I
I
i
I
I
{
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
i

wate?
ppc

Cater to Family’s Preferences
Some of your family do not enjoy
liver? Then
give them
Certified
Braunschweiger (liver sausage) instead. Serve it cold or pan-fry in bacon

drippings. It’s really delicious . . . and
nutritious . .. either way.

Variety Important
Try Spanish liver some time, too.
It’s welcomed by many who do not
care for fried liver. Brown 4 mediumsized onions in 4 tbsp. bacon ie
pings; remove onions and save for the
sauce. Dredge 1 lb. sliced liver in
seasoned flour, brown on both sides in
, remaining fat and top with followin
ingredients which have been cooke:
together and thickened with 2 tbsp.
flour: 1 green pepper, pr
aor 2 cups
tomatoes, 1 tsp. sugar, andt e browned
onions. Add 14 cup water to the skillet, cover, and simmer 30 min. Serves S.
Nutritionally yours,
\
f\
WILSON
&amp;
WTA,

f/
CO

George Rector

ce

�AIR

Will

FILTERS

1” and 2”—All Sizes
Murphy and Miller, Inc.

Phone
932

At

Ave.,

Ott Flower

school auditorium. A small admission

Film

charge will be asked. The public is
cordially invited to see this unusual

2 o’clock

Tuesday

afternoon,

motion
picture,
which
years to complete.

May 20, the widely known:John Nash
Ott film, “Flowers in Action”, will be

Winnetka 4166

Linden

Show

At Ravinia School Tuesday

shown
Shore

Winnetka

required

A GOOD HOSPITAL IS THE

under auspices of the North
Garden club at the Ravinia

10

WATCHTOWER OF HEALTH!

Housing Problems?
Even the Squirrels
Have Their Troubles
It was moving day for Mrs. Squirrel and her hard-to-manage brood of
tiny

squirreletts.

;

“Look! She can’t get that one down
the tree!” cried the children.
“He's
running back. Look! Now she’s trying to get him out of the nest again!”
Poor Mother Squirrel was, indeed,
having a hard time.
This
about:

is

how

her

difficulties

came

Ever since the fluffy baby squirrels
were born in the hollow tree, the
kindergarten
children
of Sunshine
Valley Day camp on Half Day road
had been watching the little family.
Before long the tiny squirrels began
coming out of the hole in the tree
to scamper around and around the
trunk, providing a source of endless
fascination for the youngsters.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Thompson, who
run the unusual school, were equally
interested in the little family, but one
day recently their Dalmatian, Bonny,
discovered

the

object

concern and grew
to the worrisome
under the tree and
squirrels.
Apparently this

Think what this means to transcontinental
travelers ... the realization that every day is a
California Streamliner day ... that every 24
hours the smooth, flowing power and superlative train comforts of the CITY OF LOS
ANGELES are available!

for

the

last

week

the

New

Schedule—10

Minutes

Earlier Departure
Ly. Chicago

»

.

«

8s

720 pm

Ar. Salt Lake City s i: ; 7:20 pm
8h
Se
Ar. Los Angeles 2
Only 3934 hours en route!

New

Departure Times for Other Trains

LOS ANGELES LIMITED will leave Chicago
12:01 pm instead of 2:00 pm—1 hour and
59 minutes earlier.
CITY OF PORTLAND will leave Chicago 4:55
pm instead of 4:00 pm—55 minutes later.

THE

PACIFIC

will leave Chicago

instead of 8:15 pm—15

8:00 pm

minutes earlier.

SAN FRANCISCO CHALLENGER will leave
Chicago 8:10 pm instead of 10:00 pm—
1 hour and 50 minutes earlier.
TRAIN NO. 13 (to Omaha) will leave Chicago
8:45 am instead of 9:00 am—15 minutes

SATURDAY&lt;

earlier.
For

a
a

a

ooo

—

tickets

Your local

000
—=&lt;_&gt;_=
oe
——

and

information,

C &amp; NW

apply

to

Ticket Agent or

City Ticket Office
148 S. Clark St., elephone DEArborn 2121
H. G. Van Winkle, Ass’t Gen’l Pass’r Agt.
Room 1011, 140 S. Clark St., Chicago 3,

*

CHICAGO and NORTH WESTERN SYSTEM
PIONEER

RAILROAD

OF

CHICAGO

AND

THE

WEST

their

tender

proved

too

much

mother,

for

one

day

decided

to

move

her

she

babies out to the woods where, she
undoubtedly hoped, the home atmos-

phere would be a little more peaceful.
While the kindergarten children
watched, she led, shoved and nudged
each tiny squirrel down the tree to
the

ground,

and

conducted

it

across

the lawn and over a fence to the
woods. Some of the squirrel babies
were

NOTE

little

of

jealous. She took
habit of standing
barking up at the

hard

to

convince;

some

scamp-

ered back to the familiar tree; one
tried to squeeze through a hole in
the fence, his mother having to pull
him through from
the other
side
when he got stuck; one ran fleetly
up a new tree, from where “Mr.
Tommy” lured him down again. All
in all, the mother
squirrel had a
rough time of it before her youngsters were safely established in a new
home in the woods, but it was a field
day for the children.
Nature
study, not in books and
laboratories but in the midst of wild
\life and growing things, is emphasized at Sunshine Valley, where a
large kindergarten class gathers five
days a week, a “Saturday school” is
run for older children, and a summer
camp for boys 6 to 9 and girls 6 to
8 is being planned.
The Thompsons are deeply interested in the potentials of each child.
With practical idealism they visualize
in the youngster who comes to them
for early education the superior citizen of tomorrow. Muscular coordination and timing are taught through
many
games
and
activities.
“Fair
play” is a large item in their gentle
teachings. They try to instill in their
children the gallant impulse to protect and be considerate of those who
are smaller and weaker, but also to
know how to fight on the theory
that if you are prepared to defend
yourself it will not be necessary to
fight. Above all, they provide abundant understanding of the problems
peculiar to the very young, for to
“Mr. Tommy” and his wife their work
is a labor of love.
sei
ef
ihrien
pabedl ih ae

�.

Spring Program of |
Music is Held at

|

Inter Faith Group to

—

D. B. A. PRODUCTS

|Close Year At Annual

Elm Place Tonight

Luncheon Tuesday |

|

TELEPHONE

Elm Place school will be the destination of many music-minded Highland Parkers tonight at 7:45 o’clock,
when the annual spring music pro-

The
annual
luncheon
the Highland Park Inter

gram

Mandel
in charge
of the
buffet
luncheon. Guests will be .the high
school students who have won the
prizes awarded annually to the winners of the Inter Faith contest for
prose or poetry dealing with racial
and religious understanding.
Also a guest at luncheon will be the
speaker of the afternoon,
Charles
Kinney of Winnetka, who will tell
the members of the group of his

will

be

presented

in

the

Jesse

Lowe Smith auditorium.
Vocal
and
instrumental’

numbers

are

on

direction

of

Miss

the

upper

program.

Betty
five

Under

Hahn

grades

pupils

will

of

the

perform

the

vocal portion of the program, while
the Elm Place band, directed by Bert
Greene, will play several selections.
All friends of Elm Placce school
are cordially invited to attend.
A
freewill offering will be taken
benefit of the Music fund.

for

the

will

be

held

Tuesday,

May

success

in

at

the

20,

with

his

meeting
of
Faith group

local
Mrs.

summer

This

camp

was

Sidney

camp,

venture Island,” where
clude boys of all creeds

Cadet Midshipman

YWCA

awarded a

Jews for its successful operation.
Kinney, a dynamic personality,

Mr.
is a

Cadet Midshipman Frank R. Guido,
son of Mrs. Mary Guido of Highwood, will arrive home about June 1
for a 30 day leave from the Merchant

firm believer in democratic institutions and the human race.
The high school prize winners will

Marine

which in the past have been found
challenging and thoughtful.
Officers for 1947-48 will be elected
at the close of the meeting.

N.Y.,

where

marine

at Kings

he

has

engineering

Point,

been

for

L,.L.,

studying

the

past

year.

A graduate of St. George High
school, Evanston, Frank attended St.
Mary’s

college

in

Winona,

Minn.,

and in November, 1944, joined the
Merchant Marine Cadet Corps and
took basic training at San Mateo,
Cal.
He then served in the engine department aboard a Victory ship and
a tanker. At the conclusion of 14
months’

ranean
tached
Kings

duty

in the Pacific,

Mediter-

and Atlantic,
he was
deand sent to the academy at
Point,

from

which

he

expects

to be graduated in December of this
year with a Third Assistant Engineers
license, a cOmmission as ensign US
NR,
and a commission
as _ ensign

read

their

essays

and

poems,

Kline

a resident

of

Los

of Highland

Angeles,
Park

Cal.,

for many

years, passed away following a cerebral hemmorhage at his home in the
California city April 28.
Mr. Kline is survived by his wife,
Augusta, and four children, Harry,
Robert, Edward and Dorothy; two
brothers,

Edward

Jacob

of Highland

of Waukegan,

ters, Mrs.
Perry of

J. H. Stipe and
Highland
Park,

N. A. Wink

Park

and

three
Mrs.
and

ILL.

and

Preserves

Natural

Beauty

Cleans and Sparkles in Same Operation
Produces a Dry, Gleaming Finish
® Lasts for days
Resists dust.
1 Gal. .. $4.50
16-o0z. Bottle .. 75e

WINDO-SHINE
Superior Glass Cleaner
Polishes brilliantly
Used on windows, mirrors,
®

surface
Leaves no hard-to-remove
16-0z. Bottle ac Soe

plate

glass,

or any

glass

film

1 Gal. $1.50

NO-STREAK CAR WASH

efforts

Henry Kline Dies
In Los Angeles
Henry

Reveals

citation

Frank Guido Will
Have Month at Home

DEERFIELD,

RD.

“Ad-

Naand

CO.

3

Presents 3 Smashing Spring Cleaning Hits!
FURNITURE
CLEANER-POLISH

campers inand color.

by the Chicago chapter of the
tional Conference of Christians

academy

744 WAUKEGAN

DEERFIELD

é

Reduces car washing to a minimum
Removes

dirt

only

Unharmful to either Simonize or wax
Only wash and hose to produce a lasting lustre
16-0z. Bottle .. 50¢e
1 Gal. . . $3.00
Can be purchased from your neighboring dealer
or direct from D. B. A,

ALL THREE 16-0Z. BOTTLES SPECIALLY PRICED —

‘$135

and

sisAlex
Mrs.

"Have You Tried Woods New

Danish Coffee Cake ?”

of Glenview.

USMS.

INSURANCE
Have

You

Entered the

“CLEAN
SLOGAN

HILL

UP”
372

CONTEST?

&amp;

STONE

Central

NOW’S THE TIME

H

P. 64

(G)
Mf

~

Spring

The whole family will love this delectable new
Danish Coffee Cake! Wonderful for breakfast,
for afternoon tea or midnight snacks. It's rich,
crisp and extravagantly filled with pecans,
almonds, butterscotch or fruit. Try one todayl

TUNE-UP

By Ford Specialists
We

Have

Now Restored Our
and Delivery Service

A Real Taste Treat” |

FOR

&amp;

ENGINE

"YES! We All Think It's

Pick-Up

OTHER WOODS
French

SPECIALS
Coconut

Pastries

Macaroons

Chocolate Macaroon Cake

Chocolate Eclairs

WOODS

BAKERIES
Evanston

Purnell &amp; Wilson Inc.
101 N. ST. JOHNS AVE.
PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 710

GEO. B. WINTER. INC.
387 Roger Williams Ave.

‘H. P. 3080

�rec
OH

?

ss
aby oe
a2.”

KILCOYNE,
Pictures

Photographer

Taken

in

Your Home

TEL. H. P. 4470
Deerfield

You

UP”

CONTEST?

THE
NEWS
IS
TINY

To Select Best —

The new Glencoe National bank
will open its doors Saturday, May 17,
according to plans made early last
week at the organization meeting of
the shareholders.
Herbert C. Paschen, Glencoe attorney and chairman

aA

BIG

Local Mas on tity.

New Glenepe Bank
To Open Saturday

Entered the

“CLEAN
SLOGAN

678

:

:

Have

of

the

organization

placed

in

charge

of

committee,

was

proceedings.

Principal business was the election
of a board of directors for the bank.
Elected in this capacity were Irving
G. Felsenthal, partner in G. Felsenthal and Sons. manufacturers of plas-

TUCKS

tics;

Paul

Glencoe
banker;
ney;

Misner,

schools;
Herbert

superintendent

M.D.;

Ten

of

Henry
Arthur
dealer.

Mr. Paschen then was elected president of the board at the body’s organization session held following the general meeting.
Applications and other
forms required in the formation of a
national bank were dispatched to the
Comptroller’ of Currency, Washington,

so

may

be

that

the

charter

the

bank

issued.

Flower Show in Oak
Highland
years

of

Parkers

have

visited

Park
who

the

in

former

flower

show

annually held under auspices of the
Oak Park and River Forest Garden
club,

will

year’s

be

interested

display

to

know

is planned

and
4 at
Mills
Pleasant avenues,

for

this

June

house,
Home
Oak Park.

3

and

$10,000 HOME
GIVEN AWAY

medal

awards

and

26

merit

citations will be presented at the
annual awards dinner of the Art Directors’ Club of Chicago at the Palmer House, Chicago, Tuesday evening. Guests will be the artists, art
directors,
studios
and _ advertising
agencies

H. Straus, vice president and director
of Inland Steel company; and
Wienecke,
Glencoe hardware

Frederick W. Boulton of 2149 Pine
Point drive served on the jury of
awards which selected the outstanding advertisements of 1946 recently.
More than 2500 pieces of advertising were entered in the annual competition, the jury recommending 221
of these for consideration in the final
judging.

Francis L. O’Melia,
C. Paschen, attor-

Dr. L. A. Richburg,

Advertising of 1946

which

helped

create

and

pro-

duce the outstanding advertising of
last year.
Norman
Rockwell
and
Meade
Schaeffer, famed American illustrators of magazines and books, and
Kenneth Stuart, art director of the
Saturday Evening Post, will be the
principal speakers.
The original selections of the jury
will] hang in the annual Art Directors’ exhibit at the Art Institute from
May 20 to June 2.

Garden Group to
Hold Flower Show
The
American
Gardeners
association will hold its annual flower show

in the Douglas Smith Memorial gymnasium, Winnetka Community house,
on Saturday and Sunday, June 28
and 29 this season. It is planned to
have

a

show

in place

former
of

spring

flower

and

of the

vegetable

fall show

as in

years.

John

Trini

of Glencoe

the

show.

Other

is chairman

members

of

the

committee
are J. Betette, T. Cassorie, H. Carstensen, P. Cinnarusto,
W. Fullhart, G. Helvarson, H. Hum-

ee
|

hab

ad

casuals

phreys,

H.

Jensen,

Larson,
Zsido.

C.

Tobbe,

W.

P.

Kuhlberg,

Zezola
'

and

Life and goodness are immortal. Let
us then shape our views of existence
into loveliness, freshness, and continuity, rather than into age and blight.
—Mary Baker Eddy

Sponsored by the

Chicago
Home

Metropolitan
Builders

See the very

Assn.

latest in fur-

nishings, appliances, building materials — everything
for YOUR home.

*

ss
AT YOUR SERVICE...
At Capital Airlines ticket office

VALUABLE DAILY
ATTENDANCE PRIZES

in North Shore Hotel, inquiries

are courteously answered and
reservations secured for air

Our newest style scoop in casuals... to take you on

travel,

ADMISSION 51

your merry rounds. The diamond-set tucking on bosom
repeated on the slant-wise pockets. This one-piecer
by Craig rates extra raves for its crisp shirting fabric
in spring-timed shades. Rose, aqua, maize, grey.
Sizes 7 to 15. $10.95

tax

Advance sale tickets
¢ ine.
on sole of Fair Store: 85
tox

COLISEUM
MAY

Waukegan

]

1 P.M.

TO

17-25
11

ANYWHERE

inc

15th &amp; WABASH

127 N. Genesee

A.

V.
‘

P. M. DAILY

CALL pearBoRN 5711 OR
YOUR TRAVEL AGENT... downtown ticket offices in 112 W. Adams
St. (Field Bldg.) and Hotel Stevens

| Capital
AIRLINES
Known for Years as “PCA”... One
of America’s Pioneer Airlines’

—

�Scouting Calendar of Events

cil

First

Aid

meet

at

Glencoe

last

week,
James Bartoli, George Chapman, Alfred Killian, Bob Smith, Dan
Roberts and Ted Pincus are regis-

May
17—SENIOR
SCOUT
AIR
SHOW
AT
GLENVIEW
NAVAL
AIR STATION.

tered

May 19—Camporal committee meets

from

Highland

play host to the Senior Scouts of
Region Seven who have been invited
to attend an air show at the Glenview
Naval Air station on May 17. Squadron 51 of Deerfield will put on a gasmodel demonstration and members of
the Order of the Arrow will act as a
service crew at the swimming pool.

and

Cub

show - at

leadership of
capable staff

May 24 and 25—COUNCIL CAMPORAL AT CAMP DAN BEARD.
May 27 and 28—Representatives at
national
council
meeting
in
New
York.
May 29—District Board of Review
at Mundelein.
May 30—Scout participate in Memorial day parades.
June 2—Wauconda Lions’ club entertains Scouts of Troop 40.
June 3—Troop 324 Parents’ night.
June 6, 7 and 8—Cub Leaders’ WelE-Ka-How
at College camp, Lake
Geneva.
June

10—District

court

of

honor

at

on page 26)

Park.

cky” Sailor

"Happy-Go-LuUTEX

at Scout office.
Camping committee | Scout Leaders Training Courses
meets at Scout office.
The Scout Leaders’ training course
May 20—Organization and Exten- which is now at the half-way mark
sion committee meets at Scout office. continues each Thursday evening at
May 21—Kenilworth
and
North the
Winnetka
Community
house.
Shore
honor
BOB
TOWNLEY
at About thirty Scout leaders from North
Kenilworth.
Shore communities have been enjoyfine training under the
May 22—Troop 38 court of honor at ing some
Braeside.
Scout
Northbrook.

— New Address —
62
E. VAN BUREN ST.
HARRISON 3747-3748

\

(Continued

Harry Thorsen
of Key men.

and

in

TISH-

—

&gt; the quality felt

his

v

|

Sunday, April 27, saw the conclusion of a Scout leaders and a Cub
leaders training course at Sherwood
park, Lake Villa. About twenty troop
| leaders and fifteen pack leaders found
|these training meetings most profit| able and enjoyable.
Bud-Spinney and
| his staff did a fine job with the Scout|masters and Fred Pelz did equally
| well with. the Cubmasters and
den
| mothers.

| Senior

Scout

| Glenview
j
|

|
|

The

Day

May

North

Libertyville.
JUNE 24-CAMP
MA-KA-JA- |
WAN OPENS FOR THREE TWOWEEK PERIODS.
July 6-19—Senior Scout encamp- | and

at

17

Shore

Area

council

will

|

Carpetings, Rugs

ment

at

Glenview

and

Great

August 14-25—Senior
derness Canoe trip.

Scout

Wil-

Twenty-seven of our Scout leaders |
enjoyed the week-end trip. to Camp |
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan.
They put in some |

real licks on camp improvements

tery

.. Safely Cleaned

Scouters Take Trip
To Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

|
|

and

enjoyed some real fellowship espec: |
ially at that Saturday evening campfire session.
The weather was just |
about perfect and everybody pitched |

in with a will to get those important |
projects

Uphols

Lakes.

completed.

&amp;

ts recommended
nationally by
America’s leading furmture &amp;
dept. stores.

The Hundredth Camper Enrolls |
for Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
John

Dold

of

Troop

2

Wilmette |

has the distinction of being the one- |
hundreth camper to register for Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
this summer.
He)!
turned in his application at the Coun-

Service

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE
We
To

Do

Have All New
Equipment
Your Work Right

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
:
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood
We

Build Lawns and
Driveways
TRY US OUT

You

In the

can

see

furnishings
having

restores

the

care

* No

them

*

resilience

* Pile

unmats

revive

* Also

sired.

*Charge

given

your

inconvenience

gone

wool

rises

,

All Phones 3785

the crisp grosgrain banding that slips under the
brim and flirts in a gay
little bow. Choose it in any of the new
butterfly colors. Large or small headsizes.

fibers

mothproofed,

if de-

$B95

reasonable.

..

It’s

A Leighton!

.

Phone Deerfield 444

Chicago

.. . AMBassador

3222

raclean Co.
GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI ‘Du
Division of HOME SERVI
137.N. Second
LA

the Tish-U-Tex mark of
distinction.
You'll
like

* Colors

“Coast to Coast Service”

Phone, today

jaunty air. You'll love the

touch-soft quality felt .. .

in

Duracleahing

to

and

The sailor takes to spring
and to your favorite suit
or topper with such a

Home

CE CO.

839

Waukegan

Rd., Deerfield

127 NO. GENESEE
f,
4

j

%

ea

da

WAUKEGAN,

As
A

SRE

¥

Eka,
Thea

r

eeft

&lt;

use
AE

Ses

ILL.

4

�Yes,

maam, you can‘

HAVE

YOUR

=BACK

IN

i

LAUNDRY
4

At
the
opening
of
the
second
‘natiorat
Plastics
exposition
in
the Coliseum, Chicago,
May 6, four year old
Calleen
Mary
Kelly,
daughter of the Lester
J. Kellys of 1317 Broadview avenue, was chosen “Miss
Plastics Jr.’
by employees of the Du
Page Plastics corporation
of
Chicago.
On
her throne of plastics,

DAYS!

&gt;»
S

she

THINK of the satisfaction it will give
you to know when, and exactly when, your
laundry will be at your door again, crisp and

is shown

encircled

by
a
huge _ plastic
doughnut used for water

sports,

clean as quality workmanship can make it!
FLAT IRON guaranteed four-day delivery
means you can make your plans for the
week,

and

carry

them

out

just

as

you

planned. Pick-up on Monday—delivery on
Thursday.
Pick-up on Tuesday—delivery
on Friday. And so on. No more wishing you
could enjoy better service . . . FLAT IRON
sees that you really get it! So, if you’ve
been spelling “trouble” with the letters
l-a-u-n-d-r-y, why not take this tip to its
permanent solution? Play safe, from now
on, instead of “taking chances” on_ this
question of time-saving delivery!

Make your call collect

To Offer Course in
Russian at Evanston

marily for the February enrollees of
the college, but June graduates and

others interested could register ,up
until today.
Among the courses to be offered

Community College
An introductory eight-week course
in beginning Russian will be offered
in cooperation with the adult evening
school during the summer school session at Evanston Community college

are the year course in accounting, six
semester
hours
and
the
following

from

hours;
hours;

modern drama, three
beginning
Russian,

mester

hours;

June

announced
lege

16 to August

8 it has

by William

B. Wood,

col-

session is planned

pri-

first

effective

been

director.

The

summer

semester

Typewriting,

semester
drawing,

BUC. 0286

hours;

GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50
SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Newly
Private

Decorated
Ballroom
Rooms for Weddings,

analytic geometry,

five

two

semester hours;

trigo-

quets

and

Swimming

Pool

Business
Available
NOW OPEN

Kenmore

Phone:

FLAT TRON LAUNDRY
3629 North Halsted St.

the

at Granville

BRIargate

civilization,

Public

.

8000

.

Highland

Park

Hospital

$525,000

Building

ANNUAL

ANTIQUES
and

Sale

MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY
May 19-20-21 -22
10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
75c

WOMAN'S CLUB OF EVANSTON
Folks!

three

Evanston.

tothe

Admission

CHICAGO

in

Meetings.
to

of

Make A 3-Year Contribution

and
Ban-

Exhibit

to Fine

semester
four se-

hours; general engineering
four semester hours; solid

history

school
5

EVANSTON

Why not give us a ring—NOW?

Service

hours;

Semester

semester hours; and general psychology, three semester hours.
Further information may be obtained at the college office in Room
311.
of Evanston
Township
High

THIRTEENTH

of Fine

three

Second semester courses to be offered include chemistry, five semester

In making this frank bid for your patronage, we want also to acquaint you with
the fine handling of your garments, and |
careful responsibility we put into FLAT
TRON service. Four-day delivery of your
work, with us, means
more
than just
prompt attention to your needs. It means
quality all the way through as well!

Years

_

semester

nometry,
three semester hours, and
general psychology,
three
semester
hours.

and we ll do the rest!

Forty

two

speaking,

geometry,

to

courses:

Chicago Avenue and Church
Evanston
Sponsored

by

the

Street

Fund

'

�Page

15, 4947°

Chief Hennig Urges

Neild’s to Open
With

Here Tomorrow

Industrial fire losses

Softball Season Gets Under Way
Top

Men

on

The

1947

season

of

attractions under the
the renovated Sunset

Local Team
major

softball

floodlights
at
park diamond,

will officially get under way tomorrow, May 16, at 8:45 p.m. when the
crack Neild’s Sport Shop aggregation
of Highland Park meets the powerfuk White Stucco Inn softball club of
Des

Plaines.

Boasting a stellar cast of players
such as “Eddie” Rogan, “Lefty” Zimmer, Al Sordyl,
“Bocker”
Peterson,
“Bubbles”
Rogan,
Danny
Coleman,
Jimmy Hickey and many others, the

Neild’s club this year will bring to
Highland
Park some of the finest
softball

clubs

ever

to play

on

a local

field.
Scheduled to hurl for the Neild’s
team in the home inaugural will be
the

veteran

Mel

Drinkwine,

one

of

Waukegan’s
best
softball pitchers.
Nick Nicolazzi, who last year pitched
the Neild’s team to the city championship by beating Bob Miner and his
Seguin

mates

twice,

will

also

be

on

hand to share the pitching duties with
Drinkwine.
Probable Lineup:
NEILD’S
Zimmer,
Rosie,

DES
PLAINES
Hathaway,
lf

2b

8b

Gobert,

E. Rogan,
Sordyl, ss
Peterson

biner,

rf

c
or

Gum-

Hickey,
cf
B. Rogan,
1b
Coleman,
If
Drinkwine
or

lazzi,

A

1b

Edgren, lf
O’Shaughnessy,
Drews,

ss

Winkleman,

rf

Banske, 2b
Johns, ¢
Hildebrandt,

p

3b

to

record

cisive

fire

highs

will skyrocket

this

year

unless

protection

steps

are

take

immediate

steps

how

taken, lof.a

to

to.

operate

de- | extinguishers

Fire Chief Hennig predicted today
and proposed that local factories and
plants

order.

He also urged renewed emphasis on
pore
training in fire prevention
'and protection. “If employees know

industrial Fire
Prevention Measures

Des Plaines

With

proper

re-

lare

the

and

company’s

hoses,

the

fire gaining damaging
greatly reduced.”

The
| would

| cilitate

chief

said

cooperate

the

fire

chances

headway

nD
——_—_——$$—$&lt;—$————————_——_——

Thursday, May

NEW

FLOORS
AND

in

every

way

can be prevented by using care and
common sense.”
He urged factory executives to inspect their premises for fire hazards
at once.
“One of the big risks in
large plants is alleys and yards so
crowded with stored materials that
the fire department trucks have difficulty in responding
to an alarm.

Roadways and alleys inside the plant
should always be kept clear.”
Chief Hennig also said that fire

STEWART
PARKWAY
HEIGHTS,

Arlington

Heights

CENTRAL
Ask

to fa-

of fire hazards

I have
of the
Shore.

duce fire hazards.
|in local plants and assist in the train“Nearly 100,000 industrial buildings ing of personnel.
had damaging blazes last year,’”’ Chief
Hennig said.
“The record this year
will be much worse unless we exercise extreme care. Many of these fires

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

101 8S.
PROSPECT
Phone

OLD

SANDED

SHELBY

the fire department

reduction

AND

sanded
finest

for

Mrs.

ILL.
7120-M

5218
Stewart

and
finished
homes
along

over
1006
the North

EXCAVATING
AND TRENCH WORK
FILLING DIRT
BLACK DIRT
DRIVEWAYS

LOUIS

protection equipment, such as automatic
alarms,
approved
fire extin-

“A

guishers and standpipe hose should
be checked to make sure they are in

BUILT

TAZIOLI

Veteran

of

Foreign

Wars”

DINNER

CHICKEN

READY IN 15 MINUTES!

Nico-

p

BETTER HOSPITAL
MEANS BETTER HEALTH!

amet e

Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the

Highland
$525,000

Park Hospital
Building Fund

Christened After Service Sunday
Nancy Dale,
infant
daughter
of’
Mr. and Mrs. Arnie Anderson, Highwood, was christened following the
service last Sunday in the Zion Lutheran

Rev.

church

Herbert

of

W.

Highwood

Linden,

with

the

pastor,

of-

ficiating.
Sponsors
were
Mr.
and
Mrs. Harold Larson of St. Charles.
Mrs. Larson is a sister of Mrs. Anderson.

WHOLE! .. PRE-COOKED! . . JUST HEAT
Now you can get country-flavor chicken whole

TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED
BY EXPERT REPAIRMEN
All Work Guaranteed
NOW AVAILABLE
Office Typewriters
Adding Machines

in the can, and pre-cooked, ready to gat! Just
heat and serve—no fuss or bother. 15 minutes
and your Pinafore Chicken is hot on the table,
delicious as a chicken you’d spend hours in
preparing! Wonderfully quick, convenient—

and economical, too (no waste). Pinafore’s the
modern way to serve chicken—always ready
on your shelf, for a fest ive dinner anytime,
in 15 minutes! At your grocer’s now.

4 drawer steel letter files

Order Today

CHANDLER'S
525

Central

Ave.

Tel.

H.P.

3100

PINAFORE

NNED
WHOLE

25

Amazing whole chicken,
pre-cooked—just heat and serve.
Packed in delicious broth,
Approx. 34 Ibs. live weight—serves 4

CHICKEN

�LP

Gold Star Women:
Of Both Wars Are
Invited to Tea

The last quarter tastes
Poh

ree

_

as fresh as the first!

All Gold Star mothers, wives, sisters and daughters of World War I
and II are invited to attend a tea
and musicale
to be given by the
American Legion auxiliary at Hixon
| hall, Lake Forest academy, Sunday,
May 25, from 3 to 5 p.m.
Mrs. Chris Matthiesen, 1720 Broadview avenue, Gold Star chairman of
the. Highland Park unit of the auxiliary, urges all Gold Star mothers in
Highland Park to contact her at H.P.
3403. Transportation will be arranged.

:

Scout

News

(Continued

from

page 23)

Air Meet at Winnetka
IsA Success
In spite of the windy weather which
grounded
a number
of planes
and
caused
a number
of crack-ups,
the
first air meet ever held by the Senior

NEW
ALUMINUM
WRAPPER
keeps delicate

Meadow

Gold

flavor twice as long!

Never before has the goodness of any butter
been so carefully guarded . . . at the creamery
... in your store... and in your own refriger- —
ator. For Meadow Gold is the only butter
wrapped in this new and scientifically better
way. Each quarter pound is put into an individual wrapper of crisp,clean, shining aluminum ___
foil while it is still churn-fresh. The foil seals

aluminum wrapper, you'll make a double discovery.
With the first quarter pound, you'll discover
butter at its best... Meadow Gold Butter—
rich . . . wholesome... fresh as a spring
morning. And with the last quarter pound,
you'll find the flavor as deliciously fresh as it
was in the first!
Get a pound of eae Gold today. 1a

butter flavor in—‘‘visiting”’ flavors out. So all

your

the delicate creamery quality of famous Meadow

every meal.

Gold is preserved for you to enjoy.
When

you try Meadow

Gold, in the new

family

enjoy its golden
Don’t throw away

goodness

with

the wrapper till

you've finished the quarter pound. Re-wrap the un= ased portion, keep it flavor-fresh.

Scouts
of the North
Shore Area
council was a success. About a thousand people witnessed the show..
\

The Camporal

history.

Every troop should plan to have
every one of its patrols take part in
this Camporal.
This is a real opportunity to give your Scouts a fine
outdoor campaign experience and lots
of fun.
Information
bulletins
have
been
mailed out and additional copies will
be furnished to patrol leaders at the
Scoutmaster’s request. Order as many
copies as you will need. Entry blanks
will be mailed out within the next ten
days and entries should be made by
May 15th so that the committee can
arrange for judges, equipment and
supplies.

Senior Scout Trips
to Mississippi
| Groups
of
Senior
Scouts
from
| Deerfield and Wilmette spent a good
| part of their Spring vacations camp|ing on the shores of the Mississippi
|river.

Meadow Gold Butter

Is Coming

The annual Camporal of the North
Shore Area council is on its way.
“Ed” Jacobs and his committees have
been doing a fine job of advance
planning and all indications point to
the best Camporal of our council’s

Many

fine

reports

have

come.

‘in of the enjoyable time had by
This has become an annual trip
| Squadron 51 of Deerfield.

Council

all.
for

to Be Represented

_At National Meeting
SOLD
WILMETTE

THESE

STORES:

WINNETKA

Holbrook Royal Blue Store

y
ao

AT

R. W.

Rapp Co.

North

Town

Fruit Market

_ Van Deusen Grocery and Market
George B. Winters

Pauloplos Foods
Redke’s Grocery and Market
Hill’s Market
Voltz Grocery and Market
R. W. Rapp Co.
:

GLENVIEW

HIGHLAND

Country Side Store
Charles Levernier
Rugen’s Store

Rapp Brothers
Sunset Grocery and Market
Blue Goose Food Mart
Suburban Grocery and Market

Midwest Store

PARK

HUBBARD WOODS
Woodland Grocery and Market
Community Grocery and Market
Sam Feldman
KENILWORTH
Kenilworth Grocery and Market
R. J. Croak
NORTHBROOK
Melzer Grocery and Market
Lystlund’s Highway Delicatessen
GLENCOE
Glencoe Grocery

The North Shore Area council will
be represented at the annual meeting of the National Council of the
Boy Scouts of America on May 27
and 28 at the Waldorf Astoria in New
| York City.
Harold J. Peacock and
Roland D. Feltman have already indicated that they will be in attendance.

It is probable
sentative

will

Market

third

repre-

Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the

Highland

and

that our

also be present.

Park

Hospital

$525,000 Building Fund

�ee

Resume Victory Gardens

\ Hightaad Pork?”
PUBLIC

LIBRARY

mond

apply

1301

Broadview

ave-

theory and principles on which are
based an understanding of each view,
of the relations between views, and of
the geometrical relations between the
elements of structures are explained.

A practical and comprehensive presentation of the theory and application of radiant heating presented by
one of the outstanding pioneers in this
field. Contains sections on snow melting and radiant cooling. Of real value
actually

Klingler,

nue, H.P. 4006.

placed on the shelves:
HEATING—T. Napier

Adlam

to all who

To Grednixe 12-lach League

|

It has been announced that Victory
gardeners in the South Clavey road
section are still to carry on as during
the war and a few plots are available
for any one interested. Contact Ray-

NEW BOOKS
Soon to be
RADIANT

eo

.

it to design-

For Monday

IMMACULATE
|
CONCEPTION CHURCH

Evening Games

Playground and Recreation board.
announces that a 12-inch league will
be formed to play twilight and night
ball on Mondays. All team representatives of 12-inch softball teams interested in entering this league should
report to Community center on Monday, May 19, at 8 p.m. Teams already
signifying
interest
in joining
this
league are Gordy Segart Pure Oils,
Moose, Neild Juniors, and the VFW’s.

s

Deerfield
Rt.
Rev.
Rev.

g

Rev.

and

Green

Highland Park
Msgr. Joseph
Pastor

Edmund
John P.

J. Skoner,
O’Connell,

Bay

Rosas

2uz
P. Morrisoa,
M.A.,
M.A.,

8.T.v.
S.T.D.

|

MASSES:

;

Sundays—-6
:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:06 |
and 12 noon.
Weekdays—6 :30 - 8:15.

Saturdays,
Holy

CONFESSIONS
eves. of First Fridays

Days

4:00

and

7:80

;
ané

p.m

|

ing and installation problems.
A STUDY
OF HISTORY—Arnold
J. Toynbee; Abridgement by D. C.
Somervell

A

one-volume abridgement by D.

C. Somervell of Volumes I-VI of Arnold Toynbee’s
A STUDY OF HISTORY, a book of undisputed prestige
throughout the world. Not intended
as a substitute for the original it does
offer a condensation preserving the
method,

atmosphere;

texture,

and

of-

ten the words of the original work
for those readers who do not have
time to read the entire six volumes.
WALDEN—Henry David Thoreau
A beautiful edition of the Thoreau
classic published by the Peter Pauper

Press

containing

two-tone

illustra-

tions by Aldren Watson.
HOW GREEN WAS MY FATHER
‘
—David Dodge
From the time the Dodges—husband, wife, and five-year-old daughter Kendall—pile all their portable
possessions into their car and set off
for Guatemala until the last tire blows
out on Sexta Avenida in Guatemala
City this “sort of travel diary” is filled
with fun for the reader.
New scientific books soon to be
placed

on

the

shelves:

A BIOLOGY
OF
FAMILIAR
THINGS—Bush, Dickie, and Runkle,
Intended primarily for the general
group of high school students the material is presented to have the greatest interest for that group. Sugges‘tions for research and reference lists
, placed throughout the text supply extra material for the superior student.
PRACTICAL BIOLOGY—E. F. Sanders
;
Also designed for the student, presented in a style that is easy and
interesting to read. Presents an intensive study of structure and organism types so that the student learns
all that is necessary for his understanding of functional aspects and
Text includes relevant
adaptations.
material so that there is no need for
the student to consult a multitude of
reference for basic facts and _ illustrations.
ANIMAL BIOLOGY—R. H. Wolcott
(Third Edition)
a _ college
as
Intended primarily
textbook for beginning classes in biEmphasis
ology.
upon the broader

ence
the

and
data

the

has _ been
aspects of

general

placed
the sci-

significance

of

presented.

ENGINEERING
OF
GEOMETRY
J. Hood
DRAWING—George
(Third Edition)
Presents the two methods of descriptive geometry—the direct method
Each
method.
projection
and the
method requires entirely different attitudes of mind toward the object and
also toward the drawings that represent the object, and each method re-

quires its own vocabulary.

The basic

eon

One should sing the praises of fine furniture . . . for almost
magically it fosters a friendly home atmosphere.
If you have been appraising your home furnishings
with a critical eye . . . and most women

do

from time to time’. . . visit Porters at Racine.

Thrill. to the Trend-furnishing style of “‘mixable matchable
magic’ as vividly revealed in the Guild Galleries . . . enjoy
the scores of inspiring partial settings of Traditional and Modern
helpfully displayed throughout the store. Here you will find
only the most respected names in the home furnishing field.
,

Reason enough

for discriminating homemakers to return
to Porters often after their first visit.

�THIS ALL-GAS HOME
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
|

‘

1949 So. Sheridan Rd, Highland Park
See the SUBURBAN

HOME,

a home

of

prize winning design and with dozens
of post-war features. We are proud
to call to your attention that the new
NATURAL GAS was chosen for “CP”
cooking, Servel refrigeration, Automatic
“Speedy” water heating, and househeating.

The future owner will truly BETTER
HIS LIVING WITH NATURAL GAS.
Architectural Homes,

Inc.

Invites You

1 to 5:30 daily
10 to 6 Saturday
‘ and Sunday
admission 25c

orth Shore 3as

Company

“The Friendly People’’
T. P.

“Tom”

Clark,

Division

Manager

:

�Thursday,

May

15,

Page

1947

In “Let Freedom Sing”

State T. B. President
Speaks At County
Meeting in Waukegan
Dr.

Arthur

S.

Webb,

president of the
association,
was

Illinois
guest

Glen

Methodist

church

sin,

Tuberculosis
speaker
as

in

some

by

Annual

Miss

reports

Orpha

L.

County
at the

Waukegan,

were

Woods—for

alfitude

1750

trips,

Girls

7

to

43S

ft.

:é@@
¥

nature

lore, health and character
building,
fine %
staff, Posture correction.
Write
J.
A
Mors, 228 N. La Salle
Sr. Cnipoee
«by Tu.

Mofday evening, May 12. He was
introduced by John D. Luce, Zion,
toastmaster for the occasion.
W. P. Shahan, Springfield, executive secretary of the state organization,
also
addressed
the © banquet
guests.

North

above sea level offers
a
real
camp
life.
Canoéing,
Horseback
riding,
Adventure-

Ellyn,

a dinner meeting of the Lake
Tuberculosis association held
First

Camp

Nestled in the pines
of Northern Wiscon-

29

for those who want

given

White

and

B.

Rause, executive secretary and treasurer respectively, of the Lake County association.

Final figures
seal
Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

APPEARING AS SLAVES IN A SCENE from ‘‘Let Freedom Sing,’ a music
drama presented by the Lincoln school music department last Friday evening,
were these boys of the eighth grade: left to right, Donald Carr, Ray Cimbalo,
George Freeman, Dick Wales, John Washburne, Tom Palmer, Jim Donaldson
and David Schwartz.
The production was given in cooperation with the Lincoln School PTA and
directed by Miss Anne C. Phelps, director of music.

Confirmants to Be Examined
At Redeemer Church Sunday
Confirmants
Redeemer

day during

will

be

Lutheran

examined

church

at

on

Sun-

the regular morning

wor-

ship. This examination of children is
traditional with Lutheran churches af-

ter the custom of the early
church.
The confirmants

have

Christian

been

attend-

ing religious instruction for two years
twice

weekly,

from

September

to

May. Young people to be accepted
are: James
Bartoli,
June
Eichler,
Bettina
Lubke,
Elaine
Matthieson,
Martin Netzer, Norma Steward and
Nancy

BETTER HOSPITAL
MEANS BETTER HEALTH!
Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the
Highland Park Hospital

$525,000

Building

1946 Christmas

atinounced

Annual

reports

tics on the

active

ciation,

such

and

included _

work

as the

of

the

one

them

shows

may

do

but

statis-

the

tuberculin

program, X-Ray surveys,
ics and health education.

good-nature;

A

in the

were

district. cup formally presented
to
the local organization during the program. The Lake county association
has again been official winner of the
cup in merit for the most successful
seal sale in this area of the state.

Any

Wintz.

sale

a
a

assotesting

chest

casual

clin-

act

of

continuation

it @ part

of the

of

tempera-

ment.
—Sterne.

Fund

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spring tune-up for

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women

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674

134 N. GENESEE ST.

WAUKEGAN

17

�en

Presbyterian

A pot luck supper and a full program of entertainment will be fea- tured at a meeting of the Sunset Terrace association planned at the community center Friday evening, May
16, at 7 o’clock. Bread and butter and
either a hot dish or a‘salad are to be
brought by each
member.
All
are
urged to participate.

Women

WITH

To Hear Mission
Speaker Monday
Miss Rachel Benfer, East Central
secretary of the Board of National
Missions

of

willbe

the

the

Presbyterian

speaker

at

church,

the

regular

monthly meeting of the Woman’s Association of the Highland Park Presbyterian

church

Miss

on

Benfer,

Monday,

who

possesses

ceptionally

charming

a

will

speaker,

the

church

of
on

19.

an ex-

personality

tell

carried

May

the

work

among

the

as
of
La-

tin Americans.
The ladies will make hospital dressings and sew at 10 a.m. followed by
chancel service in
charge
of
Mrs.
Henry
Little at noon.
A luncheon,

served

by the membets

Froelich’s

group

will

of Mrs.
be

R. §S.

served

at

12:30, the program following at 2 o’clock.
It was announced that Mrs. P. Ma“Don’t, worry—it isn’t a suicide
plot—she just prefers the smell of
Zagalia’s gasoline to my pipe.”

Zagalia’s Service Station
401 Waukegan

thews’ group will be in charge of the
food sale. The Bible class, conducted by Mrs. Arthur Tylee, will continue throughout

day

mornings

Highland

Ave., Highwood

Park

the month

on Thurs-

at 10:30 o’clock
Public

at the

library.

|

MONDAY
Club, Moraine

Rotary
p.m.

Club,

Kiwanis
6:30 p.m.

Sunset

‘
hotel,

12:15

Lions

Club,

Legion
8 p.m.

hall,

Moraine

hotel,

The
ing

21

Post

North

No.

Sheridan

of

the

Chicago

school

PTA

will give

kindergarten,
and
mothers
and
present
kindergartners

The

tea

grades,
will

registration
school

ter

Legion

Lincoln

| a tea on Friday, May 23) from 2 until
E p.m. for mothers of children enter-

first and

serve

of

two

children’

kindergarten

second.

purposes,

for

Lincoln

fall

and

next

an

opportunity for mothers of children
12:15) in the primary grades to become bet145,
road,

Rockford Club to
Hold Annual Dinner
In Evanston May 21
Members

x

club, | teachers of
and primary

Valley

TUESDAY
Elks Lodge No. 1362, Elks home,
McGovern and Laurel, 8:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
p.m.
American

‘Lincoln School PTA.
eet

To Give Tea for
Kindergartners

the
LODGES

Rockford

College club in this area will attend
the organization’s annual dinner and
election of officers
at the
North
Shore hotel, Evanston, Wednesday,
May 21, at 6 p.m: The 100th anniversary of the chartering of the college
will be celebrated.
Mrs. John Brauer, president, will
preside.
Guests of honor
will in©

; Sunset Terrace Group Will
Have Pot Luck Supper Friday

a

acquainted.

Miss

Jeanette

Mac-

Murchy will entertain the guests with
tea-time. music.
To be eligible for kindergarten, a
child

must

January;

be five years

of age before

a birth’ certificate must

be

shown to principal or teacher at the
time of registration (acceptable certificates are those issued by city, state
|or county hospitals); a child must live

in the Lincoln school area which includes Deerfield avenue arid Ridgewood drive and north of Ravine drive
on the
south.

north,

Beech

street

on

the

Arrangements for the tea are in
charge of Mrs. Frank Wales, chairman

of

the

hospitality

committee,

as-

sisted by Mesdames Walter Crowdus,
Michael Tighe, Malcolm and Nestor
Daggitt.

\\ AW

The Braeside organization will have
a similar tea on the same day at the
Braeside school for the purpose
of

YOUR
LINCOLN
IS OUR
RESPONSIBILITY

registration.
clude

and

President

Dr.

Elizabeth

and

Dr.

May

“Lillian

the dinner,
by

the

Rockford

through

ATs

May

eo

a aha
Yous
quality

investment
motoring

aS

in Lincoln-

satisfactibn

most

certainly

deserves

the protection

MORTGAGE
HOUSE

of Lincoln-quality service.

Let us give your Lincoln the kind of interested, skilled care that
this

fine

motor

car

merits.

Our

mechanics

are

trained

in

Lincoln

service methods. They use genuine Lincoln replacement parts. They

have a thorough knowledge of your car.
Bring your Lincoln to us regularly for Lincoln-quality service,
You'll find Lincoln service efficient
and prompt for every service need.

Ahthing walt foar

HIGHLAND

PARK

LINCOLN-MERCURY

108 N. First St.

135 S. LA SALLE ST.
ANDOVER
A

FINER

SERVICE

F °

A

FINER

Cc A

BAS

Me hs
a

te‘“

2200

all

of

the

will at-

and

sale

alumnae

Woman’s
22.

Dr.

Watkins

guests

exhibit

at the Evanston
19

Cheek

- Potts,

Church,

antiques

sponsored

group

Dr.

Lorena

the

Ashby

Findlay

Brush,

college.
Following

tend

Mary

Abbie

club

�Thursday,

May

15,

1947

Page

THORNTON

HERE

Hold League Golf

FOR

TWO

SATURDAY

Peeves of the Fairway

Highland Park

Tournament At
H. P. May 31

Nine To Face

League Leaders

Parkers Favored to Capture
Suburban League Title Again

Parkers Have Slight Chance
For Suburban League Pennant

SAME WATER HAZARD FOUR
“TIMES IN A Ry AND WONDERS WHAT PEOPLE SEE IN THE GAME
GUESS ILL USE
WY ®ZANOD
MASNIE

By Ray Geraci
Highland Park’s surprising baseball team, which defeated the highly
rated Oak Park Huskies twice last
Saturday, will be hosts to the league
leading Thornton Flying Clouds Saturday afternoon for a double header.
The game is scheduled for 1:00 p.m.
at the High School Athletic Field on
West Park Avenue.

Tmt

The Suburban League Golf Tournament will be played at Sunset Valley Golf Club on Saturday, May 31.
The Little Giants, who are defending
league champions, are favored to repeat.

State Meet Soon
The State Golf Championship will
be decided next Friday and Saturday, May 23-24. Highland Park’s golf
' team which was nosed out last year
will be one of the leading contenders
for the State Title next week.

Highland Park to Be

By Steve Herz
On
Saturday,
May
17, approximately 100 golfers will travel to Highland Park to compete in the district
will be held

at the

Sunset

Valley Golf course.
Such teams
as New
Trier, McHenry, Waukegan, Maine, Evanston,
Crystal Lake, Bensonville, and NorthThe

winning

team

from

the district selects their lowest four
men and one alternate to travel down

to

Champaign.
Individual low. men’ numbers one
and two will also travel dawn state
to compete in the individual matches.
The district meet which is given
by the State Athletic: Committee has
a set of severe rules which call for
one judge to accompany each party

of four players. The meet
follow summer rules.

will

also

Saturday, May 17—DISTRICT
Monday, May 19—Evanston (Here)
Tuesday,

May

May

20—Proviso

23-24—STATE

(There)

MEET

Sports Page
To Cease With
School Closing

News,

will

Highland
summer

end

Park
months.

with

the

closing

of

High

school

for

the

The

sports

depart-

ment was inaugurated in this paper
in September of 1945, and will complete its second year in June.
The primary purpose of this page
is to give Highland Park sport fans
an

idea

of

what

is

happening

in

the

athletic field of the local high school,
and also to help bring about a higher
standard of sports in Highland Park.
We have tried to bring our adult
readers closer to the high school
which they are supporting in hopes it
would create more parent interest in
sports

activity

at

By

Highland

Park

High.
This department hopes it can be
able to obtain a story before June

|,(el he

next

WITH

ALL WIS FANCY
—

Steve

Herz

feated

Morton

and

Thornton

they must
double

and

win both

header

also defeat

fact

that both

teams

Wins
it’s

Two
seventh

HYBRID

the running

for the

league

title by

throw

the

same

two

pitchers

week,
doing

scores

are

as

with
Harder
the hurling.
New
current

The

fol-

and

Gooseman

Trier Next
season
will

lows:

Crawford (NT) 80, Ori (HP) 83,
Wood
(NT)
84, Flynn
(HP)
7,
TaMor (NT) 85, Sheridan (HP) 83,
Petti (NT)
83, Minorini (HP) 85,
Coleman (HP) 82, Bacon (NT) 94.

were

School

Be Held Soon

Entered the

“CLEAN
SLOGAN

UP”

The GLASS

North Shore’s Smart - Dignified

ROOM

ORLAND

AND

COCKTAIL

FRANKLIN,
Popular

CONTEST?

on when will Highland Park students
be able to have a decent indoor track,
gym, and swimming pool. (“Rumors
are flying, but everyone’s denying.’)

HOUSE

at: U. S. Highway No. 41, Lincoln &amp; Touhy Aves.

DINING

Radio

Singing

LOUNGE

Pianist

Star

Entertainment 9 until closing
EXCELLENT

CUISINE —

end

for

Highland Park next Tuesday when
the Giants are scheduled to meet
New Trier in Winnetka.
Highland
Park defeated New Trier in their
first meeting last month.
Saturday
will be Highland Park
baseball fans last chance to see the
Little Giants in action |

Track Meet to

You

against

Thornton that defeated Oak Park last

under extreme pressure. Sparked by
the fine playing of Richard Flynn,
who’s score of 78 was low man for
the match,
and Richard
Sheridan,
who sank a long putt on the seventeenth hole, the Parkers turned what
looked like an easy victory for the
Trierites into a sure victory for the

Have

and

defeating Evanston twice, 5-0; 4-0.
The
Little Giants will probably

by

The annual Highland Park Grade
School Track Meet sponsored by the
High School “H” Club will be held
in the near future. Dave Floyd, head
football coach, is director of the meet.
All details, including last years results, will appear in next week’s Sport
Page.

Trier

Tuesday.

scores of 15-0 have won all three of
their Suburban League matches.
The Little Giants scores were good
the

with

New

eighth games in nine starts last week
by dealing Waukegan a double defeat,
4-0; 5-4. Proviso also remained in

o

Blue and White.
The individual

the

Thornton
Thornton »* won

GPHE SELF-APPOINTED CHAMP
WHO WEARS OUT HIS CADDIE
CLUBS

pennant,
of

Thornton,

ae

Highland Park High school’s Champion
Suburban
League Golf team,
coached
by Mr. Bolle, defeated a
highly rated New Trier team on the
Indian Hill Golf Course last week
Wednesday, May 7 by a score of 105.
The Parkers who previously de-

Grade

This Sports page, which has now
become a regular part of the weekly

League
ends

Golfers Defeat New Trier
In Third Suburban Victory

despite

Remaining Golf Schedule

TO

HIM

OF

PLAYS THROUGH.

SHE an
—
WONDER WHO g
SHOOTS 94 HIS
FIRST TIME OUT &gt;
AND WILL PROBABLY ‘NEVER
BE ARLE TO DUPLICATE (T—o

brook will be competing for a chance
to travel down to the state meet at

Champaign.

ALWAYS

= &amp;

Host to 100 Golfers
At District Meet

which

AHEAD

PERSON

FINISH, i

In order for Highland Park to remain in contention for the Suburban

er

SME FASTIE WHO CANT WAIT FoR

THE

meet

31

ULTRA

MODERN

DECOR

�Le

AC

Aggies
Midwest
Following

Golf

is a complete

piled by the seven

sional

Schofule

Golfers’

leading

1947 ‘

Tournaments

up-to-date

1947 golf tournament

golf organizations

association;

For

a

Golf

Western

of the

schedule

Midwest:

association;

District
Golf
Women’s
Golf
association;
Chicago
Women’s Golf association; Chicago Park district and

Illinois

Women’s

com-

Profes-

Western

association;
Illinois
Chicago District Golf

association :

ARMOUR’S BACON
COLD MEATS
POT ROAST
ROUND STEAK
PORTERHOUSE STEAK
RIB ROAST OF BEEF
LEG OF SPRING LAMB
LOIN LAMB CHOPS .
GROUND BEEF
CALVES

LIVER

—

16-20—Western
Junior—Northwestern G.C., Evanston.
June 16-22—Women’s Western Open,
Capital City C.C., Atlanta, Ga.
June

June

SWEETBREADS

—

FRYING

CHICKENS

GREAT-NORTHERN GROCERY &amp; MKT.
ROGER WILLIAMS AVE., RAVINIA
Highland Park 6585

16-22
—
Trans-Mississippi
—
Wichita
C.C., Wichita, Kansas.

18-24—Professional
Association

Hollow
June

Golfers’

Championship,

G.C.,

June
June

5—One Day Handicap.
6—Illinois
Seniors, Oak
Park
ad. 5
June 7-8—Illinois
PGA
Championship, 54 holes—St. Andrews G.C.
June 9 —
Preliminary
Qualifying
Round, National Public Links, 18
holes—Bunker Hill G.C.
June 11 — Preliminary
Qualifying
Round, National Public Links, 18
holes—White Pines G.C.
June 12-14—United States Open—St.
Louis G.C.
June 13 — Preliminary
Qualifying
Round, National Public Links, 18
holes—Cherry Hills G.C.
June 13—CWDGA
Mabel Gustafson
Day—Beverly C.C.

22-28—National

Collegiate

Qualifying

Round,

Jackson

lake,

England.

(Continued

'

on page 33)

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ee

rae

BOYS—A

1300

Health,

Happiness,

Ama-

Park

G.C,
June 25—South Suburban Shrine —
Olympia Fields C.C.
June 26-29—Chicago Victory National
Golf Championships, WestwardHo G.C.
June 26-29—Women’s
Professional
National Open, Greensboro C.C.,
North Carolina.
June 25—Elmhurst Blowout.
June 29—Twin
Orchard
Rehabilitation Day, Illinois PGA.
June 30-July 5—British Open, Hoy-

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June 23-25—Hearst
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June

May 16-17—Walker Cup Matches —
"St. Andrews, Scotland.
May 17—Glen Oak Stag Tournament.
May 19—Qualifying Round, National
PGA and Illinois .Section PGA,
36 holes.
May 24-25—Midlothian Derby.
May 25—Westward-Ho Rehabilitation
Day, Illinois PGA.
CarMay 26-31—British
Amateur,
noustie, Scotland.
June 2—Qualifying
Round,
U.
S&amp;.
Open, St. Andrews
G.C., West

Athletic

Training

and

Character

Building.
Season June 23-Aug. 1. Hours 9 A.M.—
4:30 P.M.
For information write Lake Shore Summer
Day Camp, c/o Lake Forest Academy, Lake Forest, Ill.,
or call L. F. 2833 or L. F. 2790 evenings.

�el

Town Talk
PUT
STARS
AND
A SONG

Take

her

IN
IN

to Villa

HER
HER

Midwest Tournaments

BUILD YOUR OWN
OUTDOOR
FIREPLACE

(Continued

for

Din-

tional
July

chins prides himself upon the excellent, quality food, so deliciously prepared by his famous Chef—which is
at

the

Villa.

Drop

July

Public

Links,

3-6—All American
teur &amp; Ladies, Tam
8-12—Illinois

36

ria;

iny for

holes.

Women’

Henri

July

Orchestra

plays.

Here

is an

WEDDING BELLS
ARE RINGING

around
mortar

With Spring comes Brides and Wedding Gifts. Gifts of true charm and
distinction are to be found at Grace

door
sound

Herbst’s,

for the
dinary.

Interior

Furnishings,

exclusive and out
Gorgeous Lamps,

Furniture,

Silver,

Glass,

noted

of the orOccasional
and

unusual

Gift items. Just the sort of things the
Bride with
appreciate.

good taste will thoroughly
563 Lincoln
Ave.
Winn.

Gather up a few friends and drive
them to Lunch or Dinner at the
Moraine
Hotel.
Just as the buds
are bursting and there’s a fresh new
greenness

every

where

—

with

occasional

bright

touch

of

Daffodils

and

Forsytia.

Blue and
overlooks
ravines.
for 80c to
dam

Lunch

an

in

the

White Dining Room which
the Lake and the wooded
Wonderful complete meals
$1.00 Dinner in the Amster-

Room,

Road.

Have

from

$1.85.

801

Highland

Park

4444.

A

FASHION

you

attractive,

unit.
All
and bricks

are well on

Sheridan

PLUM

For

easy

you
and

to

build,

your

way

to.an

out-

Weight 130
Height 28”.
18 by 25”.
lb. Price $29.95. On sale at GUSTAFSON’S
“EVERYTHING
THE
HEARTH
DESIRES.”
Showing
many

and

styles

Foot

ston.

of unique

Scrapers.

Gre.

Hitching

Posts

517 Davis, Evan-

look

bright

morning in one
new Plum Print

and

gay

every

of those delectable
Coffee Coats shown

at
the
Frances
Welsh
Shop.
It’s a wrap-around

Maternity
style which

SUMMER

TIME

Hot sultry days and nites lie just
ahead.
Why quarrel with your environment
when
it’s so simple to
install a Room
Air Conditioner in
Bedrooms, Living Rooms and Office.
Costs less than a 2 weeks tfip to the
North Woods.
Easy to. operate—a
twist of the wrist gives you the climate you want—when you want it—
and fast. Keeps you cool and lowers
humidity.
Circulates air and removes
dust and “dirt. Operates quietly in a
smartly styled console type walnut
cabinet.
Quickly installed in almost
any window. Sold by Utility Products
Co., Inc., 1521 Sherman Ave., Evanston.
Davis 7733.

is so practical and launders beautifully. Shown in black or white background with luscious ripe plums for
color

$8.95.
Uni.

decor.

630

-Sizes

Church

12

to

St.,

16.

Price

Evanston,

7709.

Lovers of Antiques will be delighted
to know that the Chicago Rockford
College
Club
is holding
its
13th
Annual Exhibit and Sale this month.
It will take place at The Woman’s
Club of Evanston on May 19-20-21
and 22.
This is Monday
through
Thursday.
The group is famed for
its wonderful collection of rare antiques—Furniture, Glass, China, and
Bric-a-Bracs.
Open from 10 a.m. to
10 p.m.
Closes at 4 p.m., Thursday.
Admission
75c.
Chicago Ave. and
Church St., Evanston.
CABIN IN THE WOODS
A PLACID LAKE

That’s an attractive picture for YOUR
Vacation,

but

how

about

your

Dog?

He'll have the best care and be perfectly happy if he is left at The
Butterworth Kennels.
Large build-ings
with
all
modern
equipment.
Licensed Veterinarian in attendance.
Big, shady grounds.
Call H.P. 2967

for

Reservations.

2810

Park

have

Glenview

Ave.

to

for

securing

popular

has

give

Country

his

Wm.

Buzanis

House

the- best

Dining

“MARY,”

July

14-20—Western
konda C.C., Des

16—Beverly Revel.
16—Sunset Ridge Stampede.
17—Champion of Champions —
Park Ridge C.C.
July 21-24—CDGA Junior Open, Glen
Oak C.C.
July 19—Lincolnshire Dawn to Dusk.

FURTH

there

is,

He

Rd.,

Dae.

Funeral
936 E. 47th
Street

and

Chicago

Directors

Ali

known

will

IMPORTANT

Kenwood

ANNOUNCEMENT

Furth

staff

of

directors.

OF
RECORD
PROFESSIONAL
AN OUTSTANDING
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

You'll WANT This Tool

for

the minute you try it!

\BU RG -tool
ESS

delighted

vikbro

Trade Mark Reg U.S. Pat. Off.

Operates on the vibration principle, 120strokes
per second, 60 cycles,
AC, 110 volts.

AND SO
GETTING MARRIED
just

to

wonderful!!

the

two

enveloped

4\

Printed.

AND

Sherman

Ruth

loveliest

and

NN

. Your

style

0700

facilities
highly adequate
and
offer complete
We
right near you on the North Shore using the well known

hostess,

be

Phones

Glenview.

that

Books.’

Plae

Advisers

now

and

tissue insert.
A Price rangeto appeal to every budget.
Delivery in 2
weeks.
Smart Stationery, Engraved
or

6—Calumet

&amp; COMPANY

of

Wedding Invitations and Announcement are most important. You'll be
delighted with them if you order them
from Chandler’s in Evanston.
Finest
quality paper, beautiful engraving, all
with

Dis-

July
July
July

a big hand

place.

well

clientele

YOU’RE
Isn’t

Public Links Team

8—CWDGA One Day Event.
Aug. 9—Rolling Green Croak’s Day.
Aug. 11 — CDGA_
Pro-Amateur —
Knollwood.
Aug. 11-16—Women’s Western Amateur, Evanston G.C.
Aug. 11-16—Cook
County
Amateur,
Columbus Park G.C.
Aug. 13—Medinah Camel Trail.
Aug. 14—CDGA South Paw.
Aug. 15-16—Glen Oak Round Up.
(Continued Next Week)

Amateur—WauMoines, Ia.

to find her to greet them with her
usual cheer when they drop in for
Open at 4 pm.
At Noon
Dinner.
on Sundays and Holidays.
Waukegan

Aug.
Aug.

trict Golf Championship—Westmoreland C.C.

(for many years at a Restaurant on
Skokie—and also “Hildegarde” from
the same place) playing the Hammond Organ every evening.
Mary’s
devoted

ANTIQUES
EXHIBIT AND SALE

A

DOUBLE ATTRACTION AT
GLENVIEW COUNTRY
HOUSE
We'll

Lin-

Women’s

Hi-Jinx.

Handicap.

Championship — Columbus Park
G.C.
Aug. 4-10—City Amateur — Jackson
Park G.C.
Aug. 6—Ridgemoor Jabberwalk.

Filius.

Amateur,

Day

_

5090.

MOTHERS-TO-BE
You'll

Pater

14-19—Midwest
coln Park G.C.
July 14-19—Chicago

need is some
this unit—and

broiled
dinner
(Doesn’t
that
luscious?).
Cooking
surface

SIZZLING

IT’S. SUCH A PLEASANT
THING TO DO

10—Midlothian

July

30—Edgewater

Aug. 3-CDGA

Ti:

Lunch—so
many women
drive out
from Evanston—or for Dinner when
Gendron’s

July

Golf

Shore. Silver Tassel.

23—La Grange Stirrup. |
26—St. Charles Fox Chase.
28—Lake Shore Pro-Lady.
28-31—CDGA Junior eee
Skokie C.C.

July 31—One

Cc, Peo-

July 9-13—Illinois
State
Amateur,
Soangetaha C.C., Galesburg.

Dancing after Nine. (It’s a splendid
Sunday nite habit). Skokie at County
Line.

July
July
July
July

Open, AmaO'Shanter.

Championship—Peoria

21-26—U.S. Public Links—Meadowbrook G.C., Minneapolis.

July 23—North

30—Qualifying
Round,
All
American Open &amp; Amateur, Tam
O’Shanter.
July 1—Final Qualifying Round, Na-

ner and the Dance.
The Villa is such
a gay spot, simply effervescing happiness and good cheer.
Frank Hut-

served

from page 32)

June

EYES
HEART

Moderne

July

With a Burgess Vibro-Tool you have electrical power at
your fingertips to do “hand work” in a jiffy which would
ordinarily require hours. You write on metal, put designs
on plastics and glass, tool leather, carve wood, slice card»
board, almost as simply as writing with a pencil.. Anyone

can use, instantly. Come in for a free demonstration.

Try it

yourself, No obligation to buy.
The Vibro-Tool, complete with engraving needle........... $7.50

Bride’s

Davis.

Wakefield
ADV.

HAAK’S
25 S. Second St.

AUTO

SUPPLY

CO.
Tel. H. P. 391

_

rage

�Mr.

and Mrs. William

grandmother,

3 dorf’s

Wolf on
Mr.

Sunday

and

Mrs.

Chester

evening.

Mrs.

C.

A.

Wolf

were

te

Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Wolf’s
son

in

and

family,

the

Libertyville,

Wilson

on

Olendorfs

Sunday.

Mts. A. L. Fry will be hostess to
of her
sewing
club on
~ members
Thursday at her home on Springfield
Mrs.
William
B. Carr of
avenue.
Decatur expects to be here for that |
meeting. A former member of that
club, she will be visiting in Chicago
and Deerfield for the next several
weeks
while
her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Olen-dorf,

also

of

are

Decatur,

in

the

wast:
Miss
Louise
Huhn
road and the Clarence

of Deerfield
Huhn family

Greasing
Tel.
H.

GAS

- Washing

Deerfield

- Accessories

576—750

Waukegan

HOLTJE

E.:

Phone
Res.

Phone,

Deerfield
Highland

RELIABLE
708

Waukegan
J.

&amp;

SZAaZeaZercenenlensenlenlenlenTenTea
en esyearea ener ensensenenlenlealeenene cet ne te etgenencensenrenren

of Springfield avenue will go to Racine on Sunday for the baptism of
the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew

Vita

Road

SCHULTZ

For

of

Mrs.

Deerfield
road,
Vita is a fresh-

school.

Mother’s

Day,

Mrs.

Friedel

Fuller drove down to Urbana on
day
to have
dinner
with
her

Paul,

a student

at

the

S.

Sunson,

University

of

Illinois.

nut street. Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Anderson served in the Special Training
unit at Fort Sheridan (teaching of
illiterates) during the war.

Bowling

Academy

704 Waukegan Rd.—Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 90
Open Bowling

5869

Monday

Deerfield,

-

Wednesday
Evenings

Saturdays

POKORNY

MILDRED

daughter

With Mr. and Mrs. Leander Hvale
of Chicago, formerlyof Hvale Forge,
Deerfield, Mrs. Friedel S. Fuller. of
Deerfield road, will spend the weekend at the tulip festival in Holland,
Mich.
‘

GARAGE

W.

at high

Deerfield

250
Park

Road,

Intranuovo,

Vito
Intranuovo of
is ill with pneumonia.

man

‘ackend cates a ihe Pied: Cahill
home on Chestnut street were Mrs.

renee t reteetiges HSA
Zea erseoys

Mrs. Harry Muhlke is entertaining
her bridge club tomorrow evening at
her home on Central avenue.

Huhn.

Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Smith of Chicago were Sunday guests at the home
of Mrs. Carl T. Anderson of Chest-

Red Horse Service Station
MOBIL

Deerfield Activities

Carr Olen-

dorf and son, William C. Olendorf |
Jr. of the Farnsworth housing project at Great Lakes, visited Mr. Olen-

and

-

Mrs. Herbert B. Graffis of Bannockburn and her niece, Mrs. John
Mayher
of
Chestnut
street, . spent

Friday with Mrs.
Mrs. Lela, Vaughan
Wis.

Graffis’
at‘ Lake

mother,
Geneva,
7

Miss Dorothy Woodbury of Lake
Forest, was the dinner guest of Miss
Shirley Scott of Todd court on Thursday evening.
—_—_——_

Houseguests the past several weeks
at the B. H. Kress-Robert Greenslade
home on Hazel avenue have been Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Heimark of Hauley,
‘Minn., Nicholas McKellar and Mrs.

Matthew Camitsch of Fargo, N. D.,
Mrs. John Rodgers and
daughter,
Sara Jane of Cleveland, O.

Sunday
Mrs.
Park.

with

Mrs.

William

Juhrend’s

Hanner

GILLWEVE

BEAUTY

SALON

Mr.

Mr.

Dorothy,

Gillen,

762

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

Grimes

GOODS

816. Waukegan

and
Road,

Tel.

Mr.

and

Mrs.

the

bride

and

W. Youin Joliet

to

Cissell.

visit

Mr.

Miss

and

Mrs.

Georgia

Wednesday

John

Herrmann

from

Miami,

returned

Fla.,

she had spent the past three
visiting an uncle and aunt.

where

months

POWDER BOX BEAUTY
SHOP
623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julie
Expert
Permanent
Wavers
Try
our Circlette Wave
that is sprayed into your hair.

DEERFIELD

NEWS

NEWSPAPERS
Home
Delivery

AGENCY
MAGAZINES
Service

(PENGUIN-DELL)
CIGARETTES

BOOKS

SOFT

DRINKS

884
758

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

175

&amp;

SELIG

Established
1925
REALTORS
.
Real
Estate—Loans
764 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Il.
Edward H. Seiig
Harold R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

LUCIUS ERSKINE
REALTOR

-

SHOP

BUSINESS DIRECTORY
FROST’S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

GIFTS

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of appliances

Deerfield

Waukegan

Te 1. Deerfield

W. R. MITCHELL

Road

- Tel.

562—Eric

Deerfield

Banfield,

29

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP
808

Waukegan

DR. G. C. PARKNEN,

122

Prop.

Mercer
Lumber

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
Deerfield
714 Waukegan Rd.

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Lumber
-

KNAAK’S PHARMACY
THEO J. KNAAK, R. Ph.
Est. 1884

Companies

Building Materials
612 Railroad Ave
Deerfield, Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

-

O.D.

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
Phone
674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings |
by appointment

Road

Deerfield

CAKES

ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION

ESTATE AND
INSJRANCE
‘634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Ill.
Deerfield

and

VANT

95

Available

weekend

Oakes

¢

760

Always

Howard

groom, T/Sgt. and Mrs. W.
art (Martene Oakes) were

&amp; Company

THE GEORGIAN

Mrs.

Oakes

POCKET

Apparel

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
_ 641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.
Telephone Deerfield 33&gt;

REAL

the

CIGARS

635
Deerfield
Road
Tel. Deerfield 806
Open Monday Evenings
We invite Charge Accounts

DRY

Over
Howard

WALLDREN

Women’s

Franklin

parents, Mr. and
of Orchard lane.

Weve

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling
and
Shaping
Free Consultation

Agnes,

Mr. and Mrs. Everette Oakes of
Still
Pond
farm,
Dundee,
spent
Wednesday evening with Mr. Oakes’

Highland

Miss

daughter,

Mrs. C. M. Willman of Greenwood

mother,

in

and

avenue entertained her Friday afternoon bridge club last week at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Warren
Flint of Osterman avenue.

Mr. and. Mrs. Hubert Juhrend and
son, Gerald, of Qakley avenue, spent

Friday

Sundays

Emma
Cahill
of Milwaukee.

Coal

Phone

1

Deerfield,

Ml.

2

M. A. FRANTZ

\

758

Deerfield

Road

Tel.

419

813

Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND
SAUSAGE MARKET

DR. R. D. MOORE
OPTOMETRIST

Sanitary and
Heating
Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR
BETTER
HOMES

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

Telephone
880

Deerfield

and

Deerfield

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
~- Tools
Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting
Goods

577

Waukegan

756

Roads

Waukegan
‘

VANT

&amp; SELIG

EST.
1925
INSURANCE

in
764

all

its

Established

branches

Waukegan Road
Tel. Deerfield

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,

- Deerfield
155

DEERFIELD

Inc.

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield
/

TELEPHONE

Day

TAXI

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

81

and Night Service
Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers
Drfld. &amp;
Waukegan Rds., Deerfield

Road

Deerfield,

Telephone

ROYAL
722

BLUE

STORE

Deerfield Road—Tel. 767
“Best
Quality
Always”

GROCERIES
FRESH

295

FRUITS

—
&amp;

MEATS
VEGETAPLES

Il.

�SI Pn

ye

Highistder Chaba

Hold Pot Luck Supper
The Highlander Club of the Highland Park Presbyterian church will
hold a pot luck supper for members
and friends on Wednesday, May 21
in the parish house at 7 p.m.
A feature of the evening will be a
cartoon chalk talk program
to be
given by “Doc” Snyder and his wife,
Penny. “Doc” Snyder is a staff member of the educational department of
the

Presbytery

Mrs.

Snyder

Cormick

of

Chicago.

He

and

are students of the Mc-

Theological

seminary,

Chi-

cago.

Have

You

Entered the

"CLEAN

CONTEST?
Se

SLOGAN

UP”

Phi Alumnae

S

Gamma

RPE ER aes

To Honor Lake Forest

Chapter Here Sunday

git ce

POE

Lake County alumnae of Gamma
Phi Beta sorority will honor the active chapter of Lake Forest with a
tea at the home
of
Mrs.
Burton
Smalley, 485
Fairview
avenue,
on
Sunday, May 18, from 3 to 5 p.m. Actives of Northwestern and the alumnae board also will be guests.
Once again this year the Gamma
Phi alumnae of the Chicago area are
sponsoring the summer recreational
program at Ridge Farm preventorium. To raise funds for this project
they will hold a rummage sale at the
Community house, Foster and Maple
avenues, Evanston, May 22.
Plans
have been completed
at the April
meeting in Waukegan and the May
meeting held at the home of Mrs. B.
L. Kleinschmidt in Highland Park.
The last meeting of the group until fall, will be held at the home of
Mrs, Charles
Close,
Clavey
court,
with Mrs. Harry Young presiding.

Only $3.70 Down, $5 Monthly on Terms

3588

5

8

Wonderful

Hawthorne

Bikes

for Work or Play

‘

S. T. Dexter Dies

ee’

Wards Catalog has the bikes that are made to give you years of easy riding
and faithful service! The rugged streamlined framesof these Hawthornes
have New High-Luster Enamel finish . . . bright red for men and boys, bright

While On Vacation
‘Funeral

services

‘were

held

last

week in Galva, Henry county, for.
Shelby T. Dexter, 67, of 424 S. Sheridan road, Highland Park, who died
of heart disease while on vacation in
Galva. Burial was in Galva, his birthplace.
Mr. Dexter was assistant vice president of the First National Bank and
Trust Company, Evanston, a position
he had held for three years. An émploye of the bank for many years,
Mr. Dexter was assistant cashier before his recent promotion.
He is survived by his widow and
two daughters, Phyllis Dexter and
Mrs. Richard Glidden; Highland Park.

blue for women and girls. Hawthorne bikes are equipped with 26 x 2.125inch Wards Riverside Mate balloon tires and tubes for extra mileage. And
they come with these four DeLuxe Safety Accessories: Delta Headlight,
Large Red Reflector, Safety Chain Guard, Kick Stand!
Order your bike from Wards Catalog now

Payment Plan.

. . on the Monthly

60 P 3096F—For men, boys; 60 P 3097F—for

women, girls: Each $35.88.
Catalog Office today.

Ask

for a Library

Catalog

at our

FREE DELIVERY

LEGAL NOTICES
STATE OF ILLINOIS 2
COUNTY OF LAKE § ss.
LYLE GOURLEY being first duly sworn,
on oath, states that he was elected Commissioner
of the City of Highand
Park,
Illinois, at the General Municipal Election
for City Officers, held on April 15, 1947;
campaign
and
election
his
of
all
that
election
primary
the
including
expenses,
are as follows:
Nothing.
:
(Signed)
LYLE
GOURLEY.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
6th day of May, 1947.
.
:
Vv. C. MUSSER,
AL)
Notary Public.

s

=

Berane

ev

eG

May

15

TELEPHONE 4800
|

28 N. FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

�ma Club Will —

| Charis
Sponsor Mother-Son
Banquet at Bethany

GENEVA NAVAL CAMP
CONDUCTED
NORTHWESTERN

BY

MILITARY AND

NAVAL

ACADEMY

_ WRITE

ern

LAKE

GENEVA,

WISCONSIN,

REPAIRING ROOF LEAKS
IS OUR SPECIALTY
Our Workmen

Are

Experts

970

Linden

Ave.

—

Hubbard

Ph. Winnetka
Serving

a short

numbers

ing

May

16,

playlet

will

at 6:30

several

musi-

follow.

decorating

diligently

and

committee

to

have

tables

is work-\
and

Men

of the

CO.

sponsoring

Woods

sumptious

742

Charisma

the

¢hicken-

Reservations

the North Shore for 40 Years

Mrs.

affair,

din-

C. Nichols

may
or

club, which
will

serve

is
the

dinner.

be
Mrs.

made.
J.

with

Zenko.

Rabbi
tures

ing hall beautifully turned out to harmonize with the theme. Mrs. F. Jones
and Mrs. R. Jinkins head this group.

Real Roofers
Courteous — Considerate
and Responsible

ROOFING

and

cal

The

With Many Years Experience
in This Type of Work:
Not Just “Handy Men” But

BECKER

Friday,

¥

Shulman

public life.

p.m.
Mrs. Rosella Ester of Barrington
will be the principal speaker, according to Mrs. Lester H. Laubenstein,
Miss Audrey Wessling and Norman
Christman of the program committee,

FOR CATALOG

105 SOUTH SHORE DRIVE

avenues,

a

(Continued

“Along the Mother-Son Trail” is
the theme of a banquet to be held at
Bethany church, Laurel and McGoy-

_@ Boys 14 to 17 learn seamanship, boating. 75 miles from
Chicago. Cutters, sailboats, motorboats. Junior Camp.
(boys 11 to 13) — sailing, swimming, sports.

Soe

and

The

from

page

3)

temple’s forums, lec-

inter-faith

activities

have

attracted the interest of all denominations, and the architecturally beautiful temple in the heart of Glencoe
continues to serve as a center for
many community gatherings devoted
to promotion of better citizenship and
spiritual advancement.
Unusual Career
Rabbi
Shulman
has had
a distinguished careerin the Rabbinate.
He was ordained at the Hebrew Union
college in 1927 and holds a law degree from Ohio Northern university
as well as graduate degrees from
University of Chicago.
Before coming to Glencoe he served
congregations

in Johnstown,

Pa.,

and

Wheeling, W. Va.
He is a past
president of the Chicago Rabbinical
association,
vice
president
of the
National Association of Jewish Chaplains and state chaplain of the Jewish
War Veterans of Illinois. Author of
several

books,

he has

seen

his observ-

ations on. peace, social welfare and
religion appear in many periodicals
in

recent

years.

His War Record
During
the war
Rabbi
Shulman
served as a navy chaplain and his
notable record won for him the Navy
Commendation award for outstanding
service.
He held the rank of lieutenant commander, and was attached
to the U.S. Naval Training station,
Bainbridge,
Md.,
the
U.S.
Naval
Training

|

(ledranes

our

of

2

complete

Spring Collection

station,

Newport,

R.

I.,

the

Quonset Naval Air station, the P.T.
boat base and the Advance Seabee
base, all in Rhode Island,
For many months he was the Jewish
chaplain of the famous Seventh fleet
commanded by Admiral Kincaid. He
was the only rabbi among 225 chaplains attached to this fleet and traveled continuously between Austral
and the Philippines, with the greater
part of the Southwest Pacific as his
parish.
Later he was attached to the staff
of Admiral Kauffman, commander of
the Philippine sea frontier, and traveled extensively throughout the Phil-

ippine

islands

in

the

service

of his

men.

gowns

suits

wraps

millinery and accessories

Make
A

Reservation

For 14 Days
and enjoy the trial offer we’re
extending you ...a vacation
at home ... away from red
hands, unruly hair, and stiff
clothes. Yes, you may have soft
water at the turn of a faucet
... for as low as $2.75 a month
... and to prove it, accept our
14 day trial offer, just by calling
Highland
Park 342

CULLIGAN
Soft Water
Service
366

Central
Ave.

�af
au

oo pe

eae

Pe

| Hold Election
of Officers
Highland Parkers
Visitors

at

Raff

initiated

into

To Show Frank

people

at

ences,
Clark

active

mem-

freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.
D.
Linville
of 700 Harvard
court;

freshman,

Hamilton,

IL.

C.

Mrs.

and

Mr.

appropriate

of

Sci-

Northshore Garden of Memories

of

animated

cartoon.

A Surprise Awaits You

JOHN
RUGS

son

Hamilton

L.

presented
on
the
program for young

Academy

717

MORAN

BEAUTIFUL

THIS

%

FURNITURE
- CARPETING
CLEANED
LIFE-TIME MOTHPROOFING
Ave.

Tel.

H.

P.

If You Have Not Visited
CEMETERY

GARDEN

Very Reasonable

-

Glencoe

POST TIME 8:15

NORTH AVENUE at RIVER ROAD
On the Edge of CHICAGO

Lincoln
Park at 2001
North
street, Chicago, at 10:30 a.m.

bership in Kappa Sigma fraternity at
Lake Forest college were the following local men: William D. Linville,

of

Chicago

e

MAYWOOD PARK

Buck’s ‘Jacare”’

“Jacare,” a full length feature of
Frank Buck’s trip to the Amazon
jungles,
will
be
Saturday morning

RACING

PARI-MUTUELS

Every NIGHT except Sunday

May 17. There is no admission charge
and children of school,age are invited
to attend.
The program includes an

Kappa Sigma Initiates Four
Local Men at Lake Forest

Charles

WITH

Home

Visiting at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Raff, 245 Cedar avenue,
are Miss Marion R. Meyers of Harwichport, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacques L. Meyers of Los Angeles,
sister, brother and sister-in-law, respectively of Mrs. Raff.

Recently

NIGHT HARNESS

The
Mollinckrodt
Mother's
club
will hold its annual election of officers
at the organization’s monthly meeting to be held on Tuesday, May 20,
beginning at 1 p.m.

Prices

Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

1137

Phone Maj.

1067

671 Central avenue; George N. Kerrihard, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. L.

Mr.

and

238

High

Adolph

and

lane,

son

of

Baracani

of

Jr., sophomore,

Baracani

V.

Oak

14

Kerrihard,

Adolph

Mrs.

street,

Highwood.

Out

Miss Rosenheim Is Named
Among “Best College Citizens”
Among

eight

senior women

as “best college citizens” at
college, Northfield,
Minn.,

chosen
Carleton
is
Miss

Nancy Rosenheim of Highland Park.
On Saturday the girls will march in
the May Queen’s procession as senior
Miss Edith Davidson of
attendants.
who

nual

drama

May

chosen

was

Evanston,

queen, will rule over the fortieth
dance

at the

an-

college.

and

Mrs.

Sherman

D.

Clough

of 2348 Lakeside place recently returned from
a_ six weeks’
cruise
aboard the S.S. Trajanus of the Royal
Netherlands
line.
Accompanied by
their
sailed

sons,
from

Bruce
Mobile,

that

looks

tastes

feed

a complete

get

proved

Dog

Ideal

famous

can--you

food--a

the

Sherman Cloughs Return
From Caribbean Cruise
Mr.

Food

of the

good,

good--smells

good

simplest

and

and

is

—

food

food--a

good--in

easiest

eos
re:

form.

and Stuart,
they
Ala., and returned

by way of New Orleans, La., stopping
at Curacao and Aruba, Netherlands
West Indies; Maracaibo, Puerto Cabello, La Guaira and Caracas, Venezuela; Trinidad, British West Indies;
and Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana.
On

Honor

Roll

at Indiana

Susanne Howe Nolan of Highland
Park is among 708 students at Indiana
university,
Bloomington,
Ind.,
named on the scholastic honor roll for

the

first

school

semester

of

the

present

year.

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED

THE 7-COURSE

No Experience Necessary
To fabricate essential electrical
equipment
required
in home

3, Wheat

construction.

e

Drilling
e
Tapping
@
Assembly Operations
Phone

THE
Shermer

Northbrook

M.
Rd.

B. AUSTIN

715

CO.

Northbrook

MEAL

1. Meat and meat by-products—animal protein.
2. Bone—calcium and phosphorus.

‘

and

barley—carbohy-

drates.
4, Wheat germ—vitamins and vegetable protein.
5. Carrots—carotene and roughage.
6. Cod liver oil, fortified—vitamins
A and D.
7. Soy grits—vegetable protein.

�KNOW YOUR SCH¢ OOL
_A series éf informative talks by the By
teachers of the Deerfield Grammar

Star

Scout

Gregory

“Rnaiony

The

troop went

school, District 109, very briefly summarized,

are

being

Deerfield Review.

Well, I always
Ta seen

one

thought

circus

I’d

that

seen

whén

’em

- but since that swell exhibition
cub scouts put on last Saturday
decided

to

be

a

regular

circus

all,

the
I’ve
fan

_ from here on—provided, of course, it’s
a

... No wonder, the

eub enterprise.

- Chief of Police, Mr. Perey McLaugh-

lin,

acted

as

parade!
If your
grow
brate

probably

holiday

in

the

continues

to

have

next

to

year

declare

to cele-

the

occasion. . . . Your
have
reason
neighbors

and
_ proud

do

escort

popularity

we'll

a village

official

of you

nothing

while

but

your

friends
to be

parents

beam

these

can

days.

How did you like that swell food
...2?
Well, maybe I shouldn’t’ even

€ \

ask

since

the

booth

was

“cleaned

out” before we. realized what had
-happened.... Yessir, it was the combined effort of your parents that put
those
delicacies
before
you.
Of
course, Mr. Edward Reagan’s gift of
a more than generous supply of PepSa si-Cola’ and Mr. Clarence Wilson’s

donation

of

dozens

of

dixie

cups

really kept that counter plenty active.
The Cub Scouts of Deerfield will
always
remember
what these
two
friends did for them. ... Don’t forget
to thank them personally, too, fellows!
Come to think of it, though, since
when do bearded ladies, strong men,
hulu dancers, clowns, and a variety
of freaks rate awards ...?
Why,one
clown couldn’t even keep his pants
up and his bright red shorts didn’t

look like a cub scout uniform, either.
~

I was shocked to see our cub master pass out arrows and badges to
such a congregation, but it seems that

he could identify the true American
spirit behind such makeup. . . . Boy,
oh boy! and what a list!! Just look
what our Deerfield boys have earned!
Awards

BOBCAT—Billy
ert

Ramsay,

RANK

OF

- Ramsay,

Jr.,

Jr.

Darling and Rob-

WOLF

CUB—Robert

Eugene

Johnson,

and

_ David Kelley.
.
~ GOLD ARROW—Eugene Johnson,
Wallace Carroll, Jr..
and John Robertson.

Richard

Pagel,

SILVER ARROW—Ronald Kloep” fer, Richard Loarie, Dennis Carroll,
and Bob Rudolph.
ADDITIONAL SILVER ARROW
_ —Ronald Kloepfer,
RANK
OF
BEAR
CUB—Ramo
Frank,

-

David

Kelley,

John

Wach-

holder, Eddie Patton, Paul Dasso, Jan
Holmquist, and Joe Kilcoyne.
GOLD ARROW — Ramo Frank,

“avid Malley, Sddie Patton, Joo! Kil‘Dasso,

Bee and

Jan

Billy

SILVER

Holmquist,

Joe

Kilcoyne,

Winters.
ARROW—

Ramis Frank:

_ David Kelley, Eddie Jatton, Joe Kilcoyne, Billy Winters, and
Tommy
- Salyards.
RANK
OF LION CUB—Bill Carrolll III, Geoffrey Afpastrong,
and
Bobby Cole.
GOLD AND SILVER ARROWS—
Bobby Cole.

presented
These

articles

in the
have

been condensed from their talks before the board of education given
earlier in the year.
This is the seventh article in the
series,

on

_

an

overnight

hike last weekend.
-

It

served

as.

cay

| practice hike for
the
Camp-O-Ral
to be held May
24. Most of the
bess didn’t get out to Timson’s woods
until 5:30 p.m. on Saturday which
Sixth Grade
was a little behind schedule. Billy
By Miss Bertha Croftchik
Gastfield had to leave early because
Students of the of a bad cut in his finger which
sixth grade have caused him to faint..Scoutmaster Bob
reached an unex- Ranier applied first aid.
The following boys went on the
pected
maturity
in some ways but +hike—Dick Johnson, Gregory Newell,
are still immature Bill Baarsch, Pete Clark, Jack Frain
others;
they bel. Bob George,” Gordon Rollman,
Roger Sloot, Teddy Soenksen
and
tend
to form
his brother, Billy.
cliques and begin
Beaver patrol is going on a special
to show signs of
hike over the weekend. They earned
adolescence.
The
this trip be being the first patrol with
teaching aims of
dues for the year paid last year. The
this grade are the
new members who came in since then
further developwill not go as it is for only the old
ment of good
members. Everything on this hike will
Miss
Croftchik
study habits, self
be provided by the troop.
control, and the presentation of subThe “old men” who will make the
ject matter.
hike are Gregory Newell, Bill Baarsch,
In reading, the child receives for
Jon
Peterson,
Dick
Johnson, Jim
the last time, concentrated individual
Reagan, and Gregory Armstrong.
help in the simple techniques of this
The bugles and drums are still misssubject. Reading for pleasure and reing. Please keep looking, they are
tention are encouraged with the help
somewhere in Deerfield, we hope.
of text books, visual aids, creative
“Helpful” is the third of the twelve
writing, and book reporting.
scout laws.
“Skimming”, as in newspaper reading, is introduced.
Certain of these
phases are particularly developed in use of text books, newspapers, discorrelation with English which | incussion, and personal experience.
cludes the study of grammar, public
speaking, and drama.
» This is the eighth in the series.
Arithmetic involves diagnostic pracSeventh Grade
tice work, multiplication and division
By Miss Olivia Clark
of fractions, all phases of decimals,
Self-control and
and the use of graphs and charts in
/
self-guidance
are
preparation for seventh grade.
stressed
at this
Spelling is integrated with all other
- adolescent age in
classy room work and each child is
seventh grade.
responsible
for evaluating his own
In social studies
progress.
of the seventh and
In art the students are urged to deeighth grades, the
velop their own interests and talents
sixth grade proin the making of posters, holiday decgram is expanded
orations, and timely illustrations in
with emphasis on
various media of materials.
the cultural develSocial studies, as in the preceding
opment of the ingrades, are developed through the
‘dividual; that is,
Miss Clark
from his relationship to his family,
were two boys present who had rated and to his place as a citizen of the
the highest honor in Cub Scouting. .
world.
Text
books,
newspapers,
Yep, Bob Hinchsliff and Joe Kilcoyne broadened reading, visual aids, and
are now
wearing the only award organized self government projects
that can be transferred to their Boy are used in aiding the student’s devScout uniforms—the Webelos badge! elopment toward his role in a given
This award demanded a very special unit of determining society.
ceremony so while the Indian Chief
English is correlated, also, with
and his Medicine Man started the that experienced in the sixth grade
Pow Wow, Dean Chief Eugene Nel- and with social studies. The student
son, dressed as the traditional archer, works toward’ more mature self exstepped out on the stage and took pressiom in conversation, debate and
aim at the Webelos target. As Bobby grammar. He learns to conduct club
and Joe promised to continue their meetings, be more discriminating in
excellent work
in the future, the his choice of reading matter and is
arrows were shot ... (?)
introduced to journalism.
It was a most impressive finale to
Journalism is scrutinized and stu-}
a very exciting day.
died, then practiced in the school
Special Novice
newspaper and in creative writing.

Don’t

forget

the

swell

excursion

Mr. Irwin Dasso has arranged for
you this coming
Saturday,
gang!
May 17th is the date so be at Wilmot
School at 1:45 pm.
This trip to
Highest Cub Honors
|Cuneo Farm is sumpin’ no one will
‘You'd think this ceremony would want to miss. ... And remember, be
by enough, but it seems
that there on time!!
Have fun, fellows!

The Dunbars Move
To Philadelphia

°

Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Dunbar moved
last week from Bannockburn to Philadelphia and have sold their home to
the Bradburys from that city
“,

Air

Squadron

51

By BILL WINTERS
Flight No, 1 to control tower. Taking off.
It has been a pretty busy week with
Air Squadron 51. The program committee got kind hearted and gave the.
boys a rest. One of the big events was
the preparation for the concession at
the ball games in Jewett Park. With
every game, there will be Air Scouts
to sell pop and candy bars. See you
out at the ball park.
Don’t

view
The
will
The
The
who

forget

the

meet

at the

Glen-.

Air Base on Saturday the 17th.
flying will begin at 10 o’clock and
continue until in the evening.
prizes are a motor, and five kits.
prizes will be awarded to those
have not yet flown a plane.

There

was

quite

a turn

out

at

the

mother’s day air meet at Mr. Timsons
on Wilmot road where Squadron 51’s
airport is located.
Watch this column for this week’s
events and the results of the air meet
at Glenview.
Until next week, this is Squadron
51 saying HAPPY LANDING!!!

With the Young People
Robert (“Bob”)
Peterson, son of
the Karl Petersons of Brierhill road,
has completed his first year at the
University of Cincinnati and at present is on his cooperative job at McDonnell Aircraft corporation in St.
Louis, Mo. While there, he and an-

other fraternity brother are living at
the Phi Delta Theta house at Washington university in St. Louis.
In June he will return to his studies at Cincinnati for the summer
term and in September, will go back
to St. Louis.
Miss

Patricia

daughter

of

the

(“Pat”)
Karl

Peterson,

Petersons

of

Brierhill road, who. placed first with
her flute in the district music contest on April 19 at the Highland Park
High school, attended the state music
contest in LaSalle on May 10, and

was

given a fitst division rating for

her solo.

;

George Kerrihard, elder son of the
Maxwell Kerrihards, has been initiated into Kappa Sigma fraternity at
Lake Forest college.
Family a
Celebrates
Baptism of Marjorie E. Wolf
Marjorie

Ellen Wolf, infant daugh-

ter of Mr. and Mrs.

J Howard

Wolf

(Ethel Jean Selig) of Denver, Colo.,
was baptized Sunday morning in the
Deerfield Presbyterian church by the

Rev.

B.

E.

Vanderbeek.

Marjorie .

Ellen, who was born November 2,
1946, had as her sponsors, her father’s
sister and brother, Mrs. J. B. Payne
of Ann Arbor, Mich., and Leonard
Wolf of Chicago, a student at Purdue

The baby is the first grandchild of |
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Selig of
Waukegan road. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John L. wen
i Cela.

©

�eae

es may

Ge

Deerfield

Masses:

Daily

Masses:

“Saturday,

7,

8:30,.10,

6:30

7:30

and

p.m.

AN

otic

*

Illinois. —
:
Last
Sunday,
thirty-one
church
attended
the

Moving

Back

the

11:30.
a.m.

Confessions.

next

week

moved

to

when

unable

or

so.

Highland
to

find

a

hold

its

annual

church.

At

banquet

the

at

banquet

9:45

age

May

a.m.

the

Bethle-

Henry

Kof-

school,

a.m.

Morning

classes

worship

for

all

service.

TUESDAY,
May
20,
8 p.m.
The
Bettilehem
Mother’s
club
will
meet
at the
home
of Mrs.
Robert
Hagberg.
Mrs. Francis
Boelter will lead
the discussion on the theme, “When Children

Ask.”

MONDAY,

The

May

21,

Illinois

conference

Barrington,

Ill.

gates

Bethlehem

from

Wessling

until

and

will

May

Arthur

meet

25th.

church

1

p.m.

The

are

at
dele-

Chester

Pagel.

May

Association

Luncheon

meeting.
Miss
Carrie
Husenetter,
Secretary
for
the
Chicago
Child
gelism
Fellowship,
is the speaker.
SUNDAY,
May
18,
9:45
a.m.
Church
Jordan,

11

general

a.m.

dren

from

11

a.m.

3

|

Robert

to

5

Kindergarten
years

of

for

p.m.

Young

People’s

E.

the

audience

p.m.

Meeting

of

the

as

members

of

the

May

Session

at

Session.

11.

PAUL’S

7

EVAN. &amp; REFORM.
638 Waukegan Road
Phone
Deerfield
858

Hugo
May

p.m.

league

the

Leinberger,

bb...

|
|

at

the

banquet

of

the

church

church.

ages.

Are

They

Thirst.”
WEDNESDAY,
7:30

p.m.

their

to let the

field-Bannockburn

fire

of

exact

location

fire

Reappointment

of

district

know

site of

police

and

will
be
made
called
later.

and

the

May

Choir

Which

Do

Sermon
week:

Hunger

the

the

George,

NicNic-

kelsen.

Next week on Tuesday and Wednesday,
May 20 and 21, Rev. Leinberger and a lay

delegate of the church

will attend

the an-

Carl

other
at

a

first

road

and

bridge

J.

Bloom,

Edward

Stuart)

to

writing.

vil-

Erwin
presented

special

four

for the purchase
Deerfield’s
two

expenditure

wa8

Miller,
policeman
from
Glencoe,
(through
the
village
attorney)

lots

for

resolution
guarantee,

ap-

The

END

PRICES—THURSDAY,

voluntary

was

passed

foreclosure
for

a

40

and

per

a

cent
4

into

new

board

regular

ment

had

been

initiated

procedure

and

adjourn-

followed.

FRIDAY,

SATURDAY

ALL BEEF
FRESH GROUND

Frock

Birdseye

yee

PEACHES

SPINACH

CHICKEN
89c

TPRNCete

Rib Roast

Lima Beans

BEEF

pkg. ........ 39c

|
“Birdseye
Frozen

89c

| NECKS

WINGS

Ovi

Vre

3 9

&amp;

ce etic

EVISCERATED

RIB

ROAST
BEEF

.

&amp;
I 9c

Ib

"Tones

All Sweet

Mixed
vena

SLICe

Ist

Ib.

Cc

39

to 5th
Ribs

| PKS.
25¢
Birdseye
Frozen

BACON

t Margarineaae | MILK

Ib. 47¢

Ib.

Succotash

PRS. senses Be

29

re

Grade A
Pork

c

Sausage

Ib.

OR

Sana

49c

» Gal.

62¢

oe

IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 25th SUMMER IN HIGHLAND PARK |
WE

DILL

PICKLES

OFFER

THE

FOLLOWING

Country

Style,

35¢

Limit

COCKTAIL

FRUIT

No.

Sweetheart Small

Whole,

2 Cans

33c
Limit

CATSUP

Monarch,

14-oz.

2

Whiie

Supply

Lasts

value

While

Supply

Lasts.

value
2 While

bottle, 29c
Limit

BARGAINS

value

2 Jars

tin, 49¢

2%
Limit

SUPER

Supply

Lasts.

value

Bottles

While

Supply

Lasts

|

Rib

DMR ice 39c

CHICKEN

onc
bk ins

-;

Oth &amp; 7th
Ib.

BROCCOLI

LEGS AND
Us

"Baby

LAMB CHOPS. 39c|DUCKLINGS '. 59c |Frankfurters ' 49c

church,

Announcements
Baptism on Sunday of Ronald Lee
kelsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert

Banfield’s

investigation and. he will make a trip soon
to look over the territory in question.
A request
of three
lot owners
in the
1150 block on West Deerfield road (M. S.

Trustee Banfield complained of the removal of black dirt from the surface of
large areas and the legality of such action

SHOULDER

BEETS
at

Scheer complained of excess water
Somerset road’s poor paving.
This

Trustee

proved.

and

21,
rehearsal

!

vacate an alley was made and the three
were advised
to present their petition in

Trustee Mercurio asked
summer
uniforms
for

policemen

Deer-

is

station.

lage
employees
meeting
to be
of

of

the

Carl
due to

acquired

residents

the

BREASTS

SRO Pours oe

|

Pastor

10:45
a.m.
Morning
worship.
series
on
the
Beatitudes.
This
“Blessed

on

ABc | pke....... 29¢ | pkg. ........ 19¢ | pkg. ........ 23¢

CHICKEN

CHURCH

16,

Bowling

held

all

for the erection

sign

Frying
eee
"ieee
‘ean
Chickens | GREEN PEAS | CORN W.K. | Applesauce

|

Charles

SATURDAY,
May
17,
8 p.m. The Golden
Band
meet
at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jacobsen in
Highland
Fark
for their
monthly
meeting.
The theme will be ‘Vacations
This
Summer.”
SUNDAY,
May
18,
9:30
a.m.
Sunday
school
with
classes
for

new

request

3

Rev.
FRIDAY,

a

newly

a

future

rising

the

of

| bb. 2B ¢ | PEE ~~ 29e | pkg... 21

LAMB
_ ST.

@

of

approval

-

The Amvets want ‘to erect. four —
signs at the village limits for safe
driving and the board approved this,
subject to permission from the state
highway commission.

is the

of

LARD

Ib BQe

E. Piper was
elected to succeed
himself
on the Session and he, too, will be installed.
The two newly-elected Trustees, Gunnar
Sundvahl
and Harold Nelson, will be installed as members of that board.
Baptism:
Marjorie Ellen Wolf, daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J. Howard
Wolf
on

came

committee

society.

Installation of Elders and Trustees
Next Sunday the newly: elected officers
of the Presbyterian church will be ordained
and
installed.
Frank
Conley
and
P.
Savidis will be ordained
as elders and installed

presented

Liquor Licenses Given

Mercurio,

of the fire department

PURE

CUBE

director.
8

Scott

STEAK

chil-

MONDAY,
May 19,
Boy and Girl Scout Troops as scheduled.
8 p.m. Meeting of the Board of Trustees
at the church.
WEDNESDAY, May 21,
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
L. Paul Brown,
church.

3)

the

HAMBURGER

|
|

age.

Tuxis

George

Two

We ANPP
BROS.
eae Malema Ol

|

The morning worship.
Ordinainstallation
of new
church
of-

tion
and
ficers.
7

school.

Field
Evan-

superintendent.

Sunday

from page

King,

official “business
was

property

WEEK

15,

Women’s

First
board

vote of thanks and appreciation to the
retiring members and a resolution was
passed.
Committees Appointed
Mayor Alexander appointed the fol-

FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Rev, B. E, Vanderbeek,
Minister
Manse:
1024
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
THURSDAY,

the

former

Trustee Harold LL. Peterson, and P.
Allen
Tennis
presented
Trustee
Joseph King.
From

groups.
10:55

Banfield,’

18,

Church

in

the

peak

up at a later date.

Unanimous approval of two liquor
licenses was given for Briergate golf
club, $350, and Liebschutz package
store, $250, a total of $600 in annual

chairman.

League

sky,
president
of
the
bowling
league
will
preside.
Following
the banquet
the group
will
go
to the
grammar
school
for
social
activities.

SUNDAY,

house

is

year

‘

revenue.

Judicial
and
License:
Banfield.
The first name in each

Merners

last

;

will be taken

curio.

Village Board
(Continued

Bowling

The

Park

* tee

Audit-finance: Stanger, Bradt, Peterson.
Water: Bradt, Stanger, Peterson.
Public Relations-Health: Peterson, Stan‘ger, Bradt.
Police and Fire:
Mercurio,
King,
Banfield.
Banfield,
King,
MerRoad and Bridge:

Mr. and Mrs. Milton Merner and
two children are moving to their new
home at 1038 Osterman avenue in

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Boezlter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace

hem

:
members
of
Zion
Passion

to Deerfield

village. Mrs. Merner
Ruth Johnson.

will

lowing committees:

at Peru,

Play.

8:15

THURSDAY,
May
15,
6:30 p.m. The Bethlehem

F

a

meeting

the

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
Rev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.

Sunday

ERE

nual North Illinois Synod

Church News
HOLY

;

o

�Page

40

Thursday,

LEGAL

Peace:
MIRRORS
.

AND

WHEREAS,
it is in the
public
interest
to provide
a no
parking
zone
for
use
by
vehicles
handling
and
carrying
the
United
States
public mails, and it is in the public
interest
to provide a no parking
zone. for
use
by
the
Police
Department
of the Village; and
WHEREAS,
pursuant
to Section
343-12,
Article
V—Parking
Rules—of
the Munici-

GLASS

DESIGN

Glenview,
Glenview

certain
forth;

DEERFIELD
VILLAGE
ORDINANCE
AN
ORDINANCE
PROVIDING
FOR
NO
PARKING
ZONES
FOR
UNITED
STATES
POST
OFFICE
AND = FOR
POLICE DEPARTMENT.

of

EXQUISITE

NOTICES

Ill.

pal

1641R

Code

of

the

Village,

it

is

unlawful

to

permit
vehicles
to
stand
at
any
place
where
official
signs
prohibit
parking
and
it is the
purpose
of this
ordinance
to
so
provide
for
the.
official
designation
of

R/O am Lee

parking

zones

of

the

width

of

the

sidewalk,

Section
on the
ing at

section

2.

of

the

That

a

Deerfield

3.

east

the

same

Police

20-foot
and

That
side

a

of

may
4.

corporation

shall

be

strip
startinter-

Roads,

20-foot

Waukegan

parallel

strip

Road,

start-

be

of

That

exclusively
the

any

violating

fined

of the sidewalk,
be,
set aside and desigzone,
in order
that

not

any

less

Section

5.

Passed

mellow butterscotch,
Look for the red
emblem of quality.

or

provision

than

That

this

Two

ordinance

hereof,

Dollars,
Dol-

shall

be

by

the

of

May,

Board

of

VILLAGE

North Shore Hadassah
Will

Honor Shulmans

At Closing Luncheon
The closing
luncheon
of
North
Shore Hadassah takes on a particular
significance

Rabbi

this

and

prior

to

year

Mrs.
their

in

honoring

Charles

E. Shulman

leaving

the

North

Shore. Rabbi
Shulman
leaves
his
post at North Shore Congregation Israel

in

Glencoe

to assume

new

duties

in the East.
Since
Hadassah’s
North
Shore
group began, they have been indebted
to Mrs. Shulman for her guidance
based on first-hand experiences and
international lecture
tours
on
the
health and youth programs in Pales-

tine. Rabbi
Shulman’s
sympathetic
understanding has helped the organization reach its increased responsibilities more successfully.
Special plans
for an exceptional
musical program and a beautifully arranged buffet luncheon are in progress,

which

all

members

and _

their

good

musical

All.

1947.

Nays:

this

13th

None.
day

of

May,

1947.

ROBERT
S. ALEXANDER
President of the Board of
Trustees
of the Village of
Deerfield,
Lake
County,
Illinois.
ATTESTED
and filed this 138th day of
May,

1947.

mer

and

STORE“

cream

Mixture

sandwiches

Weather

Scoop’

TEST

WESSLING
Village Clerk.

to

serve

with

sum-

salads.

Warm

ANY

this

1947

Wedges of ripe olives mixed with
seasoned cream cheese and spread on
very thin slices of rye bread make

Ayes:
Approved

Sandwich

ICE CREAM

Trustees,

15,

friends and neighbors are being invited to share.
Luncheon
will
be
served promptly at 12:30, and due to.
the large numbers
expected,
it is
urged that early reservations be made .
with
Mrs. Harold
Blumenthal, 250
Vine avenue, Highland Park.
To succeed the out-going president,
Mrs. Jack Lederer of Glencoe, Mrs.
Gerald White, also of Glencoe, will
be installed by
her
father,
Judge
Harry M. Fisher of Chicago, wellknown for his unfailing help and interest in Hadassah’s program.
Mrs. Aaron Gordon will give the

day

CHESTER

BY

the

in
full
force
and
effect
from
and
after
its
passage,
approval
and
publication
as
required
by
law.

Smooth Sealtest

p. m.—“’SEALTEST

by
firm

Village.

person,

($2.00)
nor more
than
Two
Hundred
lars,
($200.00)
for
each
offense,

vanilla ice cream with
thick ribbons of

BEST

parallel

Waukegan

used

Department

Section

ICE CREAM
oi
Ss

8:30

the

exclusive
of
the
width
of
the
sidewalk,
be, and
the same
is hereby
set aside
and
designated
as a no parking
zone,
in order
that
the
same
may
be
used
exclusively
by
the
Police
Department
of the Village.

138th

Thursday,

and

south side of Deerfield Road,
the southwest
corner
of the

exclusive of the width
and the same is hereby
nated
as a no parking

Butterscotch

in WMAQ

be,

ing at the southwest corner of the intersection of Deerfield and Waukegan Roads,

SEALTEST

Tune

set

same
is
hereby
set
aside
and
designated
as
a no
parking
zone,
in order
that
the
same
may
be used exclusively
for vehicles
handling
and
carrying
United
States
mail.

Section

-Everybody’s favorite

Yow ite
Scaltest time!

herein

as

on the east side of Waukegan
Road,
commencing
at
a point
65
ft.
north
of
the
northeast
corner
of
the
intersection
of
Waukegan
and
Deerfield
Roads,
exclusive

on

Royale

no

NOW
THEREFORE
BE IT ORDAINED
BY
THE
FRESIDENT
AND
BOARD
OF
TRUSTEES OF THE VILLAGE OF DEERFIELD,
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS:
Section 1.
That a 18-foot parallel strip

May

out

refilt

them

cheese

Luncheon

garden-ripe
with

cubes,

a

Salad

tomatoes
mixture

raisins,

of

diced

part

of

the

tain

of

Palestine,’

Shore

Richer Quality’

both

Congregation

Premiere

Zeller last.

accom-

subjects

Israel

May

of Italian

in

Glen-

21.

Film

Midwest premiere of “Piccolo Martire” (“The Little Martyr”) will be
shown
at the Annex theatre, 3210
West Madison street, Chicago, tomorrow.’ The film, .produced
in Italy,
stars

Isal

Pola,

Emilio

Cigoli

and

Lu-

ciano De Amrosis, the five year old
child star of Italy. The theatre shows
only Italian pictures.
green pepper and the tomato centers
cut into cubes, tossed together lightly
with
French
dressing.
Serve
for
warm weather luncheons.

FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought
Oriental
Silverware

Porcelains
Pianos —
Expert

for Cash

Rugs
—

—

—

Carpets

China

—

Jewelry

—

Libraries.
Auctioneering

and Appraisal

Service

WILLIAMS, BARKER
&amp; SEVERN COMPANY

Call ENTerprise 6700

to

help clarify the problems now being
discussed in United Nations sessions.
The meeting will be held at North
coe on Wednesday,

“You'll love this milk of

program,

panied by Mrs. Martin Gordon of
Glencoe. Rabbi Shulman will talk on
“Behind the Curtain of Europe,” and
Mrs. Shulman on “Behind the Cur-

Martha Mooney, Auctioneer
229 South Wabash Avenue

Chicago 4, Illinois
Harrison 3777

�Deerfield
Bowling Academy
CHAMBER

OF

Evening

COMMERCE

LEAGUE

By Clarence “Smitty” Schmidt
St.

Park Ave.
thereby

league

took 2
cinching

inasmuch

as

gamesefrom
first
place
there

are

Walnut
in
the

only

games to finish schedule.
In the race for last place:
Clay and Central; Clay was

3

to
CenClay
is
in
the

High individual for evening
Hamill—191-172-197—560.

Thursday
BETHLEHEM

May

Merner

8,

Ww.
Re

HOLY

L.

cc ad aikes cmmeteorsiisievceies

38
39

Sates

44

Sparrows
MIEN
i secu glue scans
WN
Fd nical
a aac
Orioles
ON
lek
et net

CROSS

By

oe
ne
nes

Charles
May

46
49
49
50
56

ee

CHURCH

LEAGUE

Yous

8,

1947

Charles Killian and his stalwart helpers
finished the bowling season in a blaze of
glory
by
trouncing
the
Coleman’s
three
straight,
putting
themselves
out
in
front
by
five
games
in the
final
standings.
Being
quite
handy
with
figures
in
his

daily

chores

probably

helped

Charlie

pot ROASTS

ARMOUR

bit

above

of

her

413

which

is

quite

a

BONELESS

high

game

8

were

2407

for

I am

taken

3

games

sure

series

by the
and

that

and

FRESH

for

single

bowling

FANCY

past was
enjoyed by everyone
as much
as
I enjoyed
it personally
and
I know
they
are
looking
forward
to
the
opening
of

the

coming

bowling

season

in

the

MERINO oe 6s sake. edbearrek tities hes caus oye

59

37

NUNS
Rem
S MRR UR
TE
oa

54
49
48

42
47
48

NI

oo nahheh ce paidhasads Nasnioke ages 47

49

Mis
betas as cn pstielgs oh epnue sabe anccuasbnepics
wo mas
a
L

47
43

49
53

Te CUNT

37

59

ok

hae eerie
Taken

Friday
ST
Team
Teams
5

54

won

—528.
225.

7
in
and
1

High

High

single

3

games—G.
game—G.

games.
third—

Capitani
Capitani—

Report ‘about St. Paul’s Sweepstakes will
appear
next
week.
St.
Paul’s
Church
Bowling
League
annual
banquet,

the

Church

will
next

Recreation
OFEN

celebrate
with
Friday,
May
16,

its
in

rooms.

The R. N. Gaugers have sold the
former E. R. Seese home on Wilmot
road, Bannockburn, and are moving
to California. Newcomers will be the
Davies

of

Kenilworth.

to

CANS

25¢

FLAKIER

ott

f Ac

PKG.
e

oe

eo

LB.

MARY DUNBAR VAC PAK

Gorm:

12-OZ. a7
CANS

6a

FOR FINE GRAVY

sor, IB°

Gravymaster ..
oe

ARMOUR

4
‘

} Vienna Sausage

PeCAN

LAKE SUPERIOR

JEWEL

ys

NOT AN ORDINARY ICE CREAM
IT'S RICHER, SMOOTHER, BETTER

x ae

NEW LOW
PT. CTN. |

SHREDDED

PRICE

a

ALSO VANILLA,

MELT

PR

BAG WITH EACH

PIMIENTOS,

4

CABBAGE

gy THN

PEPPERS &amp; CELERY

Garden

IN LEMON

35EL.

Salad

&amp; CARROTS

IN TART LIME GELATIN

Perfection Salad
CRUSHED

BUTTER-PECAN
BERRY a

CARROTS,

GRATED

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

a

WAS TR

by
READY

2 PT. CTNS.

25° | 49°

PINEAPPLE, GRATED

CARROTS

&amp; DATES IN LEMON

GEL.

Pineapple-Banana-Date
YOUR

STRAW-

OE

SOLD IN MOST JEWELS

CHERRY VALLEY CUT

GREEN BEANS...

2D ens 25°

CHOICE

.

move

The

the

NO. 2
-o CAM

&gt;

Chiffon Flakes ..., Ke. 0
FOR FINER FABRICS

15°

MADE

Boysenberry Preserves jx:© 35°

ROYAL

PRIN€E

KANDI

YAMS.

FLORIDAGOLD
SALAD
RED

,

ORANGE

AND cerca
SEGMENTS OF
GRAPEFRUIT AND ORANGES
(CELLO WRAPPED)

KIDNEY BEANS

e

BABY FOODS

vei

LOVE IT!

WYLER'S CHICKEN OR BEEF

Bouillon Cubes 2°9°

Spaghetti . .
OR

PENN

ANN

ey

9 20; 25°

519

Central

445

Roger Williams:
Ave.

SU

99°

CANS

Ave.

e
3

NO. 2
CAN

19°

1-LB.
BAG

15°

c

AGAIN

INSTANT SUDS IM COOL WATER LGE, 34c

|

CANS

LIBBY'S STRAINED—HOMOGENIZED

ROGER

Desist 39°

OF "FLUFF"

LGE.

Northern Tissue . 3 ros 19°

EDWARD'S

Sweet Peas

Gaugers Going to California
Sell Former Seese Home

Marshall

sees

7-OZ.

ICE CREAM

a

Sundays.

Gaugers are planning
latter part of June.

14-OZ.

Krispy Crackers

STAR

HEINZ

BOWLING

Roger
K.
Dardenne,
proprietor,
announces
open bowling on Monday,
Wednesdays,
and
Friday
evenings,
and
Saturdays

and

6k

~4 JEWEL “YUMMY”

LIGHT

LEAGUE

first
place
by
6
tied for second and

each.

Beans

cor ale

BROWN

a

FRESH

‘ ry,

Evening

PAUL’S

DEEP

14-OZ.

fall.

Slip into the Deerfield
Bowling
Academy
occasionally
during
the
summer
months
and
knock
the,
rust
off
that
hook
and
your bowling
will show improvement
when
the
season
starts
again.
Fine standings:
Team
Ww.
L,
ria pce ase ici aguttic cneries
a t
os Ji pceed tg c iar inedscikans
cio

FINEST

iit

with
just

LIBBY'S

2 39¢ ° Whitefish

Yellow Pike

game.

season

STOKELY'S

4

- 2.2 45°
Braunschweiger. .». 49°

single

Wachholder’s

877

the

high

4l°

{B.

STAR

MAYER AND ARMOUR

:

35°

Catsup ..sess

STAR

average.

game

|

Wieners....

OSCAR

12-OZ.

SUNSHINE

OSCAR MAYER AND ARMOUR

es

PORK

CAN

BRISKET

Other high scores were rolled by Fred
Coleman
521,
Ray
Frost
513
and
Clyde
Foote with 509.
The
final
figures
show
Fred
Coleman
with
high
individual
series
of 640,
and
high single game of 248.
The team honors
for

TRIM

ALL ONE
PRICE

Corned Beef .
Sliced Bacon .

ARMOUR

to

together
games
of
210-191-201
for a
hot total of 602 for the evening, therewinning
the
men’s
sweepstakes.
The
ladies’
share
of
the
sweepstakes
was
won
by
Mrs.
M.
J.
Hart
with
her

series

EXTRA-VALUE

BEEF

put
red
by

splendid

Tree

FLAT BONE, ROUND BONE, BOSTON CUT

1947

Team
EE

MEATS eau

Peer
tae ais
Ast

JEWEL

LEAGUE

Sweepstakes
night
for
Bethlehem
bowlers
provided
some
surprises,
one of them
a
score
of
196
pins,
not
including
her
handicap,
turned
in
by
Miss
Hildegard
Zickman
placed
her on a scoring base only
one
pin
under
Tom
Sloot’s
197.
Next
Thursday,
May
15 we will close the
194647
bowling
season
with
a dinner
at
6:45
p.m.
followed
by
an
evening
of
dancing,
etc,
final
standing
of the teams:
Sorin

aE

was

Evening

BOWLERS’

By Arthur

WIE
Hawks

Jewel's Top Quality Foods are ALWAYS FRESH—
Jewel's. Every Day Prices are ALWAYS LOW

more

tied by: Pine,
short 3 men,

automatically
forfeiting
8 games
tral;
Pine
won
8 from
Cedar,
so
now
undisputed
last
place
team

League.
“Dick”

YOU CAN’T BEAT JEWE
FOR REAL VALUES!

oO
=

Tuesday

Ivory Snow . 1 uns

PKG.

LEAVES NO

re, Oa

SOAP

.

Drett

)

FOR FASTER, SAFER WASHING

Amer.

«a's

FILM

Fam,

0 6 0s
Flakes

USE OXYDOL, THAT'S ALL

Oxvdel
x ies es

Camay Soap....
CLEANS

j

DIRTY HANDS

FASTER

Lava Soap....:

32¢

pe, One

THE SOAP OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN

:

GLASS 95°
JARS

LGE,

PKG.

BAR

Qc

sar 9°

DEWKIST FROZEN FRESH FOODS
SLICED IN SUGAR SYRUP
ELBERTA

PEACHES. «:

DISINFECTS—DEODORIZES

Lineo Bleach
nae7:

15°

Ta,

19°

a:

�REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(Highland

tL.

iemipcavedd’

Park)

or RIC
TL Y MODERN.

We have some very fine list’gs
East side homes prices $20,000 LOWER
PRICED
HOMES
_ Good buys—Various sizes $11,000 _ Also some beaut. Country Home

of exc.
$50,000
$20,000
sites.

E. T. SKIDMORE &amp; SON
N.

St.

Johns

Ave.

Tel.

COUNTRY

H.F.

577

REAL

BUYS

Glaraline
Colonial
home,
three
bedrooms,
1%
baths,
including
furnishings.
$21,500.
French
Provincial.
Delightful in every
Ready
for
immediate
possession
datadl,
without
ee
Come and see for
yourself.
$48,00
For
pttker
details call

-EARHART,
878

LLOYD

Central

Ave.

&amp;

RINGER

Tel.

H.P.

880

CITY
LIVING
IN COUNTRY &gt; ATMOSSet back on 10 acres nicely landen sphere.
acne
is this most attractive white brick
&amp; frame home.
Consisting of large living
‘room with fireplace.
Screened porch, with
vista
of beautiful
surroundings,
library,
streamlined
kitchen,
2 bedrooms
and
baths on 1st floor; 8 bedrooms,
2 baths
and
aton
second.
Heat
is automatic
A martached peepee of 2 car capacity.
$45,000.
a, Rs
buy at

HAMBLY

se

&amp;

COMPANY

S. St. Johns or Clavey &amp;
“Tel. H.P.
1484, 2855 or

EARLY
Three
Priced

REAL

541

Ridge
1491

Rds.

OCCUPANCY

and

four

from

bedroom

$10,500

ESTATE

Central

Avenue

to

Tel.

H.F.

Beautifully

wooded

tion,

handsome

lot,

fi

MARGARET

8
7

N.

choice

improvements

five blocks to main steam
To close estate $5,000.
For details
Sheridan

Rd.

east

loca-

in

vicinity’;

station;

100x213.

see

E. BYRN
Tel.

H.P.

2542

RM.
BR., 2 baths
H.W. oil ht., cedar
1 car gar.
closet stone terr. off din. rm.
See
attd.
Cent.
location.
Early
occ.
Call
this
lovely
home
before
buying.
Mr. Benson, H.P. 474.

BANNOCKBURN:
White
Norman
house
with
country
atmosphere,
3 bedrooms,
2% baths; living room 27x22, pine paneled library. Automatic oil heat, garage,
three-fourths
acre,
close
to school
&amp;
transportation.
"Excellent
condition,
Owner, $25,000.
Tel. Deerfield 339.

f

“ATTRACTIVE SIX ROOM
HOUSE
Built in ‘36

On

beautifully

landscaped

lot

MARGARET
Sheridan

Rd.

over

100

E. BYRN
Tel.

ENGLISH

H.P.

2542

old home is offered for the first time.
The 1st floor contains an entrance
hall, good sized living room, attractive
dining room with southeast exposure,
library, powder room and utility room
containing heating plant and laundry.
The 2nd floor has three bedrooms and bath.
.

As the owner is leaving town permanently, this property can be delivered for immediate occupancy.

PHELPS,

' 387 Central Ave.
SIX

ROOM

frame

Highland
house

on

Inc.
Park 4580
a 2

acre

lot

for sale or exchange for smaller house.
Tel. H.P. 3692 or 1537 Main St., H. P.

CHOICE HOMESITE IN EAST
HIGHLAND PARK
Wooded, beautiful ravine ‘view, average
- width sixty-five feet, all improvements in
and paid for.
Architect’s plans for property) available.
Owner
leaving
the city.
Frice $3, 750,
r details see

MARGARET

8 N.

Sheridan

Rd.

REAL
541

ESTATE

Central Ave.

E. BYRN |
Tel. H.P!

and

powder

|

~ WHITE

ing

the

Park 2360

HOUSES

there

are

house
area.

WANTED:

room

property

FAMILY

.

GUY
Railway

G.

VITI

Ave.

Highwood,

2542-

PHELPS,

FOR

SALE

FOREST

FOR
SALE
basement,
Six
room
bungalow.
Full
near
stoker
heat
anl
two-car
garage,
Lake
high
school
and
transportation.
Forest 2785.
.

REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE.

need

1%

or 2

to rent home

(Misc.)

furnish
ref.
Tel.
Will
or write c/o H. P. News

salesman
of
blind
made
GLEASON,
urgently
needs
unfurnished
products
Excellent
referuse
or
apartment.
Box 449, Mundelein, Il.
ences.

6

p.m.

rr
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

|

SKIDMORE

&amp;

ROOM
town.

near
825

WANTED

'

ROOMS

TO

RENT

EMPLOYED
girl or woman to assist with
dinner dishes &amp; stay some evenings with
children in exchange for room &amp; board.
Tel. H.P. 33381 (collect) or r 950 8. Sheri-

dan

Rd.,

He P

single
AvailWrite

schools
and
H.P. 6546.

transportation,
Tel.
Vine Ave.

HELP

North

for employed
8690
or
714

(Clerical)

STENOGRAPHERS,
TYPISTS,
OFFICE
personnel.
Permanent
position
with
a
future
proportionate
to
your
ability.
Growing
national
concern.
State
age,
experience,
references
and
salary
desired.
Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.
—
OFFICE CLERK
- TYPIST—local country
club—all
year
’round.
Experience
not
necessary. Good wages and meals. Write
Box H-75, c/o H. P. News.
WANTED:
A young woman with clerical
&amp; sales experience in a local established
business.
Permanent
position.
Please
give details
&amp; salary
expected.
Write
c/o Highland Park News- Box H-105.
EDITORIAL
ASSISTANT,
SUBSTITUTE
DURING
EDITORS
VACATIONS,
ENTIRE
MONTH
OF JULY.
EXPERIENCED.
APPLY
SON
AT.
THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
NEWS OFFICE.
WANTED:
Secretary
for doctor’s
office.
Write c/o H. P.
News Box I-135.
EXPERIENCED SECRETARY FOR SMALL
‘OFFICE;
STENOGRAPHY,
TYPING
AND
SOME
BOOKKEEPING.
EXCELLENT
SALARY.
WRITE
BOX
I-145
c/o H. P. NEWS.

TELEPHONE
OPERATORS
HIGH SALARIES
$33 per 5.week to start.
Frequent increases.

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE
COMPANY
WANTED:

PART

TIME

BOOKKEEPER

Tel.

J.

B.

Garnett

H.P.

4700

BOOKKEEPER -- EXFERIENCED
Part time, permanent position.
At Jack
ea
87 N. Sheridan
Ad.
Tel. H.
STENOGRAPHERS,
typist,
bookkeeper,
permanent
employment,
pleasant
working conditions, good wages.
Apply Manager’s
Office,
Moraine
Hotel,
801
N.°
Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.
capable
secretary.
Please give details
Write Box I-115,

EXPERIENCED
and
Permanent position.
and salary expected.
c/o H. FP. News.

HELP

WANTED

(Domestic)

Experienced,
SECOND
MAID:
serving and upstairs work.
required.
~ Reply
Box
P-47,
|
Forester.

SON

SMALL
4 bedroom
house with one bath.
Excellent condition. Near Beech St. station.
As
trade
plus
cash
for
larger
4
bedroom
house
with
at
least
two
baths.
Write: Box 1-125 ar H. F. News.

ONE
large room
for rent
couple
only.
Tel.
H.F.
Ridgewood Dr., H. P.

URGENTLY needed for occupancy September 1st, small apartment
of 2, 8 or 4
Veteran at Lake Forest College.
rooms.
Digan
Weber,
Robert
No.
children.
Lake ForHouse, Lake Forest College.
est 2422.

May
DOUBLE
furnished
room
for rent.
584
Onwentsia
use parlor &amp; 1 aundry.
VACANT
FOR
SALE
Ave.
Tel.
H.F.
2086.
If you
are
interested’ in buying
East/|
Side lots or beautiful country prop., call
WOMAN
or girl to sit with child nights &amp;
us re some choice listings.
help with housework for room &amp; board.
Write c/o H. P. News; Box I-35.
882 N. St. Johns Ave.
Tel. H.P. 577
240
DOUBLE
and single room for rent.
N. Green Bay Rd. or Tel. H.P. 2335.
REAL
ESTATE
TO EXCHANGE

E. T.

320

5346.

SECOND. MAID:

i

(Vacant)

Tel.

PLACE
teacher
desperately
needs
ELM
small apartment
for year round
occuWrite Box
Has some funiture.
pancy.
I-5, c/o H. P.. News.

GRAYSLAKE
FILLING
Station, with liv.
atr.,
lunch
rm.
&amp;
other
possibilities:
Husband
and
1 WANTED
TO
SUB-Let:
Call. H.P. 474.
Mr.
Benson.
wife, both veterans, and six months old
baby would like to sub-let small house or
BRICK bungalow, 5 rooms, lot 66x175, one
Reply:
apartment
for summer
months.
block from St. Paul station in NorthBox R-7, c/o Lake Forester or telephone
brook,
immediate
possession.
ReasonHighland Park 83809.
able. C. A. Schnordt. Tel. Deerfield 789 |
after

or

for sum-

HAVE
a qualified client for a four bedroom house with servant’s quarters for
the summer months: in Winnetka, Glencoe or Highland Park.
Please phone us
if you are planning to be away, as we
ay
highly recommend
these
tenants.
nee
no
object
for
the
right
house.
Call Mrs. Coulter of
BAUMANN-COOK
Winnetka 3450
551 Lincoln Ave.

Inc.

LAKE

we

No ehilCULTURED
substantial couple.
dren, wish to rent small house between
Best
of
Highland
Park
&amp; Waukegan.
Write
c/o H. P.
care &amp; best of ref.
News, Box I-165.

Highland Park 4580

(Improved)

but

FOR
JUNE:
Adult
couple visiting from
Calif. avish to rent small apt. or room
with private bath.
Good ref.
Tel. H.P.
e/a:
¥F.
4468
or write Box
1-155,
News.

Ill.

Charming white brick and clapboard Colonial.
Unusual living room
with paneled fireplace wall.
Lafge
dining room, modern
kitchen, and
powder room complete Ist floor.
4 beautiful bedrooms and 2 baths
on the 2nd floot. Ample’ closet space.
Large landscaped grounds. ‘ Immediate possession.
Attractively priced.
387 Central Ave.

of 4 wish

mer
months.
Graceland 8962
Box I-75.

in Town

15%
on your ee
eight apartment
Bldg.
for
$16,000.
Two
four- rooms
flat building,
recently
remodeled and modernized.
Price $13,000.
Two
family
house,
large rooms,
large
Bo bibs" area hick: nis cock ao eae basa shea
14,000.
226

wed

WANTED:
By minister’s widow, daughter
&amp; granddaughter, apt. or house furn. or
Tel.
or
housekeeping
rooms.
unfurn.
1185
N.
Glencoe
1653
or write Jones,
Green Bay, Glencoe, Ill.

IN HIGHWOOD
income

To

EMPLOYED
WIDOW
desperately
needs
Best
unfurnished cee or small house.
HP:
4876 rer 5 p.m.
Te
references.
or 830 S. Linden Ave., H

8 Room frame house recently remodeled,
in the best of condition—Immediate
posBEBRION
PRIOR pi cae hs otis ctoadietc
cee $16,000.
House
with
income
and
4. 8/10
acres
GL. BPO. co Petee. csi eaee cokeeke $17,000.
House with two flats.
First floor immediate possession, central location.
Price

returnable

2

VACATIONING
EARLY?
with
nice
surcouple
familiar
Quiet
roundings
will rent your
house
for 2
ExcelNo
children.
mos.
or longer.
ref.
Franklin
Tel.
Sh ore
lent
North
Ex.
20.
6386,

FOR SALE at HIGHLAND PARK

Best

*

starting
rooms
with
kitchen
facilities,
R.
July 20. Tel. Greenleaf 9328 - 9367.
A. Trumble.

Inc.
10

WANTED

Unfurnished)

:

YEAR’S
Reliable

2 screened

course,

&amp;

plus bonus.
rent in advance,
5-7
room
house
family
needs
Tel. Briargate
1823 or
or
apartment.
address Box E-15, c/o H. P. News.

A

for summer. rental
in restricted
$600 per month.
Tel. H.P. 891.

$13,000

APARTMENTS

both
employed,
REFINED
young
couple,
desire four or five room apartment, unReply
Excellent
references.
furnished.
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.

Highland Park 4580
golf

SERVICE
A D HOUSES
and
Sunset
SubdiPark
at reasonable

WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by responsible family.
references.
Tel.
furnish
finest
Will
Central 5309.

porches and a glazed porch.
On the 2nd floor there are 4 large
bedrooms
and 2 baths; the closet
is more than adequate.
An
‘space
excellent value and moderately priced.

PHELPS,

&amp;

(Furnished

Highwood

TWO
PROFESSIONAL
women, two
bedrooms, with kitchen privileges.
able June
1.
Tel. H.P. 1128 or
- Box I-55, c/o H. P. News.

&lt;

prices.

COL@NIAL

garden,

ESTATE

SEVERAL LOTS
in
Ravinia,
Braeside
visions
in
Highland

ROOMS TO RENT
TWO furnished double rooms.
Ave.,

TWO ROOM apartment with kitchen privileges.
Tel. H.P. 4932 or inquire at 121
N. Green Bay Rd., H. P

SERVICE

Highland

OFFICES

ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
AGENCY
16 N. Sheridan Rd., H. P
Res. H.P. 37
Tel. H-P., 93
as
APARTMENT
TO
RENT
(Unfurnished)

This white shingle Colonial house
is situated on a large lot on Linden
Avenue near Cedar Street.
On the first floor a gracious hall
runs through the center with a large
living room and good sized dining
room on one side, and a bright sunny
kitchen on the other side.
Across
the entire back of the house overlook-

PAUL

BRICK

Located in a heavily wooded section with a generous ‘lot, this 6-year

PAUL

den,

REAL

WOODRIDGE

ft.
frontage.
Many
pleasant
features,
-sereen porch, aut. gas heat, 2 car gar. and
tool shed,
carpeting
on
first floor goes
with the house.
Poss. July) 1st.
Priced to
sell at $17,500.
For details see

8 N.

kitchen,

AND

Howard Huber.
866 Central Ave.
Tel. BP.
812

room on first floor. Fireplace in master bedroom, three other lovely bedrooms, and bath on second floor. Full
basement with shower, Hot water oil
heat. 106 ft. frontage, 264 ft. deep.

OVERLOOKING

2360

STORE

HOUSE

387 Central Ave.

$40,000.

OFFICES, STORES, STUDIOS TO RENT

timeenea’

Park)

2 to 5 p.m. Sunday Afternoon
753 S. Green Bay Road.
Cheerful entry hall, large
living
room with fireplace, dining room, sun
room, breakfast room with fireplace,

PAUL

iy
lente

BARGAIN!

SALE.

From

homes.

SERVICE

:

FOR

OPEN

modern

HOME

Beautiful white clapboard house, 8 acres
of ground,
excellent
floor
plan,
many
_ special details such as library which can
be used as guest room on Ist floor, four
fullbaths—all for $40,000.

Ps

ESTATE

(Highland

‘

832

REAL

Experienced, white. For

6 weeks or permanent, starting April Ist.
References
required.
Mrs.
W.
P. MeBride, Lake Forest 36.
white
for
References
c/o
Lake
*

SECOND MAID
White,
4 adults.
cleaning
women.
Park News.
Box

Have cook, laundress,
Write
c/o
Highland
H-95.

EXPERIENCED
girl
for
general
housework &amp; cooking.
Good salary.
Must like
children.
Employed
husband may stay.
Tel. H.P. 3963 or Write Box I-25, c/o
H. P. News.
RELIABLE
woman
white,
for
helping
cook every Saturday and Sunday. Steady
job. Apply 888 S. Green Bay Rd., Highland Park.
WANTED:
Maid
for general housework.
Two in family, private room with bath.
Mrs. C. M. Humes, 200 S. Maple Ave.,
Oak Park, Ill.
Phone Euclid 6579.
COUPLE,
husband
may
be employed,
if
can give one day’s work in exchange for
rm. &amp; board.
Woman to cook &amp; do gen-

eral hsewk.
735
2431 (collect).

Rie

Grove

8

&amp;

Tel. eeeeere
2

©

�{

MAID

for general

house,

and

garden

man

work.

housework
for

heavy

Tel.

H.P.

for

4907

or

2161

Fine

Pt.

7 room

cleaning

Dr.,

Own
H.P.

girls.
Tel.
H.

P.

PRACTICAL

WANTED:
Couple for general housework.
Good
wages,
pleasant
and
comfortable
rooms; ref. req.
Tel. H.P. 364 or 160
H.

P.

HANDY
MAN:
Every
windows
&amp; car, wax

housework.
No
WOMAN
for
general
heavy
cleaning
or laundry.
May
stay
on place or go home
nights.
Call at
298 Central Ave. or Tel. H.P. 880.

$8 per day.

Desires

Tel.

H.P.

H.

504

Good
P.

4900.

COOK,
general houseworker exp. for family of 2 adults, 2 school children.
No
laundry.
Own
room &amp; bath, $35.
Will
consider woman with employed husband.
References required.
Tel. H.P. 1283 or
868

Moraine

Rd.,

H.

P.

RELIABLE
cleaning
woman
one day each week.
Tel.
1943
S. Green
Bay
Rd.

or man _ for
H.P. 2447 or

Central

Tel.

Saturday
to
floors, mow

Tel. Deerfield

H.P.

wash
lawn.

319.

ACCESSORIES

&amp;

LaROen TN

WOMAN’S

COOK, general housework.
No laundry or
heavy
cleaning. Own
rm.,
bath;
near
trans., $35,
735 Grove or Tel. Glencoe
2431 (collect).
COOK AND HOUSEKEEPER
8
Adults.
Own
room
bath.
wages.
1416
Wildwood
Lane,

nurse for 20 hour service in

private home.
Must have ref.
2180 or 708 Ridgewood Dr.

Sales Help — Full Time.
TOWN
, SHOP
Highland
Park
Ave.

GARDENER:
One day a week.
Care of
lawn
and flowers.
1622
S. Green
Bay
Rd. or Tel. H.P. 3964.
EXPERIENCED
store,
ings.

Green

saleslady

for

frozen

40
hr. week.
Pleasant
Town
&amp; Country Frozen

Bay

Rd.,

Glencoe,

food

surroundFoods, 65

Ill.

meMan,
Maintenance
and
ENGINEER
chanically inclined, experience with High
Pressure Steam
Equipment
desired but
not necessary.
See Engineer, 8 a.m. to 3
p.m.,
Moraine
Hotel,
801
N. Sheridan
Rd.,. Highland Park.
f

Permanent

HALL
APPLY
VILLAGE
510: Green Bay
Road
Winnetka,
Il.

COMBINATION
CHAUFFEUR
and houseman.
Married
man
without
children.
Lake Forest 702.»

top
time,
part
— Full or
WAITRESSES
wages,
excellent
working
conditions.
Office, Moraine Hotel,
Apply *Manager’s
801 N. Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white. Temporary position, May
26
August
25.
References required.
Mrs. A. H. Revell,
Jr.
Lake Forest 1330.

for our shipping
men or women
YOUNG
department, also counter girls. Ermine
Cleaners, Inc., Highwood. Tel. H.P. 3710

WANTED

OPERATOR:
BEAUTY
$40, plus 50% comm.
Vernon Ave., Glencoe.

(Miscellaneous)

WANTED
Men, part or full time at
Highland Ten Pins
139 N. Second St., H. P.

MAN

with

car

for

service

or production

work.
Must have good personality and
be capable of selling or making
estimates.- Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired. Address
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.
NATIONAL
ADV. MANAGER
who understands copy, production, merchandising.
Unusual
future
for right
man.
State
age,
education,
experience,
salary | ex-

pected.

Duraclean

BRICKLAYERS—6

Co.,

day

Handler
Construction
Ave., Glencoe, Ill.

Deerfield,

week.
Co.,

652
!

Tl.

B.

W.

Vernon

FURNACE-repairman—experience not necWill train—steady employment.
essary.
;
Apply 3 to 5.
?
Company
Furnace
Holland
523 Park Drive
Kenilworth, Illinois
for
Mechanic
WANTED:
Vernon
660
at
agency:
Tel. Glencoe 674.
Til.

Part time janitor at. Ravinia
WANTED:
hours 2 to 5, Monday thru. Frischool
Tel.
day, 8 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday.
H.P. 4020 days or H.P. 3091 evenings,
2322
or see D. R. Beam, Braeside school,
Fark, days or at
Pierce Rd., Highland
805 §. Ridge Rd., Highland Park evenings
SALESLADIES WANTED
Full
time
work.
W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
512 Central Ave., H. P.

F.

In local drug , store, Junior
Senior High
School
girl, part time
Sept. 1st. . Write Box I-65, c/o a.
News.

WANTED:

or
to

wages,
good
or part time,
MAIDS—Full
Apply Manexcellent working condition.
801
Hotel,
oraine
Office,
ager’s

Rd., Highland

Park.

wool spotWANTED: Experienced silk &amp; dry
cleanter, good wages. In modern
Box

ing

plant.

Write

SITUATION

c/o H. P. News

WANTED

(Clerical)

office man at liberty in a few
GENERAL
Accustomed to meeting the public.
days.
responsibility.
Accept
type.
Executive
and
accident
also
coordinator,
Geod
for
reasons
Good
investigator.
claims
leaving present position, Address; Mann,
P.O. Box 121, Highland Park, Ml.

SITUATION WANTED

DAY WORK:

(Domestic)

Three days a week.

Lake Forest

references.

SITUATIONS

Ontario

WANTED

and Roper Gas
Plan. ...
Free
Home Appliances,
Woods.
Phone

DINING FURNITURE $500. Empire, beautiful condition.
Table oval, small, yet
seats
12 when
extended
by
3 leaves.
Sideboard,
six
chairs
and
mirror
inre pet
1122 S. Green Bay Rd. or Tel.
YEP 3422.
NINE cu. ft. Copeland refrigerator, in
cellent condition.
120 Clifton Ave.,
P. or. Tel. H.-P.) 1108.

ex-

THREE
piece
room
Phone
6 &amp; 8

complete rooms of furniture,
Six
red maple
living room
set; bedset, a
dinette set, white enamel.
H.
P. 3998.
Please .call between
p.m. or 707 Deerfield Ave., H. P.

CHEST

of

ble

drawers,

beds,

rugs,

dresser,

SINGER

vacuum

single

refrigerators,

day beds, buffet
Second St.

&amp;

odd

cleaner

&amp;

gas

dishes.
¥

&amp;

good condition; reasonable.
sia Ave.
Tel. H.P. 1055.

FOR

doustove,

29

S

Good

3818.

(Miscel.)

REMINGTON
practically
Box

621

Onwent-

noiseless portable typewriter,
new.
Write c/o H. P. News

CHILDREN
play
house
7x10.
Can
be
moved on flat truck.
1 Billard table for
rumpus room.
Stone jars ten, five, four,
two gal.
heelbarrow.
Tel. Libertyville
807-M
or 112 Phird St., Libertyville.
EMPIRE
style bedroom
set, hardly used.
Original
cost $500.
Sacrifice.
Colonial
dinette set.
Rare cock-a-too bird.
131
Pleasant Ave., Hwd.
Tel. H.P. 6455.

FOR

SALE

linen,
size
138, like
2574 after 5 p.m.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

new.

SALE

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post.
We sell furniture, bric-abrac &amp; clothing.
47 §..St. Johns.
Tel.
H.P. 2744.
84-B120-ln-tf
BARGAIN
SMOKE
DAMAGED
FURNITURE FOR SALE, INCLUDING PORCH
FURNITURE,
FLOOR
LAMPS,
LIVING
ROOM
TABLES
&amp; OTHER
ODD
PIECES
AT
IREDALE
STORAGE,
PARK
AVE. WAREHOUSE.
ASK FOR
MR. KELLY.
MAHOGANY
dining room set, -18th Century 9 pieces; mahogany
console desk;
hall &amp; stair carpeting in figured beige
tones; 15x21 &amp; 12x14 broadloom rugs;
8 bedroom rugs; recreation room furniture; maple bedroom
set; antique walnut
full length
mirror;
cherry
chest;
end tables; glass top white iron’ breakfast room set &amp; misc. articles.
Mrs. R.
N.
Gauger,
Bannockburn.
Tel,
Deerfield 795.
‘
tie

est

24

FOR SALE: Kitchen sink, tables, library
table, 2 -FRER oes ener; dressing
. table,
ete. 441 Glencoe Ave.,.H. PP.

and

as

H.P.

News

$30

Box

&amp;

I-45.

$40.

Write

c/o

right.

Tel. H.P.
St., H. P.

4507

PIANO:

522

Lake

For-

whats

or

SALE

eall

y
TO

or 294

at
eit

ai

122
Ren

BUY

Write
Northyeas

Linden

Any

model,

and

must

reasonable.

be

in

:

ae

~

good Nee

Private

2633.

|
_

P.

OE

Forest

party.

-

aS

Small electric refriger-

ator, 7 cu. ft. or under.
condition.
Lake Forest

' LOST

LOSS:

Park, H.

A
6-inch power wood plainer;
other power tools.
Tel. Deeror Write c/o H. P. News Box

condition

AND

Must-be
1414.
|

in good
gi

FOUND

.Oliveyereen. Guitited. dows, jam te

between

1736

beach. ZHaWene,

Rice

St.

C.

and

S.

‘Ravine

Beach.

Dr.

Tel.

2

~

LOST:
Dog, fawn-colored, female, boxer,
Answers to name of Gretchen.
Liberal
reward.
4943 or

No questions asked.
1946 Priscilla, H. P

Tel.

H.P.

—

BILLFOLD:
Lost at Highland Fark High
school
containing
driver’s
license
and —
social security card of Robert L. Pettis,
745 Chestnut St., Deerfield.
Tel. Deer-—

field

485.

Reward.

LOST—WRIST
WATCH:
Liberal
reward
will be paid to the finder of man’s diamond
wrist watch lost May
6.
Write
Wm.
Bauman, Box 189, Deerfield, Ill.

USED.

AUTOMOBILES

' BARTLETT
966

\Lake

See

Ken

like

new

MOTOR

SALES

Northwestern

Forest,

Ill.

Marquis
used

Ave.
Tel.

or Jim

}

L.F.

606

O'Flaherty for

cars.

weg
Skier

PACKARD
4-door
You

- 1939

Deluxe
model,
must hurry to

radio,
heater.
get this car.

RAVINIA MOTORS
PACKARD DEALER
22
CROSLEY

newt

1942

1945.

So.

First

St.

convertible

Price

AUTOS

sedan.

$550.

Tel.

Bought

Deerfield —

WANTED

WANTED

FOR

CASH

Good
’37 to ’47
Used
Cars.
A. G, McPHERSON,
I
887 KE. Park Ave., H.

BIRDS,
BEAUTIFUL
ians.

CATS,

DOGS

thoroughbred

1325

East

St.,

BUSINESS

H.

smoke
P.

Specializing in
pictures of
T.P. 3199

Tel.

FLAGSTONE,

TOP

Tel.

PersH.P.

SERVICE

PERCY H. PRIOR,
Photographer

Jr.

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park, Il.

SOIL,

29-S-S-Inetf
HUMUS, CIN-

ders,
serecnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
_
oe
pews ad ee
a general haulg and
welding.
el.
-P,,
3981
ioe

twin

8785.

John

Tazioli.

MODERNE

bg

DECORATING

SERVICE

H.

BOY’S blue suit, tan jacket, 4 pairs wash
‘pants, 2 shirts, all size 14; also saxophone; new &amp; used lawn mowers.
1024
ee,
Ave., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield

—

eae
“Small upright Kimbslt plano.

WANTED:
also any
a
898

beds,
steel
springs,
innerspring
mattresses,
$100; two mahogany
dressers,
‘$40
each;
two cedar chests, one very

large,

hours,

GIRL’S small 26 inch bicycle.
Have boy’s
26-in. bicycle to exchange or sell.
Tel.

FOR QUICK SALE: Reantiful dining room
table, six straight chairs, two host. chairs
for less than
one-fourth
original
cost,
chairs need upholstering,
$250; Hoover
vacuum complete attachments, like new,

use

t

low

USED
166
mm.
sound
projector.
Capt. Dunlop, C.A.P., Sky Harbor,
brook, Ill. or Tel. H.P. 3950.

DOLLAR DAY
Friday, May 16th
$1 off on all electric irons; 5 steel boxes
$1.25
value—$1.00;
odd
chairs
$1.50
value—$1.00;
5-gal.
gas,
Regular
$1.15
value—$1;
1
Simoniz-wax,
1
SimonzKleener for $1.20 value—$1; 5-qts. PennUsed.electric irons,
z0il—$1.75 value—$1.
$2.50
value—$1;
Tetco
fire extinglisher,
$1.80 value—$1; Ideal rechargeable flashlight
battery
$2.00
value—$1.
Haak’s
Auto Supply, 29 S. Second St., H. P.

can

Green

WANTED:
To buy or rent:
Horse dsaven?
scraper to move dirt.
E. L. Hall, Tele-—
graph Rd., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 672 —

EIGHT storm sash and bronze screens to
two
38x50,
sizes three
overall
match;
32x50, two 32x30, one 32x42; good as
Rice, 1724 S.
new; $20 takes the lot.
Ridge Rd.

bed,

priced

‘WANTED

DOLL HOUSE &amp; furniture, 5 dining room
chairs
good
condition,
gateleg
tables,
book
stand,
lamp
shades,
small
typewriter desk, spinet desk, and Floor mats
1940-41-42
Fords
and.
1929-30-31-3237-38-41-42 Chevrolets.
29 S. Second St.

bunk

CHIEF,”

kitchen

S,

os

price $75.
McGovern

°

maple

Tel. H.P. 484.

1557.

FOR SALW:

OUTSIDE
glass.
showcase
with
shelves,
6-ft. long
4-ft. high,
8-ft. deep,
good
condition;
reasenable.
Ravinia
Auto
Service, 1600 Burton Ave., H

$70;

1331

ee
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
FOR

CHILD’S wooden sandbox with cover, $2.50
complete.
425 S. Linden Ave. Tel. H.
4368.

table,

section

bottles.

“AERONICA

VACUUM
cleaner, very reasonable; also 3
large canvas porch awnings’
Tel. Deerfield 307.

P.

dining set,

drawing

3

perfect condition; 5-h.p. “Johnson” outboard motor; 1%-h.p. “Frisch” refrigera- —
tion unit with
coils, and “‘Kelvinator”’ |
twelve-hole
deepfreeze.
All in perfect —

I-85.

corexten.
wood
drawers,
CHEST
LOW
nice, teeter babe, lamp table, end table,
tea cart, brass desk
set, silver pickle
holder, drapes, miscel.
Tel. H.P.
1139
or 640 Michigan Ave.

CLOTHING

wine

REFRIGERATOR:

SALE

posts;

server;

table;

Bay Rd., H. P.

1946

Lake

HIGH
SCHOOL
senior boy would like to
work part time for room &amp; board from
June 1 to Sept. 1; sitting, yard work.
Can pay part of board.
Best references.
Tel. H.P.. 3730 or 530 Forest Ave., H

White
Forest

200

oi5.

attachments,

@&amp;

square

condition

60oil hot water heater,
KLEEN-HEAT.
gal., $25; dog house, $15; wren house
stakes, 25c¢ each.
on post, $10; peony
Tel. H.P. 3580.
Rd.
Egandale
451

SUIT:
Lake

case

clothes

chairs

i

small

7.

GREEN
davenport
and flower
slip cover
‘$15; child’s 3 yrs. old tricycle; and 13ft.
cotton
hall
runner,
like
new,
$4.
Tel. Win. 1787.

Leave me
a note I’ll do the rest—
ROOM
WASHING
-- FAINTING
Vet. Lloyd Bock, 543 Oakwood, H, P.
or Tel.
H.P.
2646

Car
Nash
new
Glencoe,
Ave.,

Two men for part time clerical
WANTED:
One in. Highland Park &amp; one in
work.
Park
Highland
c/o
Write
sichwosd.
ews Box H-5.

Sheridan

day,
712
452.

5%
Steady,
on all work.
Glencoe
Tel.

eseaiemeneninhipannbieniismnenassamsnanimnsciinmiinsiel

a

MAGIC
CHEF,
Universal,
Ranges.
Time Payment
connection.
Winnetka
‘956
Linden,
Hubbard
Winnetka 2000.

galvanized

table

tion,
including
spring
and
fine inner-|
spring mattress.
Priced at $15.75.
Call
at
1317
Judson
Ave.,
Highland
Park
or ‘Tel... H.P; (2728.

MARTIN
‘60” greatest Out Board Motor
of. all times.
Get your order in. while
our
allotment
lasts.
P.
J.
Juhrend,
Salesman, 666 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield.

WANTED:
Experienced silk finisher, good
plant.
cleaning
dry
modern
in
wages
Write c/o H. P. News, Box I-105.

WANTED:
Lathe operators
&amp; other machine
shop
employees.
Modern
Engineering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.-P.
10567.

TWO

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
* lawn roller for hire.
Borchardt Fuel Co.,
Pel, HPs
6%,

experienced,
excellent
COUPLB, . white,
position.
No
laundry;
reference necessary.
One
in family.
Tel. H.P.
18@1
or 510 Hawthorne, H. P.

HELP

metal bed in good condi-

MICELLANEOUS

POLICE
PATROLMAN
WANTED
Age 21-30 years.
Village
of Winnetka
00
Salary
$215.
- $250.00

PARLOR maid, white, reliable.
Own room
&amp; bath; references.
Tel. H.P. 3888 or
888 S. Green Bay Rd., H. P.

"MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

COMFLETE %

per

EXPERIENCED
MECHANIC
to work
on
all makes of cars. Tune-up, brake work,
etc.
No heavy
work.
Sun
test equipment—Barrett brake equipment. Guarantee $70 per week.
Ravinia Auto Service,
1600 Burton Ave., Highland Park,

WANTED:
General
maid.
Experienced,
white, $35 per week.
Apply in person.
1917
S. Sheridan Rd., H.
P.

Dr.,

Tel.
Jar-

MAN
to work
in yard one half day
week, or longer; experienced.
Tel.
4671 or 273 Woodland Rd., H.
P.

LAUNDRESS:
One day per week; exp. in
ironing,
$8.
Tel.
H.P. 1177
or write
Mrs. Schonthal, 1705 Rice., H. P.

Ravine

for house and yard, work two daysa

week.
Prefer Monday and
iday.
H.P.
30 or Write
Mrs. Theo. P.
dine, 829 Forest Ave., i. Bese

and

1846.

COUPLE
WANTED:
Or two
room, bath; current wages.

MAN

ae

tg

ve

Seip
Pie

he

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More
628 Vine Ave., Highland Park
M. Preti_
os
BO
Tel. H. P. 5676
ope H. P.

er

a

Mee

,

4

186-5-19-tt

89

�e

Me

BUSINESS
CRAFTSMAN
“For
Upholstering,

88rd

St.

SERVICE

GOAT

FURNITURE

REPAIR

Work
of Quality”
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.

&amp;

Gilboa
Tel.

Ave.

Zion

Zion,

3496

sale.

&amp;

HENNING

TO

CLASSIFY

TOO

LATE

TO CLASSIFY

MISCELLANEOUS:
REAL

BERGQUIST
Detcratice
:

&amp;

LATE

184.

DECORATING

O.

Painting

:

TOO
goats’ milk for

Deerfield

PAINTING

L.F.

MILK

Toggenburg

Telephone

Ill.

BARTLETT MOTOR SALES
Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel.

966

PASTEURIZED

:

ESTATE

BARGAIN

2

x

South
lots

East

Section

53

15

Wooded

.

corner

each

South

Motor

driven

lawn

mower
and
second
hand
home
freezer
cabinet, both in running condition.
Also,

LIST

shower-bath

glass

and

tings.

Front

stall

chromium

Lake

SUITCASES:

with

door

Forest

left

and

hand

al]

fit-

1349.

Preferably

large.

I

oa

$08, Oug service department,
hes the | Moderate prices,
20 yr. on North Shore} | 1CCd tO Sell at $1975 each | Moaition and reasonsble: "Lake Poser

cars. Stop
in touay. Now open for busi-| 411 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, Tl

most

modern

equipmen

Spat
PARKWAY

oO

e

M

'

geCURTAIN

pte

Ruffled
curtains,
panels,
drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.

adios: eee ee ee
F
300 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 6804

LAKE

Perennial

FOREST
.

North

Inside

FARM
®

Highway

hake

Forest

UP &amp; DELIVERY
SERVICE
Also car radio repair.
WICK’S RADIO
SERVICE LD
1151
PARK
ae
eae
te

FOR

CCQ)

Landscaping
an
&amp;
EVERGREENS

Laurel

Windows

H.P.

F

R

E

Too

sik
7-5

E

H

.

ALSO

:

to

Highland

PLANTS

Swimming,

a

crafts,

group.

pic-

Experienced
Bonn,
H.P.

- METAL

SALE:

marigolds,

Cabbage,

cosmos.

if we are notified
publication.

following

Cancellations

YOUR

without

FOR

HIRE:

and

1947

driver—by

must

8
p.m.
Tuesday
for
News
to be effective
On
‘Telephone
ads

Highwood
P.

Ave.

2017.

Tel.

day

or

H.P.

Reply
Wanted

6488

be

oak

Humus,

4339

or

H-|]

or

want

any

built

and

sewer

job

598.

repaired.

Call

F.

Ten

years

ads

will

not

be

not

contained

raainet.

in

bog. Westin sest Oi atin!” ine
s

BLACK
CLEAN”

Tested
Supply

ern

and

Line

by

&amp;

" ~" Deerfield

Pitts.

t

i

Phone

Glenview

or

The

4502.

‘

mae

office is open Tuesday

S

forwarded by ee
to
59
S.
St.
Johns

Tuesday,
5:00
p.m.
Deadline on all Classified

SOIL

Lab.

RATES:
Rd.,

20

words

Minimum

or less.

Charge

Additional

The

Chicago

tion.

in

Lake

weekly

Forest

Finesse

Lake

Forest

solid

comes

2786.

walnut

dining

room

Olives

vegetable

more

delics

aes

=

i

ripe

Beautiful

9

persons

IS

ie ed

olives.

JOHN
ing in

Illinois,

7x10,

pus

well

room;

Libertyville

built;
stone

billard

807-M.

crocks;

table

for

wheel

rum-

barrow.

that

AND

CLAIM

GIVEN

the

and

that

Ads,

for

words

All

to 55 words will be 5 cents each.

‘

NOTICE

first

Mond

DAY

to
f

all
Jul

dake*tn Che patate’ oe

C. CHRISTENSEN,
the Probate Court

MABEL

V.

.

ki

MY

Se

claims

:

Wm.

ARMACOST

Briddle,

Deceased, pendof Lake County,

may

be

filed

CHRISTENSEN,

Attorney.

od

=

p/ MEL BRANDT and his “505 FIFERS," for

your dancing enjoyment—starting at 4:30 p.m.
;

- BETTY
—aN

every

BOLT

and her FASHION

eal
W ednesday
d
d

S
an d

7
+
aturday,

PARADES,
2:30
4:°

m
p.m.

ied

Pes aie

DEL

RENE'S'

ORCHESTRA
©
Featuring

MARIA

‘oil Pastis

toile Seorass

‘
nightly.

|

SELDON
REE
Irish Tenor

be
Ave.,

$1.10

them

from
the can or?
,
in oil to keep
their
’

6 chairs, buffet and serving table; solid
against the said estate on or before said
mahogany
Adams
period
bedroom
set,|date
without
issuance
of summons.
All
double bed, box
springs and mattress,|claims
filed
against
‘said
estate
on
or
vanity
with
bench,
rocker
and
night| before said date and not contested,
will
table.
Lake Forest 2718.
be adjudicated on the first Tuesday after
the first Monday of the next suceceeding
MISCELLANEOUS:
Children’s play house,}
month at 10 -a.m.

-

:

se

HEREBY

1047, ‘ie ‘the Bist

table,|

wi Asa it 1s Sor

ahh

°

NOTICE

piece

set, refectory

be-

more

.

e.

“ ADJUDICATION

;

salad

and

x
come

LEGAL

occasional]

up

Sa

eat

whole

:
fruit

or

dressed

as they
ar or roll them

996.

walnut

with

Any

wash-

until 5:30

Highland Park.

Waukegan

A. F. VOLTZ
Lehigh &amp; West Lake Ave.
Glenview, Ill. —

4501,

p.m.
Ads
addressed

SOIL

approved

Co.

next

aren.

location.

,
d Retail
PRODUCTION
"TOF

Field:

2786.

Daily

request.

your

aren
same

ive.

a.m.

‘

a

For the protection of our advertisers
replies
2 pia. ne will
not be dei

etc.

For

R.

Forest

“Lake Bluff 259.

adver-

125 Highwood Ave. Tel. H.P. 4339 or 2017
Right is reserved to revise or accept
SEPTIC TANKS machined, cleaned. Sewers |] °°RY are uk Se
ee
ville

take

MISCELLANEOUS:

aes

To reply to such

information

to

Tuesday,

drive.

10:45

before

made

truck || identity of any Box Number advertiser

week.

SALE

Cinders,

To

rocker;

| table.

Highland
Park
the same
week.
adjustment
is

omer
pant
a
4500,
art
or
4502
ept.
Our name,
address
+
and
phone
number
will
be placed
at
once in the box a
one aa
aes
The
Wanted
Ads_
wit
B
NUMBERS

Black Dine Cement Blocks
FOR

Lake

SMALL painted vanity and mirror; armless|

to Real Estate and Situations
may be made by phone as well

as by letter.

314

two-ton dump

hour,

,-

un

y Fund
at

charge, only

eet) Scar ee eee

H.P.

BLACK rors
Manure
—
inders
:
;
Fill
Dirt
Vines
Deerfield

G.

starts

Floral

of error,
ae
—
made
by

immediately

interested

Drcdean

tomatoes,

Strub

Adjustments, or corrections
on Advertiser’s written wh
fault of the advertiser will be

correct publication

KITCHEN

Sas ee

oppor-|

DESK:
Pre-war
walnut
desk
for
office
or library,
33x51”,
plate glass
top,
7
drawers, $95.
Lake Forest 988.

:

Co., Duffy Lane, Deerfield.

ety

A. M. EVANS
Sheridan Rd.
Tel.

N.

week.

Marbatt.

Dest oe Mena of 'avasinble. Fick up || aorethoding
thee talk paper seacmmta oo

$1

Mak

Anniversar

program

CRIB:
Maple “Storkline,”’ 6 year size, innerspring
mattress.
Very
good
condition.
Lake Forest 2732.

VACUUM CLEANER SERVICE|] nde onlz,om errors, in addressor
ert

fifth

respon-|

Excellent

Getta,

Park.

FOR.

astors,

FOR

9.

cap-

1

GARDENER’S helper wanted: full time.
Tel. H.P. 2180 or 2031 S. Sheridan Rd.,

ROEBUCK

AND

TEL.

.

3

salary.

be

WONGnetkaSheed,
Mocpatae’,
Phaee
Tak Wiens
1071
(collect).

ROOT

COLORS,

SHOP

RD.,

8784.

TILE

IN

JILL

nics, interesting trips, etc.
instructors.
Tel.
Dorothy

OR

BATHROOM

2653

CAMP—morni
and afternoon
ng

Ages

AVAILABLE

&amp;

Pleasant,
some

will

:
May 20, to the college and its
seventy

COOK:
Experienced, white, willing to go
East with family for 6 weeks this summer.
Mrs. James A. Douglas, Jr., Lake
Forest 15.
c

H.

Illinois

H.P.

10

:

DAY

HEATING
MR. KERRIHARD

&amp;

&gt;)

JACK

1829

accept

ing for small family.

CLASSIFY

SHERIDAN

N.

to

HOOFH.P.

;
SECOND
required. MAID:
Near Experienced.
transportation. References
Mrs, R.|JUSt

THOROUGHBRED
Great
Dane
pups
for
sale.
Mixed
colors, six weeks
old.
K.
Sabine,
Camp
Logan
Rd.,
Zion.
Tel.
Zion 3135.

INSULATION

SEARS

TO

AT

ROOFING,

MR.

LATE

.

wit

Highwood,

37

ON

SEE

Schultz.

Tel.

APPLY

ih
p.m.

ATES

ESTIM

Ave.

day

/LAUNDRESS:

SALES GIRL PART TIME WORK]

tia cine

- JOE

Lake Forest 2051
7-8 a.m. or between

Between

1179

Washed

indows
Taken
Screens
Put
TO

H. Holtie

Trees
nee
;
surgery.
property.»
fully insured,
re

Reynolds

Good

:

rere

Woodwork

Woodwork

STURTZ

Highwood
Earl

floors Waxed

Storm

ERIC

Tel.

Floors,

apeerc es
cabling and
and men

able

Park alumnae
and friends
A
:

college

:

:

Hudson

Earl

5
Smith

know
that Ted Malone, the Westj
inghouse “Story Teller of the Air,”

Tel.

SECRETARY:

person,

one

SKOKIE
VALLEY
TREE
SERVICE
Treating,
Pruning,
Spraying

322

BAHR

Ave.

and

e

Highland

tunity. - Lake Forest’ 2548.
.
time; A readers are advised to consult
CC EANING
WOMAN:
Experienced, for|® daily newspaper for the proper sta-

TREE SURGERY

Also

Spraying

Windows,

1947.

per

bo cn, 46, cock coda

otVery1885,reasonable,
Brosdview. $60.
Avé

sibility.

LLL

Vet’s
Maintenance,
5124 Newport Ave.,
t
Chicago 41. Tel: Bel. 5080 (collect).

533

8,

SPRING!
d

HANS

LWRIGIVAENE.
able

Outside

PERSONAL

April

n cinénes,
and
painted.
&amp;Eocene
hung. wemoved.
Gutters Reresn
cleaned
and pFoe

SHRUBS

ee Tel.

We _ have purchased business known
as|
Red Horse Service Station, 750 Waukegan
road,
Deerfield,
Ill., and
are
responsible
for
obligations
contracted
by
us_
since

Deerfie

PREPARE

Hwd.

Tel. H.P. 3452 or 3053
E. R. Conger
eS

2704

PICK

Tel.

ance

landscaping

DECORATING

and

$15

foot.

JOHN GRIFFITH. / Inc
LAKE FOREST 485
.

AND

—

ront

PRIVATE
PAINTING

:

Skokie

na less

Smith College
g on the Air
of

Mei i

oe

Plants

FLOWER

Priced

246-A

remove
&amp;Ee
spray trees.
Also
Peeve
tdha dine

GARDENS
-- LAWNS
;
:
d Atekuie
Mating: Dire on
Pansies

rs

360.

ee
rary Naewer
‘Utilities
AND In.ae Oe?

Grayslake 5414
JOHN HALL’S

LANDSCAPING
and

ee

R.E.D
1
A Etbertyeiiie, ge

West Lake Forest

&gt;.

WALL
VALL WASHING
WASHING

LAUNDRY

Annual

*

up

words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All classified display ads 1 inch or
more are charged at the agate line rate.

73
i

D

Executrix.

\ May 15-22-29

2

�Natural

Gas

will reach Deerfield

within

a few

days.

Notices will be mailed to those gas users to
.

be visited by specialists who

will convert

your Gas Appliances to use Natural Gas.

Please arrange to have someone present to

admit the workmen to your home in order
that the work can be completed for your
satisfaction.

For your own

safety,

please follow

the instructions

contained in the special notice

NORTH SHORE Gaz COMPANY
“The
T.

P.

Friendly

“TOM”

People”

CLARK,

Div.

MGR.

�im

YON

pr.

VILLAGE PANTRY | | Deerfield Activiti
644

Bank

6:00

June

FRI., SAT.
May 15-16-17
EARLY
BIRD
SPECIAL
to 6:30 — Sat. 2:00 to 6:30

Allyson, Lucille
Judy Garland

INDIAN
On

Bremer,

Offers

SUN., MON., TUE., WED.,
May 18-21
Loretta Young, David Niven, .
Charles Ruggles

aA

Marriage”
PLUS

“OUT

News

and

WAY”

Cartoon

BARTLETT
THEATRE

THURS., FRI., SAT.
May 22-23-24
Joan Crawford, John Garfield
ne
mu
umoresque
Selected

Short

vo

\

TOWERHighwood
CASINO

in

CALIFORNIA

Subjects
News

and

From

Forest.

morial

Late

HIGHWOOD,
Week
LAST

Deerpath

THURS.

Jean

Porter,

William

“BETTY

Girls 8-16 yrs.
program

of

Aug.

26

4 weeks $185.00, 8 weeks $350.00,
_inclusive fee.
Will make personal
interview.
Write for folder.
Morris and Dorothy Shaw, Directors
Northport, Michigan

FOREST,

ILLINOIS

Are First!

15

to

May 16 &amp; 17

Sonny
with
Also

FRI., SAT. May
Sat. Mat. 2 to

15-16-17
4

SUN

Wright,
thru

Robt.

WED.,

Sun. Cont

“DEAD

from

GUY

Also

Mitchum

Short

Subjects

&amp;

Late

“Shadows

Club Lorraine
346 Waukegan

Warren

“BELOW

Bogart,
Scott

THE

Ave.

News

SEE AND

Ames

DEADLINE”

COMING
SOON:
“A
Thousand
Nights,”
“‘Humoresque.”

&amp;

One

FRLI.,
In

May
BANDIT

SHERWOOD
‘Cornel

Your

OF

Anita

Louise
|

GLENCOE
FRI.,

- Betty

SAT.,

Grable,

“THE

May

CUB

BASEBALL

BOXING

GAMES

1 block

NOW

“LITTLE

in

musical

James

17

in

at

THU., FRI., SAT.

“CAPTAIN

John

Garfield

May

22-23-24

CAUTION”

Alan Ladd, Victor Mature

Have

purchased

home

station

Graduation

STOP IN!
Weekly Program

Photos

Sonny
fun

MON.,

Cagney,

Richard,
exciting

are

H. P. 6025 .

Understood the Wrongs of His Parents
Pola

The

Tufts

and

cr

ye

All Talking

“Il

riot

n

The

Home

of

Picture

Matire”’

Martyr)
3210 WEST
Continuous

Annex Theatre

TUES.

Ambrosis

Italian

Piccola
(Little

de

ist Run

Italian

MADISON
from 1:30

Pictures

Annabella
Conte
adventure

YOU and
Robt.
Montgomery
starred in the year’s most
unusual picture.

“LADY

deposits are Required
Until Proofs Are Shown

Limited Engagement Two Weeks Only

A Boy Who

THE

JUKE

IN THE

LAKE”

BOX

Snack Bar

Starts WED., May 2\1st

MON., TUES., WED.
May 18-19-20-21

Crawford,

We

SATURDAY

“13 RUE
MADELEINE”

MARKER”

““HUMORESQUE”
Joan

1:30

“CROSS MY
HEART”

PARTY
p.m.

3 CARTOONS
&amp; COMEDY
Advance tickets now on sale
NOTE: Regular performance starts
4:30.
30c to 6:30

_SUN,,

Hutton,

SUN.,
May

MISS

THRU

Betty

MISS

SPECIAL KIDDIES MATINEE
One an
it Only—At 2

from

of

Mon-

eastof Highwood

- WRESTLING

Isa

15-16-17

Saturday

last
:

397 North Ave.
Highland Park

No

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

Dick Haymes

SHOCKING
PILGRIM”

Boelter

Naperville,

recently

HEAR

Entertainment

Continuous

Highland Park 605
Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun.,
1:30
THU.,

Best

GENESEE

FOREST”

Wilde,

Francis

22-23

Technicolor

“THE

Mrs.

road.

THE
HIGHLAND PARK
STUDIO

Highwood

Over Chinatown

PLUS
Douglas,
Ramsay

of Warrington

college,

their

OTHER SPORTING EVENTS
THU.,

and

TUE., WED., THURS.
May 20-21-22
Sidney Toler as “Charlie Chan” in a

May
18-21
2 to 11

~

East.

May 18 &amp; 19
Dana Andrews

Bari,

born

John Ko-

on

Fair Oaks avenue to be vacated by
the Malcolm Muirs, who are -going

“KIT CARSON”

RECKONING”

Humphrey
Lizabeth

Blyth

Ruth Warrick, William
Gargan
Selected Short Subjects &amp; News

SUN. &amp; MON.
Jon Hall, Lynn

“PURSUED”
Teresa

Ann

“SWELL

TEL. L. F. 2106
THU.,

Tufts,

was

Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hayner and
children, Susan and Jimmy, who have
been living with Mrs. Hayner’s parets, Mr. and Mrs. A. L, Fry of
Springfield avenue, will be moving

P.M.

Marshall

FRI. &amp; SAT.

Deerfield.

of

and

Open

Daily

7:30

to

11:00

Sundaes
CARRY
961

—

Mr. and Mrs. David Stryker and
little daughter
of
Evanston
were
weekend guests of Mr. Stryker’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stryker of
Orchard lane.

“Boston Blackie and the Law”

LAKE

valcik

Central
day.

Mason

Trudy.

a daughter

to Mr.

Rev.

CO-ED

Morris,

that

last week

Mecomes

Rosemary terrace attended the alumni.
reunion of their alma mater, North

ALSO
Chester

report

Condell

in Libertyville

A. C. Schwarm

ILLINOIS

May

Elizabeth

Mrs. W. E. Starr was here from
Decatur, Ill, on Sunday to spend
Mothers’ Day with her mother, Mrs.

Traverse

a delightful

June 30 —

the

hospital

CAMP

Famous
Bay

Basketball, Dramatics
and Crafts.
Resident Registered Nurse.
4 &amp; 8 week periods.

We

Days—Show
Starts
7
Sundays—2:30
P.M.

DAY

girls

the

activities—Riding, Canoeing, Swimming, Archery, Tennis, Volleyball,

quicker. you
“Look, Punchy—th’
get knocked out—the quicker we'll
get to Tower Casino!”
Spaghetti - Ravioli - Steak

“The Perfect
Rogers

BEACH

Michigan’s

Northport, Michigan

“Till the Clouds
Roll By”

Roy

Lake

A GOOD PLACE
TO EAT

Highland Park
"TELEPHONE H. P. 2400
THURS.,

Lane,

Waukegan

OUT
Ave.

—

Saturday

night

until

12:00

- Sodas
HAMBURGERS

Tel. H. P. 1508

.

�MATCHED
Bridal

whl,
SPECIALS AT
will

you

Buschs

At

LOWEST

diamonds, nationally advertised watches
Our confidential
fered at lowest prices.
convenience.

Duet

quality

finest

of

selection

large

a

find

PRICES

and other jewelry ofkredit plan is at your

PERFECT

$49.50
75¢ Weekly
17 jewel
nationally
advertised
Bulova
watch.
10-k
natural
rolled gold plate case.
Ask for
No. 73.

$1.00

and

diamonds.

two

Ask

SEE

BRIDAL

genuine

One
ed

side

IN

OUR

7 DIAMOND

For
Both
$3.00 Weekly

In line with the vogue for matching

engagement

and

wedding

rings—you find this twelve genuine diamond bridal pair modern
in all respect.
natural gold.

18-k white
No. 150.

DIAMONDS
AND
MOUNTINGS
ARE ENLARGED
TO BRING OUT
OF DESIGN.

or 14-k

fine

of

18-k

white

with
Ask

for No. 96.

WINDOWS

PERFECT

us

Jewels

yl Jie

$3 3.75

50c Weekly
A

pairs

17

:

$1 675
$]

Hb
:

of our latest style matchbridal

BULOVA

Weddin
Ring

Both

or 14-k
natural
gold
eight genuine diamonds.

for No. 94.

SPECIALS

For
Weekly

$1.50

Artistically designed ring of
18-k white
or
14-k
natural
gold with a perfect center diamond

MATCHED

Weekly

modern

75¢c Weekly

wedding

ring

CARRYING

DELIVERY—NO

IMMEDIATE

2

SHOWN
DETAIL

a

Large sparkling center diamond
with four fiery side diamonds in
beautifully engraved 18-k white
or 14-k natural gold ring. No. 300.

;

mA 3
ee

CHARGE

DIAMOND
SET RING

UME

PERFECT

$6.00 Weekly

A lovely 17 jewel ladies’ Bulova watch with small size 10k natural rolled gold plate
case. No. 33.

with
seven
genuine
diamonds in
neatly
engraved
18-k white or 14-k natural
gold. No. 41.

hens

Latest style 10-k natural gold
ring with two genuine diamonds
on the sides of the
simulated birthstone.
No. 21.

75¢ Weekly

PRICES

BUSCHS

B

Open

Sparkling
perfect
diamond
in
this heavy massive gents’ 14-k
natural gold ring. A ring every
man will be proud to wear. Ask
for Gents’ Perfect ‘‘250.”

ALWAYS

Monday

and

FEDERAL

INCLUDE
Thursday

Gents’

TAX

Evenings

shockproof

15

natural

KREDIT JEWELERS — OPTICIANS
~ 1624 Sherman Avenue, Evanston
Chicago

Loop

4 Other

Store,

37

Conveniently

E.

Madison

Located

and

watch.

10-k

S

plate case.

USCH
Also

accurate

St.

Stores

ae
dependable

jewel

Benrus

rolled

Ask for No. 92.

gold

Ce

7

£4]

Ri

�Have

You

Watched

This Weekly

Hospital

HIGHLAND

Emergencies

PARK

HOSPITAL

Record?

DOINGS

Week

of May

to May

9th,

3rd

1947

attended

Babies delivered —-.--- sbesteseeeeebesece sees
Operations performed
X-ray examinations —----- |
Laboratory

examinations

If you

impressed

are

by

the hospitals importance
ber

this...

. not

able to get it when

this

week-by-week

report

of

in our daily lives, just remem-

everyone

needing

hospital

he needs it—because

care

is

our hospital

is too small for our community!
To safeguard the health of YOUR

family, it is important

that the Highland Park Hospital Building Fund goes ’way
over the top!

Have you made your contribution?

WHEN YOUR NEIGHBOR CALLS
MAKE A 3-YEAR CONTRIBUTION
TO THE HOSPITAL BUILDING FUND
This

advertisement

is sponsored

by

friends

of

the

hospital.

�</text>
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                    <text>Photos

Gimpses

Thursday, May 8, 1947

of the Chamber

of Commerce

“Ladies’ Night’

Dinner

Oo

oCe

by

James

Kilcoyne

�‘«

Mother's

Day

MOTHER,
Crown

your MOTHER
the day—have

is the queen of her realm.

your

family

dinner

at the

Moraine.

Dust off the chariot; groom the steeds;
food prepared

come enjoy

to a queen’s taste.

Plebiantly priced

MORAINE
801

N. Sheridan

Road

HOTEL
Highland Park, IIlinois

�Volume

22,

Number

Thursday,

6

Rotary Club Commended

Bus Hearing
To May 14

At District Conference
Adopts

Oral arguments, it is reported, will
be heard before
the
Illinois
Commerce
Commission
on Wednesday,
May 14, at 10 a.m. at 160 North LaSalle street, Chicago, concerning the
petition of the Highland Coach Lines,
Inc., to operate
Deerfield-Highland
Park

bus

service.

This

is a continua-

tion of the hearing held April 29
which “was to be the last hearing”
Petitions of the bus company to establish

service

‘The Circus Is Coming
To Town on Saturday!

Deerfield-Northbrook

Continue

running

to

the

high

5 European

we
oo

Families

At the Rotary International District
Conference held at Rock Island, IIlinois,

April

25

and

26,

the

Deerfield-

Northbrook Rotary club had the opportunity of explaining to the conference at large its European Adoption
Program. This program
is one
in
which the Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary club has adopted five European

Admission is free and everyone
invited to the two-hour circus.

and in some cases
ters, have been lost
Every two weeks
package containing

Firemen and Amvets
Will Hold Dance

sons and daughduring the war.
the club sends a
clothes and food

school or to Highwood
have
been
opposed by the Chicago, North Shore
and Milwaukee Roailroad Co. on the to meet the needs of these families
excuse that such trips would parallel so that each family receives several
the North Shore line’s tracks.
The packages a year. A personal letter by
Highwood route was dropped several the Rotarian who sent the package
months ago.
accompanies each shipment, and the
Attorneys Stout and Thorney, rep- idea is to help these people, and, in
resenting the North Shore line, have so doing, build international good will.
stated there is no objection to the bus
A full talk on the details of the
line between Deerfield and Central
avenue, Highland Park, but they do program was given at the Conference
not explain how the bus is to turn and received with great enthusiasm.
around in the
business
section
of Many other clubs have indicated a
definite interest in adopting this proHighland Park on Central avenue.
gram, and the Deerfield-Northbrook
It would be of interest for Deer- ‘club is honored to feel that it has
field residents
concerned
with
the inaugurated something which is dowhy and wherefore of these contin- ing so much good and which other
uous postponements and opposition to clubs are going to adopt.
appear at the next meeting on May
14.
At one of the
continuations
in
March, the ICC instructed the North
Shore line attorneys to complete its
objections at the April 29 hearing,
but now the opposition
has
been
granted another continuation.
Words as colossal as “stupendous”
The general passenger agent for
the North Shore line testified for his and “magnificent” would not begin to
describe the exciting event “Fashions
company.
He presented three beautiful maps of the area around the Cen- and Fun” which was given Saturday
tral avenue-Vine avenue stations. He evening in the Deerfield Grammar
school under the
auspices
of
the
gave details of all the trains, north
PTA.
and southbound that pass these two
Pretty, petite, vivacious
Mrs.
Irl
stations each 24 hours and the average

i

number

of passengers

in each

and a detail of the number

car,

of empty

seats.

When

cross-examined

Axelrod,

attorney

for

by
the

David

bus

line,

the passenger agent could give no details

as

to

the

number

of

passengers

carried between these two stations
and stated that his statistics were for
the

road,

in

general.

that no count had
passengers

It

was

ever been

between

these

stated

made
two

The

route,

as

now

proposed

by

bus line and opposed by the railroad,
beginning on Deerfield road would go
east

on

Central

avenue

across

the

tracks; north on St. John’s avenue to
Vine avenue for the high school; then
west on Vine avenue to Green Bay
road. Here, the bus would go south
to Elm Place, east on Elm Place to
First street, then south on First street
to the Highland Park business district, and then west to Deerfield.
_ Opposition was presented by the

Deerfield-Bannockburn

Fire Department dance is scheduled
for Saturday, May 10, at 8:30 p.m.
in the Briergate clubhouse. This year
it is to be a joint party given with the
Amvets co-sponsors.
The fire department recently acquired a piece of property just east
of the railroad tracks on the south
side of Deerfield road, as a future site
for a new fire station. The payments
on the property and money for the
new building will necessitate many
benefit parties similar to the one being planned for this coming Saturday
evening.
The community is invited.

New

Gas Masks

Arrive

for

Chosen King &amp; Queen for
PTA “Fashions &amp; Fun”

Fire Chief Russell Batt reports the
arrival of two new gas masks for the

Marshall

and

her

dignified

husband,

selected as king and queen for the
evening,
accepted
the
coronation
ceremonies with regal bearing, much
to the delight of the large audience.
Gifts galore
were
showered
upon
them.
Games, a style show, and delicious’
refreshments, added to make it a decided social and financial success.

of

the

is

Local Fire Department

sta-

tions and admitted that the number
would be small.
The North Shore line wants bus
passengers transferred to their electric line, with extra fare for this short
trip.

The annual

North
Shore
line
attorney,
Fred
Stout, with C. E. Thorney, public relations head, sitting close-by.
John Heinemann of Chicago, who
will have charge of the bus service
for this area if and when bus service
is approved,

was

in Deerfield

on

Mon-

day and stated that he was confident
that this continuation
to May
14
would be the final hearing and that
the examiners would complete the
case at that time.

use

of

the

develop their own oxygen from canisters which
contain
chemicals
for
this purpose.
The
containers
cost

about $6 each.

Is Poppy Day
The Deerfield unit of the American
Legion auxiliary, will hold its annual
Poppy Day for the sale of poppies for
the benefit of disabled veterans on
Monday, May 26.
Mrs. C. C. Kapschull Sr. is chair- .
man of the poppy poster contest and
the sale of the poppies.

“

Sunday Circle Number One elected
officers on Thursday afternoon as
follows: Marjorie Brown, president ;
Darlene Black, vice president; Helen
Hout,

Sister

secretary;

Deerfield Village board will meet
on Tuesday, May 13, at 8 p.m. in the

basement

Katharine

Marshall,

Mary Ann Meyer, publicity
They will take office on
two pictures of the group
last week Caroline Kerriwas omitted.

of

the

Masonic

Temple.

It will be the final meeting of the
1945-46-47.
board of trustees.
The
rezoning application will be on the ©
list of unfinished business
to be
brought before this group.

Retiring

after

the

completion

of

their work will be P. A. Tennis, H..
G. Cazel, and G. T. Scott. Their suc- —
cessors are to be Eric Banfield, Harold L. Peterson, and Joseph W. King.
|
Mayor Robert S. Alexander, Trustees Anthony Mercurio, Andrew G.
Bradt, and Floyd Stanger, and Village —
Clerk Chester Wessling, make up the
remainder of the board, with Erwin
Seago, as attorney.
.

Cookies Wanted for

Downey Hospital
Mrs.
Carl
Scheer,
rehabilitation |
chairman of the Deerfield unit, American Legion auxiliary, reports that
National Hospital Day will be ob- |
served at Downey Veterans’ hospital,
near North Chicago, on Sunday, from |
11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The hospital will be

open to the public and guests will be
escorted on tours and have tea in the
recreation

lounge.

Anyone in Deerfield and Bannockburn who would like to contribute
cookies for this open house at the veterans’ hospital may take the gifts to
the Georgian shop on Saturday where
Mrs. Scheer will arrange for their delivery.

ON
This

THE
week’s

COVER
cover

shows

various

candid camera shots taken by James
Kilcoyne, local photographer, at the
recent dinner of the
Chamber
of
Commerce at St. Paul’s church,
=
In the extreme upper left corner
are pictured Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. ©
Peterson.
Peterson
is
the
newly —

elected

Monday, May 26

treasurer;
chairman.
Miss Ann McGary of Chicago is May 17.
In ‘the
visiting her sister, Mrs. J. C. Fuller,
and her niece, Mrs. F. W. Nolde at published
hard’s name
their home on Meadowbrook lane.

Visit

Deerfield-Bannockburn

fire department members.
They are
known as “Chemox” masks and are
made by the Mine Safety Appliance
Co.
The masks which cost approximately $130 each, are the new type that

Presbyterian Girls
Elect New Officers

8, 1947

Village Board
Meets May 13

place.

families who are in very bad straits—
in a number of cases, the husband,

Mr. &amp; Mrs, irl Marshall

”

Cub Scouts are
having a big circus on Saturday,
opening
with
a
parade at 1:30 at
the Masonic Temple. The
line of
few
march will lead to
\ \&gt;y
the Deerfield
old
school gymnasium
where
all the “big top” events will take

May

village

trustee.

Across

the

top, left to right, are L. K. Carr, A.
C. Ullmann, Mr. and Mrs. Frank O’-—
Connor and Mrs. Raymond Goodpas- |
ture.
In the lower right picture, third
from the right
is
Milton
Frantz,
president of the Chamber of Commerce, and to his right is the secretary, Mrs. Edna S. Orsborn.

Police Warning

|

Numerous coniplaints have been
received by the Deerfield Police
Department about dogs running
loose and damaging gardens. The
ordinance

requires

all

dogs

to

be

on a leash, when off their’ own
premises.
Chief of Police Percy McLaughlin also states that dog licenses and
vehicle licenses are delinquent and
arrests are now being made for
residents who have failed to purchase them.

_

�Page

Thursday,

4

MEET YOUR, NEIGHBORS
THE DOUGLAS CULVER FAMILY

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

s

Thursday,

May

8,

Vol.

1947

22,

No.

Park,

Telephone

The PTA
of the Deerfield Grammar school feels that most of the suc-

cess of the “Fashion and Fun” party
on Saturday evening was due to the
contributors, more than 150 in num-

year

ber,
and

4500

There

It is so easy to sit back and criticize,—to congregate with fellowmen

that

action

civic

on

af-

fairs is obtained by voting.
. If you are for or against light manufacturing,—for or against issuing a
permit for a gun club, for or against
anything or everything, tell it where
it really counts for something! Tell
it at the village board, not on the
street

corners.

The village board has begged and
pleaded for expressions of opinions
from the villagers, either verbal or in
writing. Why not help them by tell‘ing them what you think?
The Deerfield Forum is open to all
readers to express their opinions. Letters must be signed, but the name
will not be used unless requested. A
signed statement is much more forceful.

Are You Really Interested
Deerfield’s Civic Program

in

Every time there is a civic meeting
in Deerfield for the proper study of
Deerfield’s real civic problems, the
voters stay away. Then, by word of
mouth,

they

tell

each

other,

loudly,

what they would do, what this board
and that board didn’t do, and how the
village is going to—, a place not proper to mention in print.
~
Women’s

clubs,

mothers’

groups,

in

fact all women’s groups have difficulty in getting their members out for
civic study programs. The majority
only want to eat and be entertained.
One woman said she thought it was
silly for women to “dig up the sewers
and inyestigate things.”’
“Light
manufacturing”
to
one
woman in the village meant the manufacture of electric light fixtures and
she was so surprised when informed
of the meaning.
Evening meetings with open forums
for both men and women have been
so poorly

attended

that it has

discouraging for those who
betterment.

become

seek civic

Presbyterian League
Bowling Banquet Will
Be Held Monday Evening
The annual banquet of the Presbyterian bowling league
will be held
Monday, May 12, at 7:30 p.m. in the
Presbyterian
church
dining
room.
Committee
in charge of arrangements includes Albert Arentz, president; Warren Darling, treasurer ; and
Raymond F. Spars, secretary .

faithful

with

its gift

articles.

were
of

too

the

many
school

parents
who

and

worked

Dance May 10

it is action

is cheap,

our

Firemens’-Amvets’

to tell how you would run the village,
the state, and even the world, but did
and

includes

REVIEW

their fingers to the bone,—and their
brains to a pulp,—to mention them
individually, but they were so grand
about helping that they should all be
made girl and boy scouts for their
good deeds.
(Mrs. R. G.) Elizabeth Heupel
PTA Publicity Chairman

j.

Talk Is Cheap

Talk

this

news

friends

Action Counts

counts,

and

DEERFIELD

MEMBER
;
Association
Editorial
National
Tllinois Press
Association
‘Entered as second-class matter Novem:
1944, at the post office at Deer~
ber
27,
of March
Act
the
under
field,
Illinois,
8, 1879.”

you vote?

Forum

To the Editor:

Illinois

H.P.

1947

Thanks Community for
Cooperation With PTA

6

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
Chestnut St., Deerfield,
Illinois
Ruth Pettis, Editor
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday

Highland

8,

Deerfield

745

Lecal Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate— $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
;
Foreign
Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.

May

Dear
Photo

Left

to right:

Culver

Mr.

Brian,

Mrs.

Culver,

Douglas

Jr., and

Ezra

Smith

Douglas

Sr.

and

Mrs.

Douglas

Culver

and

their two sons are living at 700 Osterman avenue.at.the present time. With
housing shortages so prevalent, they
had tried trailer living for a while.
Young Brian is two years old and
his young brother is seven months

old.
Mrs. Culver is» the. former
Kay
Miles and her home was in Corning
Iowa, before
coming
to
Deerfield
seven years ago. She attended schools
there and taught in a rural school
near Corning.
Mr. Culver, born in Macon, Ga.,
has

holding

by

lived

in

the

village

about

five

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
THURSDAY, May 8—
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon
7:30 p.m. Royal Neighbors in Town
Hall.
8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar school
spring concert, first night.
FRIDAY, May 9—
8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar school
spring concert, second night.
SATURDAY, May 10—
~ 1:30 p.m. Cub Scout Circus parade.
2 p.m. “Big Top” in school gym.
8 p.m. Firemen-Amvets dance at
Briergate clubhouse.
MONDAY, May 12—
8 p.m. American’ Legion post.
TUESDAY, May 13—
8 p.m. Village board.
WEDNESDAY, May 14—
10 a.m. Bus hearing at 160 N. La
Salle st., Chicago, on Deerfield-Highland Park bus service.
;
8 p.m. Township board meeting.
THURSDAY, May 15—
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
1 p.m. Spring luncheon, Presbyterian Woman’s association,
8 p.m. Amvets’ auxiliary.
FRIDAY, May 16—
8 p.m. Amvets in Masonic Temple.
8 p.m.
Board
of Education-PTA
meeting at Deerfield Grammar school,
SATURDAY, May 17—

years. While attending school here,
he lived in the home of his uncle,
Gerald Culver of Hazel avenue.
In
the navy one

year, he received

a med-

ical discharge and returned to Deerfield to finish high school in Highland Park.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Culver enjoy
bowling, although not members of a
league.
Mr. Culver is employed at
the Northbrook Village Tin Shop.
Future plans are to move to Atlanta, Ga., where Mr. Culver expects
to attend Georgia Tech for an engineering course.

Do

Deerfield

Residents

Want Light Manufacturing?
All

the

taxpayers

do

not

feel

the

same, so why put it to a vote?
One of the nearest neighbors to the
proposed factory spoke in favor of it
at

the

Will

open

we

company,

meeting.

ever
who

forget the Jewel
have

a beautiful

Tea
plant

in

Barrington?—NO!
I believe Deerfield would have been
a more prosperous town if they had
been allowed to come in to Deerfield
. . . but doesn’t look like Deerfield
will ever progress.
Jane Sallach
1034 Osterman avenue
A tax-payer for 26 years.
Deerfield, Ill.
Opinions expressed in these columns do not necessarily constitute
the opinions of the paper. Letters

Friends:

We are sure most of the citizens
of Deerfield and Bannockburn know
what we have been doing with the
money raised by our Annual Dances,
but, for the new

citizens who

whose name

will be withheld if re-

8 p.m. Eastern Star card party.
MONDAY, May 19—
8 p.m. Legion auxiliary unit.
TUESDAY, May 20—

8 p.m. Masonic lodge.
THURSDAY, May 22—
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce.
Future Events:
July 11-12-13—Firemen-Amvets carnival,
August 15-16-17’—Legion carnival.

not

was

applied

to

the

purchase

price

of

our new Fire Truck of which every
citizen should be proud. Last summer’s Carnival netted us $2000. which
was used as a down payment on a $5,000. piece of property just east of the
railroad track on Deerfield road which
is to be the site of our new Fire Station. We have a balance of $3,000. to
pay

on

this

property

before

we

can

build and this Annual Dance is one
of the very few ways we have of
raising money.
We, your Volunteer Fire Department sincerely hope you will continue
to give us the same splendid co-operation you have shown in the past,
for everyone should realize a good
Fire Department is an essential part
of every

community.

Deerfield Amvet Post No. 63 is assisting in this dance as in the Carnival of last year with a recreation center as their goal. The dance is Saturday,

May

10,

at

Briergate

club.

Ticket money may
be
left with
Stuart Hoadleyat the Deerfield State
Bank, Mrs. Hattie Wessling at the
Village Hall or may be sent direct to
me at my home, 1041 Hazel Avenue,
Deerfield.
Buy your share of this new property for the\fire station.
Very

sincerely,

Russell Batt
Fire Chief

should be brief and should contain
the name and address of the writer,
quested,

may

know, here is a brief summary.
The money realized from our previous dances which amounted to $2000.

The Timely Topic:
Light Manufacturing
To the Editor:
_ Here
view.

is a
I

letter,

can’t

hope

it gets

understand

why

in

the
a_

Renew,

modern factory can’t be let into Deerfield.
The
brickyard
and
the mill are terrible
eyesores, and like I heard a young
man
tell Mr.
Cochrane
that
evening
(of the
hearing),
“There
are
too many
ten-cent
millionaires
in Deerfield.”
I think the business men are so selfish,
If said firm that wants to buy and build
would import
80 people here, that would
be 30 more homes and taxes to be paid.
I believe
they
were
sincere
and
would
build
a nice
factory
and
landseape
the
grounds.
Sincerely,
Jane
Sallach

�[Deerfield PTA and ,

Presbyteri

WW

Board of Education

To Hear Winifred Wercee Ss
Plan Joint Session
Bible Story Chalk Talk
The

annual

Deerfield

spring

luncheon

Presbyterian

of the

Woman's

as-

sociation will be held Thursday, May
15, at 1 p.m. in fhe newly remodeled
church dining room.
Circle 2 will
serve the luncheon with Mrs. Frank
Glotfelty, chairman, directing.
Circle 3, of which Mrs. E. M. Davis is chairman, have planned the devotional part of the program.
Mrs. Walter W. Lige, the new president,
will
preside.
Mrs.
Chester
Wolf, program chairman, will introduce the guest speaker, Miss Winnifred Vercoe, of Chicago, formerly of
Highland Park, a recent graduate of
Moody Bible Institute, whose, “Chalk
Talk on Bible Stories’ will be of special interest to all mothers and Sunday school workers.
Miss Vercoe is Mrs. E. M. Davis’
sister.

Marriage Licenses

Issued Recently
A

marriage

license

been

issued

in Chicago to Axel Olson, 1427 Somerset
avenue,
Deerfield, and
Mrs.
Elma Redine of Highland Park.
In Joliet, a marriage license was
issued to Cyrus J. Fritsch of Northbrook and Dorothy Renner of Highland Park.
Last week, in Waukegan, a marriage license was issued to Clair N.
McChesney, 37, of 1019 Greenwood
avenue, Deerfield, and Miss Arline
M. Mentzer of 660 Chestnut street,
Deerfield.

PTA Executive Board
Holds Monthly Meeting
Thursday

evening

in

the

Deerfield

Grammar school.
;
Mrs, Robert O. Clark, the president,
presided,
and
the
following
members
Henning

formed
the
Hermanson,

Winters,

Mrs.

ward

Cazel,

J. W.

Mrs.

quorum;
Mrs.
Mrs. Herbert

King,

A.

F.

Mrs.

Ed-

Sturm,

Mrs.

J.

B.

Carson,

Mrs.

N.

C.

Lane, Mrs. C. E. Morgan, Mrs. G. A.
Jacobs, Mrs. Vernon Giss, Mrs. R.
G. Heupel, and William E. Sheehan.
Deerfield Girls Win
Horsemanship Ribbons
At the horsemanship show on Sunday at Brown’s Riding academy on
Deerfield road, five Deerfield girls
won

various

types

of

ribbon

awards.

Those
receiving
the
horsemanship
honors were Barbara Reed, Katherine
Kies,

Roberta

sisters,

Nolde,

and

and

Phyllis

Marjorie

the

twin

George.

Holy Cross Mothers’ Club
Will Meet Tomorrow Evening
The Holy Cross Mothers’ club of
the Holy Cross parochial school will
hold an important business meeting
and election of officers on Friday,
May

9, at 8 p.m.

Mrs. Harold Norman of Bannock_ burn has been nominated as a trustee
_ for the Lake County Tuberculosis asE

.:

iat

°.

aN

{Young People of
Protestant Churches.

Plan United Group ©

of

board

will

be

members

and

briefly

president,

Mrs.

program

the
of

On

for

O.

next

the

Clark.

The

year

will

be

at this time.

The

nominating

committee,

Mrs.

Arthur
F. Kaatz,
chairman,
Mrs.
Clarence Wilson, and Mrs. Donald
Easton, will present candidates for
the

expired

terms

of

vice

president

or

and secretary. Retiring officers are
Mrs. Lewis Hayner, vice president,
and

Mrs.

Edward

E.

Cazel,

secretary.

Following the brief business meeting, the board of education will make
a report of the district and all residents of District 109 are invited to
of

the

currents

activities.

They

will attempt to answer some of the
questions most frequently asked about
the school and its program.

W. E. Sheehan Participates
In District PTA Conclave
Held May 6 at Fox Lake

well

is

wise;

planning well, wiser; doing well, wisest of all.”
There were round table discussions
covering Health, Rural Service, Visual Education, and Recreation.
The
conference on Recreation was conducted by William E. Sheehan, superintendent of the Deerfield Grammar
school.

—Photo

by

James

Kilcoyne

Mrs. Youart is fhe former Martene

Oakes.

T/Set.

W..

Her

W.

marriage

Youart

took

April 26 in the Deerfield
terian

to
place

Presby-

church.

SPRING CONCERT
At Deerfield School

presentin the’ Spring Concert.

This

event will be held in the grammar
school gym on the evenings of Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9, at 8
p.m.
The program each evening will be
different in order that every class
group and every musical organization
will have an opportunity to perform.
On Thursday evening the following

will be heard:
Kindergarten—in
First

Tunes

Grade—Our

and

Musical

Grade—The

Circus

Action
Calendar

Comes

to

Town

Kent-Berger
Engagement

Third

Grade—Our

Fourth

Grade—Songs

and

Dances

of Satine

Sixth

Songs

of 706 Central
avenue,
Deerfield.
The wedding will take place in July.

Girls Chorus—7th

Social Situation

Also selected solos and instrumental]
groups.
On Friday
evening
the program
will offer: Band, two marches, two

THE SITUATION:
You are
dressing a letter to a widow.

ad-

Martha

Jones.
(A

RIGHT
widow

band’s

WAY: Mrs. John Jones.
continues to use her hus-

name

until

she

marries

again).

The same situation exists in newspaper reports, also, so please don’t
say “Hang Emily Post” when we ask
for your correct name.—The Editor.

Sets Wedding Day
June 7 has been selected by Miss
Ruth Schmidt and Edward Horenber\ger for their wedding day.

Grade—More

waltzes,

and

an.

of

Spring

and 8th Grade girls

overture.

Roundup

Camp at Night—an operetta for boys,
presented by the 7th and 8th grade
boys.
i
Orchestra:
Two short pieces by Handel
Ave Verum Corpus—Mozart
Russian Overture—Isaac
Freckles—Isaac
This program, arranged and supervised by L. Paul Brown, will be the
first of an increasingly expanded and
perfected series of concerts planned
by the music department of the Deerfield Grammar school for the parents.
Both programs, tonight and tomorrow evening, are open to the public.
aoe

Aper

Siar

ck ae

Sey

Beh eee

-

hg

churches

name

people,
for the

the

uniting

of the

might
serve
as ex 3
selection of a future —

for the new organization.
Delegates

ge

Delegates to this initial meeting in.
pastor of each church as foilows:
Bethlehem
church,
Anita Pagel.
Richard Merner, Marjorie Hurt, an
Francis

Boelter.

Evelyn
Louise

Black, Willard Allen Jr.,
Bertrand, and Rev. B. es

Vanderbeek.

Birthday Anniversaries © %
Peggy
William

Jo George, daughter of the
D.
Georges
of
Westcliff

road, entertained

a group of friends

on Saturday evening, May 3, at her
home in honor of her birthday anni:
versary.
pa
Eighteen years old, and that important date on May 2, called for a
celebration, also. Roger Hunt, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hunt, was host _

to a group of his friends on Friday at

a dinner
avenue.

at his

home

on

Pee

Oaks
,
hdr

Fifth Grade—Songs

Mrs.

delegates

Protestant

America

Announcement
has been made
of
the engagement of Miss Ann L,. Berger of Chicago to William M. Kent

WAY:

“Unity”, for

young
amples

Rey.

Members of the various classes and
organizations of the Deerfield Grammar school have been trying to perfect the numbers which they are to

Second

WRONG

afternoon

three

Tonight &amp; Tomorrow

A district meeting of the Illinois
Congress of Parents and Teachers
was held Tuesday, May 6, beginning
at 2 p.m. and including a dinner meeting in Grant Community High school
at Fox Lake.
The general theme of the conference was taken from an old Persian
“Thinking

the

Richard Merner of Forest avenue to.
discuss the possibilities of a united |
youth organization for the village.
The purpose of this organization,
as explained by Louise Bertrand, is_
to plan programs and parties that
would be impossible to give in small _
groups. The first of these meetings |
is scheduled for Sunday, May 25, a
the Presbyterian church, but details —
are not yet definite.
All young people of high school age
and over are urged to attend these
meetings. No name has been selected —
but suggestions are welcome. Names
such as “Amity” suggesting friendship

PTA

by

Sunday

from

execu-

the

summarized
Robert

theme

selected

of

chairmen

Miss

Beth Andrew,
Mrs. John Vieregg,
Mrs. James Collins, Mrs. Frank Frabel,

Reports
tive

proverb:

The concluding session of the present PTA executive board was held

ae

The annual meeting of the Deerfield Grammar school Parent-Teacher.
association will be held Friday, May
16, at 8 p.m. in conjunction with the
board of education.

hear

has

a
5 ¥
eetocts

Ea

ser

Suzanne Heupel
blew
out
nine |
candles and one to grow on at her.
ninth birthday anniversary on Satur-—
day. A party with ice cream and cake
for the children of her fourth grade
room
in the
Deeffield
Grammar
school was held Friday afternoon.
BS

Mrs. John J. Welch, wife of Deer- 3)

field’s postmaster, observed her birth-.
day anniversary on Monday.
Seventeen

Danny Newcomb was 17 on Aprit
30 and entertained a group of friends _
at dinner that evening at his home in|
Bannockburn.
Bob Pettis Jr. was 17 on May 2 and
celebrated with a dinner and show
for some of “the gang.”
¥
Glenn Harris was 17 the previous
week. He, too, had a “stag dinner.”
Five

Louise Bradt, daughter of the A. feet
Bradts of Margate terrace, observed
her fifth birthday anniversary at a i
pees on eer
ae 5.
fa tae

�Buddy Ponpies Will
Bloom Here May 24
In Annual VFW Sale

FRED

anda

RED

Gloria Linari of Highwood has the
leading role of Sylvia in the New
York City
production
of
“Sweethearts” at the Shubert Theatre.
Nella Bernardi of the First National
Bank is to be congratulated on her
engagement

to

Lee

Coppi.

Chief Electrician’s Mate Paul E.
Richter is at the Highland Park Post
Office every Thursday recruiting for
the regular and reserve navy program . . . Complete training in electronics and summer cruises are featured in the new Navy agenda.
Jim

DeSanto,

umpire,

won’t

Highland
be

Park’s

ace

’em_

this

calling

Buddy poppies will bloom again
soon on coat lapels and in button
holes in Highland
Park, for Post
4737, Veterans of Foreign Wars, has
set May 24 as the date for Buddy
Poppy day. The event will mark the
26th annual sale and the second local
sale of Buddy poppies for benefit of
disabled American war veterans and

you

contribution
-

Hospital

made

to

your

the

three

Highland

Jack Evers, outstanding lineman. of
Highland Park High crack elevens of
1941-42, is a leading tackle candidate
at Lake Forest College.

Poppy

day,

Zaeske

assisted

Investigating Christian Science
They are finding health and peace far beyond
investigate

it at no cost.

CHRISTIAN

The

BIBLE,

that

a few

and

can be

tickets

are

purchased

at

to

announce

still

available

the

SCIENCE

LITERATURE

P.S. — The T-shirt value of three
regular dollar shirts for $2.50 is still
on.
P.S. — We are open Monday nights
—7 to 9.

April

30

at

Highland

Tamarri
A daughter was born at Highland
Park hospital on Friday, May 2, to
Central

The

CHRISTIAN

textbook and

READING

WHEN

DAILY

*+-

YOU

ARE

parents

of

FOR

instrument,

beautifully

Full size, exchangeable

WOMEN

unit.

SHEAFFER'S

rofilling

finally

be-

to change

from

blue

Vv
i
V

comes necessary or you
want

ei

Ann,

born

on

Wednesday,

an eloquent silence; it serves
to approve, sometimes to
there is a mocking silence;
respectful silence.
—La Rochefoucauld

17

Campbell chapter will present an
Eastern Star spring dance for A. O.
Fay Lodge Royal Arch chapter members and friends on Saturday, May 17,
starting at 8:30 p.m. in the Masonic
temple.

WALTER

BALL-TIP

Writes a smooth, even line
for weeks, months and even
years, depending on how
much you write

When

hos-

Park

May 5.

is optional.

not in use.

DEPENDABLE

at Highland

Tickets for the affair are available
from committee members or at the
door the evening of the dance. Members of the dance committee are Dorothy Gillilan, Victoria Iverson, Vera
Witten, Capt. Ralph Ebersole, Arthur
Hollands and Joseph Lambert. Dress:

Especially designed for tucking away
when

hospital.

Spring Dance for OES Members

engine -

writing

the

Monday,

and Friends Saturday, May

A precision-uilt, jewelry-fine writing

born

Park

North

are

April 23, at the Clinton Memorial hospital in St. Johns, Mich.
There is
sometimes
condemn,
there is a

AND

a daughter

born

TO SHEAFFER’S

MEN

of 439

Highwood,

5, at Highland

Martha

ROOM

Stealouriler
TUCKAWAY ...

Bertis

avenue,

Mr. and Mrs. Phil Muzik of Carson
City, Mich., former residents of Highwood, are the parents of a daughter,

WELCOME

IT COMES TO WRITING—COME

Highwood.

Muzik

43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN

Armendo

Central

of a son,

containing testimonies of 7

SCIENCE

avenue,

pital on Monday,

healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at

door.

New arrivals
All wool grey
flannel trousers manufactured by the
Goodall oe
of Palm
Beach suits . .. Botany wool gabardine shirts . . . Jockey shorts . .
Whisper weight felt hats to sell for
$6.50 and Western Style blue jeans—
zippers included.

born

hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Inman of
| 827. Sandwick court, are the parents

the

in purse or pocket. Cap protects point

wishes

son,

Inman

their expectation. You, too, if you wish, may

Bud Maroney, chairman of
day night’s big VFW Dance
Temple,

a

Park

May

turned with blank space for engraving.

Labor

Mrs.

of

Berti

Liz Goss, Vera Thaleg and Mary
Dinelli of our women’s department
will be glad to help you select your
Mother’s Day gift.
Saturat the

by

as co-chairman.

Mr. and Mrs. Ortwin Schimmel of
339 East Park avenue are the parents

The

Park

We are now stocking suits to fit
the large size man... We have an
attractive assortment of longs, stouts
and shorts in spring and summer
weights.

Buddy

Elsie

New Thousands Are Now

Building Fund?

Norm Durment, former Highland
Park High athletic great, will wed
Mary Schwalbach, Saturday, May 17
at the Immaculate Conception Church
. Alden Harris, a running mate of
Norm in football and track, will be
the best man.
..In case you might
have forgotten Norm held the world’s
high school record in the 200 yard low
hurdles and was also Illinois champion in that event.

Mrs. Mona Bergman is the Highland
Park auxiliary
chairman for

Schimmel

Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Tamarri of 430

year

Leo LaBuda and Harold Glandt will
pilot our entry in the Cities Softball
League this summer.

sale is voluntary.

Hall, Werld!

North

summer at Sunset Park since his duties as manager of the Great Lakes
Enlisted Men’s Club will keep him
busy ... Jim’s “tell your friends and
bring your friends” will be missed by
his admirers behind the plate.
Have

didic Ceacadenrs
The
name
“Buddy
Sone
was
chosen for the flowers by the disabled veterans who make them. This
year more ex-servicemen in government hospitals than ever before are
busily fashioning the blossoms.
The disabled men are paid for making the poppies, but all other work
in connection with the nationwide

to red or green, just insert
an entirely new complete
writing unit, including balltip, into the fine jewelry
holder. New units are only

$1.00.

;

V

WRITING

Ideal for addressing packages, for making carbons,
signing stencils.

Rolls your writing on dry in ©
permanent Red,
Green Strato-ink.

Blue

or

One hand easily operates
the quick-action retractable point of the long, vestpocket model.

Chandlers
525 CENTRAL AVE.

The

Tailor

Writes at any altitude, in
any climate, on almost any
surface, wet or dry.

TEL. H. P. 3100

ALTERATIONS
Men‘s aad

Women's

Clothes
Without
Suits Made

Delay
to Order

Also Cleaning and Pressing
&amp;
Pick up Tuesday before
10:00 a.m. and Delivered
on Friday
\
8 N. Second St.
H. P. 1712

�hamber of Commerce Tuesday
Congressional Medal Hero
Newly Returned from Pacific

ernment.

The monthly meeting of the Highland Park Chamber of Commerce this
coming Tuesday evening will feature
Brigadier General William H. Wilbur, who will discuss his experiences.
The meeting place is the Sunset Valley club, and a dinner is planned for
6:30 o’clock.
General Wilbur, a resident of Highland Park since 1938, was graduated
from West Point in 1912 and retired
from active duty on March 31, 1947.
He served in the first world war and
greatly
distinguished
himself
in
World War II, receiving numerous
citations. The most outstanding honor
conferred upon him was being decorated personally by the late President
Roosevelt in Casablanca
with
our
country’s highest award,
the Congressional Medal of Honor, for his
part in planning and securing an armistice with the French Military gov-

in Europe and only recently returned
from Japan, Korea and the Philippines, where he did special work for

Following
made

the

War

General

Park

justly

his

war

proud
record

of
and

WE ALL NEED OUR SHARE
OF GOOD HOSPITAL CARE!
Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the
Highland Park Hospital
$525,000 Building Fund

CAMP

GREENWOOD.

Bay,

Door

County,

Wisconsin

;

IS FOR
BOYS AND GIRLS
Ages 7 to 14 Years
|

People with high blood pressure should have regular physical examinations, then follow
the doctor’s
orders until
the
conditions is improved.
Only
by strict adherence to the doctor’s advice can serious consequences be avoided.

July

They
of

4

will

real

to

August

enjoy

outdoor

ionship
and

with

girls

a

front and

15
advantages

and

fine

under

Greenwood

the

life

compan-

group

able

of boys

guidance.

is ideally situated with

all the facilities which

Never take medicine unless
the doctor prescribes it, then

natural

woods, water-

beauty

can

Phone

the prescription.

or

write,

CAMP
Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

etc.

GREENWOOD

Mrs.

Bertram

1885

2300

offer.

/

:

select a trusted druggist to com-

Highland Park

Wilbur

of conditions

his choice of this city as his place
of residence. He lives with Mrs. Wilbur at 1540 Judson avenue and they
have two children, a son, William,
now a cadet at West Point, and a
daughter, Mary, a student nurse at
Wesley Memorial hospital, Chicago.

High blood pressure is a common ailment, especially in recent years when working hours
are long, living conditions are
trying and anxiety is ever present. Fortunately it is a condition that can be corrected when
the cause has been determined.

2600
Phone
—Pharmacists—

is

Wilbur,

Ellison

Phone

studies

department.

Highland

Don’t Encourage
High Blood Pressure

pound

the war, General

exhaustive

A.

Weber

Groveland

H. P. 1782

* Ravinia

Strictly for Fun
For Mother
Surprise
With

Team a plaid shirt with these
smart boxer shorts, and good
times
will
come
naturally.
Stock up now for a carefree
summer.
*
CO ee
IN ees daa $3.95
Shorts in blue, white or
NOS 66s
od
$4.95

Her

Those

LOVELY FLOWERS
She Has Always Wanted

___-

KOTTRASCH BROS.
GREENHOUSES

457 ELM

ST.

DEERFIELD,

PHONE

DEERFIELD

5

ILL.

Garnett ¢ Co.

�é

By

: Star ‘Scout

Gregory

Armstrong

Work

on_

the

wigwams didn’t
begin, as the boys
who

master

their parents are hard at work on the
big event.
It seems that every one
in town is asking what the admission
fee will be so when

they hear

to make

have,

played

boy or girl attending can have the fun

so

be

ditched

and'

will not count

on

the

“Loyal” is the
scout laws,.,

Armstrong

second

“ing Boy Scout meetings of late so it
appears that these two are ready to
graduate from cub rank. Good luck,
fellows! But we'll really miss you.
_ David Kelley is going to be in a
very funny act in the circus, I’m told,
but no details now . . . See for yourself Saturday.

Girl Scouts,
Attention!
Girl Scouts wishing to go to Camp
Hickory Hill this summer must get
their applications into Mrs. F. W.
Nolde as soon as possible. No applications will be accepted after May 12.

Den No. 2—Paul Dasso is waiting
to collect a bear badge and gold arTow,

Saturday

‘is lined up
f arrow in the
will collect
rank. . . Say
Fight!

while

Bobby

‘inner-Reception to

Rudolph

Nonor Wayne Thomas

for his additional silver
wolf rank. Pat Carroll
his gold arrow in this
these boys are doing al-

... Wait,

here’s

No.

Wayne Thomas is being honored at
a dinner and reception on Tuesday,
May 13, at 7 p.m. in the auditorium of
the Oak’ Terrace school in Highwood
marking his 25th year in that school
as principal and superintendent.
Before World War I, he was principal in Mason City, Ia., then at Sioux

another

3—Melville

Steed

is

the

_ hardest fellow I’ve ever tried to reach,
but the phone strike jis entirely to
blame for lack of news from his home.

Den No. 4—Kenneth
; that

Randall

Falls,

George reports

Vanderbeek

was

absent

last week since his mother had a trip
to Chicago on his calendar. Richard
Pagel completed his achievements for
4 new arrow so he’s plenty excited
about Saturday, too. All these cubs
are definitely looking forward to the

“day

of days.”

Den

member

No.

of

.

5—Goll-ee!

this

_ award of some

Every

tribe is up
kind!!

single

for an

[I thought

the

_ thrill of a home made circus would
keep them busy enough, but achievements seem to supersedes anything
the schedule offers. .
Congratula-

_ tions, all.
_

Special

Notice

Croftchik

control, and
ject matter.

In

ways

the

child

self
sub-

receives

for

the last time, concentrated individual
help in the simple techniques of this

subject. Reading for pleasure and retention are encouraged with the help
of

text

books,

visual

aids,

creative

writing, and book reporting.
“Skimming”, as in newspaper reading, is introduced.
Certain of these
phases are particularly developed in

correlation

with English

which

in-

cludes the study of grammar, public
speaking, and drama.
Arithmetic involves diagnostic practice work, multiplication and division
of fractions, all phases of decimals,
the

use

of

graphs

and

charts

in

preparation for seventh grade.
Spelling is integrated with all other
class room work and each child is
responsible
for evaluating his own
progress.
In art the students are urged to develop their own interests and talents
in the making of posters, holiday decOrations,

and

timely

illustrations

various media of materials.
Social studies, as in the
grades,
use of

are
text

in

preceding

developed
through
books, newspapers,

cussion, and personal experience.

the
dis-

Don’t forget the big parade (weather permitting) will start from the
Village Hall at 1:30 p.m. this comin
g
Satuarday, May 10. The Circus will begin at 2 p.m. at the Deerfield Grammar school—Come one, come all!!
Free!!

S.D., after

the war.

He was principal of the Deerfield
Grammar school from 1920 to 1922,
leaving here
to go to Highwood,
where he is now observing his: 25th
year.
Ps
Mrs. Thomas is the former Dorothy
Lidgerwood of ‘Deerfield. They have
two children, Susan
Anne,
8, and
‘Wayne Jr., 6, both Oak Terrace grade
school students.

Geraldine Clavey, 12, Is
In Waukegan School Band
Geraldine Clavey observed her 12th
birthday anniversary at a party on
May 6 at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Clavey in
Waukegan.
ee
Geraldine, violinist,
was
in
the
Waukegan band concert last Thursday evening. She is a pupilof Miss
Phyllis Parshall, former teacher | in
the Deerfield Grammar school, now
teaching in Waukegan.

7 Deerfield
Bowling Academy
Monday Evening
_
VICTORY ROLLERS
The final evening of the season
place
May
More
details
will
next week.

Team

Air

but

study habits,
presentationof

the

reading,

some

are still immature
in
Others;
they
tend
to form
cliques and begin
to show signs of
adolescence.
The
teaching aims of
this grade are the
further development of good

25 Years in Highwood

Gene Johnson expects his wolf badge
plus a gold ‘arrow. . . Boy, oh boy!
- Den

Miss

|and

_ and Bob Hinchsliff have been attend-

_

in

games

of the twelve

2

Students of the
sixth grade have
reached an wnexpected
maturity

the scoring.

the patrols to. get an “A” rating.

News

1—Geoffrey

to

two bugles have been misplaced. Will

let out some mighty potent

No.

F

how

anyone who knows where they are
please notify the troop? We will appreciate it. Two troop drums are also
missing. These drums
are. marked
“Troop 52—BSA”.. Please notify us
about the drums, too.
Reorganization of patrols is underway. It will be completed in time for
the patrols to practice for the CampO-Ral. It is hoped that this will help

Since we'll wait until next week to

Den

and

Need Bugle for Bugler
The troop is interested in having a
bugler,—but it cannot, because the

publish the
list of
awards
these
youngsters have earned since the last
pack meeting, I’m afraid this column
will be short today. If I start talking

Den

costumes

in the

Grade

Robert

year.

? ©

secrets about the circus in general
: ‘you just come and be surprised!

Indian.

ae

"By Miss Bertha Croftchik

as-

Here’s hoping it won’t rain again this

of a lifetime and goodies galore for a
very nominal amount.
Any profit
‘shown after expenses are paid will be
equally divided between the dens to
_ purchase handicraft materials or entertainment for the boys next year. . ,
Is
it any wonder the fellows are

I might

Sixth

they are to be made.
Announcement was
made
of the
“Camp-O-Ral” to be held May 24.
The requirements that will be judged
are easier on some points. A few of
the changes are that tents no longer

that the

the foods and game
concessions.
These prices are very low so every

so hard...

een

is the seventh article

Ranier discussed the materials needed

show is free they can hardly believe
t ... Yessir, ladies, and gentlemen,
he show is free.
.
_ The only items that cost a thing are

x. working

This

signed
to
bring
wallpaper paste,
didn’t bring any.
Instead, Scout-

orPGES

-arrives!! The village is filled with
placards while the cub scouts and

were

NE

takes
follow

Team
Seul’s

Control tower to Squadron 51. Take
off.
ae
The results of the air meet on April
27, at New Trier High school were
quite surprising for out of nine entries,

Team

Leaders—3
Hieh

Clavey’s—-852:

Team

Games:

27

Bo

Tailor’s—2422;

Bank—2361.

Single

Game:

Bank—847.

CHAMBER
OF
Standings:

Seul’s—873:
-

COMMERCE

Team
Team
Team

Team
Team
Team
Team

Team 2—Central
Team
High
Cherry—2591; Pine—2573.
Team
High
Single
Game:
Cherry—934; Clay—925.

Wednesday

Evening

AMERICAN
Team standings:
Team 8—F.
Coleman
Team 6—R.
Dunham

LEGION

x

or

21

planes,

four

of the

mem-

bers of the Squadron won prizes.
John Taylor of the Evanston Flying Club won first place in Class C
speed, first place in stunting, and
won the grand prize. Jim Diener won
second place in Class C speed. Class
B speed was won by Greg Newell
who took both places. Greg flew a
Bipe and a Mr. Mike. Jerry Juhrend
took both places in Class A speed.
Jerry entered four planes and_all four
were flown. Last but not least came
Louis Rainer who walked away with
the prize for the worst crack-up.
Bob Newell was the chief judge of

the

contest with Milton

Merner

as-

sisting. The.Air Scouts wish to thank
the other men who participated as
judges and officials.
If you didn’t see this meet, don’t
be discouraged for on May 17 another
meet will be held at Glenview. This
meet will be largely for the boys who
have not flown a plane yet, although
anyone may fly but he will not be
eligible for a prize. “Watch the Air
Scout column for further information
on this coming air meet.
:
The weekend activities
have
not
been very strong with all of the leaders up at Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan. They
have volunteered their time in making the camp ready for the summer.
During the rainy weather there has
not been much flying but when
a
pleasant, sunny day comes there will
be plenty doing out at Mr. Timson’s
on Wilmot road, where the models
are flown.
;
Thursday night, each member received a set of tools donated to the
Squadron by Harold Peacock.
The
Air Scouts express their thanks to’
Mr. Peacock by inviting him to attend one of their weekly meetings as
guest of honor.
All boys interested in Air Scouts
and who are fifteen years of age may

join the Air Scouts.

Team
Team

51

Thursday

night

at 7:30 is the meeting night and the
place is the Air Scout Headquarters
on Waukegan road.
Squadron 51 to control tower. Taking off. See you next week.

Tuesdav
Evening
ROLLING
40’S
standings:

Seul’s—2407;

Squadron

By BILL WINTERS

Elm—2705 ;
Elm—$982 ;

Team
Team
Team

&amp;8—W.
5—R.
4—J.
2—E.

Johnston
Riley:
Klemp
Hurt

Team

1—0O.
Trute
7—M.
Olson
54
Team
High
3 Games:
Team 8—241 13
Team 6—2403; Team
1—28738.
Team
High
Single
Game:
Team
8—
887; Team
1—879; Team
8—860.
AMVETS
Team standings—April 21
1947:
Ww.
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team 3
40
50
eam
High
3 Games:
Team
4—9338;
Team 1—931; Team 6—925.
5
Team
High
Single
Game:
Team
6—
2623; Team 2—2609; Team
1—2596.
Results of the Amvets’ Sweepstakes
held

Team

(Continued

on

Page

35)

�-

Sigs

Ei

Highland

Park

Two

Weeks

of

Park

Water

Influenza

is

department,

turning to normal

re-

activities this week

following a battle with flu germs the

or

tes
.

F

Miss
and

Nancy

Mrs.

H.
has

avenue,

Holt,

at

she is finishing

Mortar

daughter

Board

of

Mr.

Emilio Galassini Receives
Honorable Mention for Painting

H.P.H.S.

Seniors

in

Festival

Two Highland Park High school
seniors participated in the 20th annual spring festival of Illinois Wesleyan university, Bloomington, which
was held on Friday and Saturday,
April 25 and
26. They
are John
Bowles, 720 Central avenue and Donald Heinl, 535 Bronson lane.
Visits

New

Mrs. R. W. Ropiequet of East St.
Louis is a guest at the home of the
Percy

Priors,

1026 Wade

street.

Mrs.

Ropiequet is becoming acquainted with
her new grandson, John Lee, born
to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Ropiequet
April 16. The baby’s mother is the
former Jean Prior.
Initiated

Into

Charles

Fraternity

Hamilton,

son

of

Mr.

would

night

mention

Aboard

Santa

Mr.

and

Charles

A

tion,” at Chicago’s Art Institute. Mr.
Galassini, a student at the Institute
and veteran of the Okinawa battles,
drew upon some of his war experiences in the conception of his painting.

I.

L:

of

CORBY’S
RESERVE
5th $3.37

school

of

education

dred

teachers

will

Jewelers and Opticians
Fine Watch-Jewelry Repairing
Highland Park. — Tel. H. P. 630

FOR MOTHER

Me ow $3.90
3 FEATHERS
RESERVE
eee $3.90
SEAGRAM’S
7 CROWN

Camera
in

LORD
CALVERT

Stock

IN
KINSEY Gl N

GILBEY’S G

2121

$2.98

And Up

IN STOCK

To

Do

SPECIAL
FREE FILM

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood
We

Build

Lawns

and

US

OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137 N. Second,

All Phones

WITH

ANY

PURCHASED

CAMERA
THIS

WEEK

00,
127,
616,
130,

35

mm,

120,

620,

116,

122,

124,

etc.

Community GAMERA EXCHANGE

Driveways

TRY

3785

ith $4.23 |

Old Underoof
Rec $4.09
SCHENLEY
RESERVE

attend.

All Makes

Have All New
Equipment
Your Work Right

FOUR ROSES
gre $4.25
HUNTER’S

1. H. NEMEROFF

at

Northwestern university, on the improvement of teaching mathematics
in the elementary schools. Four hun-

April 26,.aboard Grace Line’s
Rosa for a Caribbean cruise.

We

in

Miss Harriet Kaiser, Miss Dorothy
Westfall and Kenneth Crowell of the
Highland Park schools are planning
to take part in a conference Saturday
sponsored by the mathematics de-

and

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE

distinctiv e
Blend

PARK &amp;
TILFORD
5th $3.53

South Deere Park drive were among
the passengers
sailing from
New
York,
Santa

$3 39

Local Teachers Will Attend
Conference at Northwestern

and

6 NO. SHERIDAN

RD.

tr. Whiskies

IMPERIAL.
Sth $3.39.

college.

Lewis

of S

Originated

Rosa

Mrs.

Phone 4579 for
FREE DELIVERY.

5th

is completing

at the

the

‘“Depreda-

painting,

his

for

Now

year

door

William
Penn

A

college.

at the

Blend

Alpha
Chi chapter
of the national
fraternity
of Kappa
Sigma
at the
Chapter house on the campus at Lake
his freshman

sold

dance.

Special — PRIVILEGE

Mrs.
C. L. Hamilton,
671 Central
avenue, recently was initiated into

Forest

be

of the

Burton
1400
Emilio Galassini of
avenue last week received honorable

partment

Grandson

a
NEEDS

society

is an honorary

Is Graduated from Army

Set. Wallace
M. Huehl of 1200
Prairie avenue recently was graduated
from the Panama Canal Department
Non-Commissioned
Officer
lLeadership school, Ft. Clayton, C. Z.
Sgt.
Huehl is on duty with the 408th Ordnance company.

ets

a

WEEK-END

The dance
all tickets

her junior year.

whose members are chosen for outstanding activities on the campus.

Ta

sold and unsold be returned to Bud
Moroney, 573 Glenview, or Al Gerkin,
137 South Green Bay road, by Friday,
May 9. It was announced that .tick-

Judson
Mortar

past fortnight, during which period
he was confined to bed at his home.
School

OT

Michigan,

of

University

Board

furnish music for dancing.
committee
requests
that

to

E. Holt of 1330
been elected to

where

* Hiigtlbnd = Patio “VFW . Madiorial
Post No. 4737, will sponsor a dance at
the Labor temple on Saturday, May
10. Johnny Olin and his orchestra will

H.P. 4500

Miss Nancy Holt Is Elected
Mortar Board at Michigan

George B. Prindle of 374 Oakland
drive, superintendent of the Highland

‘

Telephone

News

George Prindle Recovers
From

ain
:

gow

‘

JAPPENINGS
IGHLAND PARKERS...
ee

H. P. 206

Full

BURT

Full

quart

eo

$388
$398

GIN
STALKERS 5 GIN

$312

FLEISCHMANN’
reeSs
GIN 5th

$319

Bonded

Whiskies

OLD GRAND DAD
OLD TAYLOR
'
OLD FORESTER
OLD FITZGERALD
KENTUCKY TAVERN
Phone 4579

| Phone 4579

LIQUORS
PL SERVICE

Racl sae B08|ch aan Leh

335

Waukegan Ave.
High wood
FREE DELIVERY

�‘Troop 324 Scouts

HOW ARE YOUR SCREENS?

Leave Saturday
For Camping Trip

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combination screen and storm sash.
@

Or

@

Midwest First Aid Meet
Held in Glencoe April 28

&amp;

if you prefer we will rewire your present
screens with bronze or galvanized wire.
CALL

FOR

150

H.

ESTIMATE

A.

sented.
The Beaver,

Terms

S. First St.

H.

P. 5102

ther patrol
ratings for

on the

BROS.

four

ratings

and

as referee

@

Furniture

MOTHPROOFING
Time

to

Buv

Is Before They

H.P.
676
Sa
eee
ee

Fly”

ee

See

Eagle

patrol

of Troop

rating.
of Chicago

handled

THE

recently

served

Rev.

dresses

should

the

be

closets

ee

served

as

are

purchased

by the troop,

enabled the troop to
excellent
equipment

northwest

corner

of

the

state,

by

biiinpsteinsihiieniacl vhiculine

good
in

Edmund
John

P.

J. Skoner,

M.A.,

O’Connell,

M.A.,

Weekdays—6

9 00,

10:00,

Bob

up

for

be

glad

thorough

finishing—and
moth

bags

ready

for them.

put

for Mom

to pick

them

cleaning

and

‘them

in

when

she

Funeral

services

were

S.T.u.°

day at Streator,

S.T.D.

Fairbairn

Ross,

84,

day,

4, at

the

11:6

May

337

Fridays ane
7:80 p.m.

Central

held

to come,

roses you give Her on Her

Tel. H. P. 177

Tea

who

died

Caledonia

avenue.

Mrs.

EXTERIOR

60 Green Bay Rd.

Sun-

home,

Ross

4, 1862.
Smith

Highland

Burial

at

Park,

survives.

Streator.

With

your

Mother

Special Day.

Roses and Climbers

Coli

Tues-

born in England October
daughter, Mrs.
Hypatia

Mother

For years

©

Ill., for Mrs. Eleanor

Roses

will treasure

the

Each packaged

with a colored picture.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618 N. Green Bay Road
Highland Park

is

Please

Black,

Ross Services Held Tuesday

:80 - 8:15.

eves. of First
Days
4:00 and

Scoutmaster

tor.

CONFESSIONS

Saturdays
Holy

Assistant

being

Call H. P. 177 or 178
we’ll

is

a qualified Red Cross first aid instruc-

cleaned.

And

ar-

floor

inaaetniennrtinienrinntierntirelactnlsthentansciitline

Sundays—6 :30, 7:30,
and
12
noon.

sent

has

necessary for a camping group of this
size.
A similar three-day trip to Apple
River
State
park,
located in the

MASSES:

those

were

committee have
purchase
some

Deerfield and Green Ba
Roaas
Highland Park 202
P. Morrison,
Msgr. Joseph
Pastor

Rey.

“MOM'S NEXT”
and

chairman,

and the patrol method will prevail in
both cooking and camping. Funds
recently made available by the troop

the instruction

Rev.

Rt.

FAMILY
coats

transportation

ranged automobile transport for the
journey.
During the outing, the Scouts will
camp in tents and prepare their own
meals. New patrol cooking outfits

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

CLEANING
FOR ALL

while

ier,

first

planned for the Memorial day weekmanager ;
George Putnam of Wilmette was the end.
Last week 26 Scouts and leaders
timer ; Fred MacKenzie and Ed Spellfrom the troop participated in an
man of Wilmette served as doctors;
Jim Russell of Deerfield and Bob overnight hike in the woods near
Wright of Lake Bluff were assistant Camp Dan Beard, north of Wheeling.
The troop expects to enter a number
floor managers;
and Arne
Makela,
of patrols in the annual North Shore
assistant
Scout
executive,
and
Ray
Area Council Camporal May 24 and
Davis of Wilmette served as record25 at Camp Henry Fowler on the Des
ers.
Plaines river.
J. E. Jacobs of Winnetka, chairman
of the Activities committee of the
A Troop 324 patrol also participated
North Shore, Area council, presented
in the council first aid meet held in
first aid certificates to all units tak- Glencoe April 25. This group of boys
ing part in the meet.
was trained and prepared for the meet

BANISH THE

now

the

and

executive,

wool

difficult

Bluff, Bob Black of Highland Park
and Nick Bock of Mundelein.
Jerry
Knowlton,
assistant.
Scout

SHRINKAGE.

heavy

extremely

ing
prior
to
the
first
aid meet.
Judges
were:
Roy
Kroeschell,
Bill
Fox, George Moyer and H. Herschend
of Wilmette,
Bill Peterson,
M. T.
Leffler
and
W.
Krueger
of Lake

® Carpets

Her

Pan-

of the judges who held a dinner meet-

@ Rugs

DRY

and

of Troop 3 received “B”
scoring better than 80%,

42 received a “D”
Bob Berkemeier

CARPETING CLEANED

“The

Fox

aid problems. The Cobra and Wolf
patrols of Troop 42 and the Eagle
patrol of Troop 324 received “C”

CLEANERS

OF

Silver

ther patrols of Troop 2 and the Pan-

Deerfield 416

RETTIG

Approximately 32 Scouts and leaders from Boy Scout Troop 324 will
leave the Presbyterian church at 8
a.m. Saturday, May 10, for a weekend
outing at Starved Rock State park.
The group expects to return to Highland Park Sunday at 6 p.m.
Planned by the troop committee
and staff, the trip will be under supervision of Russell Whitney, camping
chairman for the troop, and Scoutmaster Harry Skidmore. David Las-

The
North Shore Area council’s
Midwest First Aid meet finals were
held Friday
evening, April 28, at
Glencoe Central school. Patrols from
Troop 2 and Troop 3 of Wilmette,
Troop 324 of Highland
Park and
Troop 42 of Lake Bluff were repre-

H. N. GAMLIN
F.

Scouts and Leaders Plan
Weekend at Starved Rock Park

Finals

$1.30 and

ads,

up

S

DECORATORS

Winnetka

132

was

A
of
was

ae

�Re

: dion Is Appointed Director of Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

Tae:

George

R. Boardman,

Scout

execu-

tive of the North Shore Area council,
has; announced
the
appointment
of

staff.

In

1942

Mr.

Knowlton

in the Buffalo council,

Buffalo, N. Y.
He
entered
May
10, 1943,

the
and

at

utive, as director of Camp Ma-Ka-JaWan,
the council’s popular summer

Ill., and the gunnery school in Yuma,
Ariz. As a B-17 radio operator with
the 15th Air force, he was stationed
at Foggia, Italy. Shot down in a mis-

camp

near

ton

has

Antigo,

had

Scout camps
sellor

and

24

Wis.

years

as a Scout,

camp

Mr.

Knowl-

experience

camp

in

coun-

director.

the

radio

BONDED

army
air
forces
received training

Julius S. Knowlton Jr., assistant exec-

school

at

Scott

Knowlton

council

came

to the

shortly

North

after

his

Shore

p.m.

No.

42,

JULIUS

S. KNOWLTON

Catholic
Central
High
school
in
Grand Rapids and Western Station
university at Kalamazoo. He attended
the 46th Nationa] Training school of
the Boy Scouts of America, and in
1935 joined the professional Scouting
ranks.
His first assignment was in his
home territory, Grand Rapids,
he had attained the rank of

Royal Arch
ple, 8 p.m.

Veterans

8:00

Foreign

No.

226,
tem-

Wars,

club,

Moraine

hotel,

p.m.

JOHN
-

a8

Daily

(Closed

DELIVERY

|

Sunday)

@

JEWELRY

@

COMPACTS

@

WALLETS

@

LOCKETS

@

PEARLS

@

PINS

Successor

to

Polk’s

Jewelry

JEWELER
Watch

and

Jewelry

Telephone

Repairing

2028

REMEMBER
MOTHER!

p.m.

American Legion Post No. 145, Legion
hall, 21 North Sheridan road, 8 p.m.

RUGS

Highwood

MOTHER

Witten

12:15

CO.

Gifts for

Masonic

Masonic

MORAN

FURNITURE

-

CARPETING

CLEANED
LIFE-TIME MOTHPROOFING
117 Glencoe Ave” _—‘ Tel. H. P. 1137

Moth-Bag

IT’S TRIM

IT’S TIRELESS

_

Your

Winter

DUFFY

Fit-Tested,

&amp; DUFFY
Cleaners

HIGHLAND

PARK

Ws THE ROUNDIOWNER
Action-loving classic by Gold
Cross that you’ll wear simply
everywhere. And so-o comfortable.

Clothes

AMERICA’S

WALTERS
WINNETKA

toe

years old 5th $5.98

FREE

THURSDAY
Lions

where
Eagle

and

of

Masons,

BOURBON 5

hall, 8 p.m.

Scout and had been a Scoutmaster
and a mémber of that council’s camp

Clean

Until

Fine

Highland

JR.

“Jerry” Knowlton, as he is better
known to the Scouts and Scouters of
the
council,
is a native of Grand
Rapids, Mich. He was educated at the

a

JOHN RUTTKAY

temple.

WEDNESDAY
Park
Chapter

Yt

LIQUOR

SERVICE

8 p.m.

Lodge

:

dis-

old.

Fellows

é

H. P. 1500
Open

Loyal Order of Moose, No. 446, Witten hall, 360 Central avenue, 8 p.m.
TUESDAY
Chamber of Commerce, Sunset Valley
club, 6:30 p.m.
Highwood Legion Post No. 501, City
Odd

'

337 Waukegan Ave. —

MONDAY
Rotary club, Moraine hotel, 12:15 p.m.
Kiwanis
club, Sunset
Valley
club,

hall,

KENTUCKY

PHONE

WITH the LODGES
6:30

ON

LIQUOR

charge from the army in October,
1945. He lives in Highland Park with
his wife, Maxine, and their two sons,
Mike, four years old, and Jerry, nine
months

%

BEER IN CANS Case of 24 .0.05.....0000l, from $3.35
FRENCH BURGUNDY WINE 1937 Vintage .... 5th $2.85

field,

sion over Augsburg,
Germany,
he
was held a prisoner of war until liberated by the 14th Armored division
on April 29, 1945.

Area

‘

OLD ROSE 4 year old Ky. Bourbon ................ 5th $4.79
IMPORTED SCOTCH from -..0..0.2-2..2.200200202ceeeee- Sth $5.85
CHAPIN © GORE 62
een:
Sth $4.95
CALIFORNIA SWEET WINES ...............-..-..... Sth 98¢

became

field executive

%

SAVE

ry” Kno

Highland Parker Has 24 Years’
Experience in Scout Camps

;

of course.

UNCHALLENGED

SHOE

SHOE

VALUE

SHOP

389 CENTRAL AVENUE
OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK

|

—

�Miss

Audrey

Vrindle

Mr. and Mrs. George B. Prindle
of 374 Oakland drive are announcing
the engagement of their daughter,
- Audrey, to Dudley J. Clapp Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. Dudley J. Clapp
of Wethersfield, Conn.

Spring Luncheon to

End Season for

Ravinia Woman’s Club
The

final

meeting

club

of

will

the

be

in

Ravinia
the

form

of a spring luncheon to be held in
the Ravinia Village house on Wednesday, May 14, at 12:45 p.m.
Following the president’s report and
the introduction of new officers, Miss

Lois

Fisher,

cartoonist,

will

present

“Secrets of the Subconscious.”
Miss
Fisher illustrates a weekly column
for a Chicago newspaper.
In
the
movies,
she
appears
in
‘Woman
Speaks.”
She.is the author of “Cartooning for Fun and Profit” and of
a

new

book,

“You

and

the

United:

Nations,” visualizing the structure of
a great idea and the individual’s re_ sponsibility in a united world, through
simple text and humorous sketches.
In her program before the local
group,
Miss
Fisher backs up her
belief that anyone can draw with a
demonstration
of a simple devices
for “fun-drawing.”
The artist draws
some of her original caricatures of
the subconscious.
Demonstrating
at her easel, the
artist will tell about her interviews
with various prominent persons among
those
Bi

she

has

caricatured

are:

Mar-

shall Field,
Gary
Cooper,
Zorina,
Olsen
and
Johnson,
Col.
Robert
McCormick, Kathleen Windsor, Quiz
Kids and Joe Kelly, Quiz Master of
Quiz Kids.

a\

_

Threshold Players’ “Claudia”

The first spring meeting of the
Women’s Committee of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra, followed by tea,
at the Fortnightly, was held Wednesday, May
7.
Hostesses
were Mrs.
Telfer
MacArthur,
chairman of the
Women’s committee, and Mrs. Frederic W. Upham.
Plans

Woman’s

Elizabeth Gage Has Role in

Orchestra Committee
Plans 1947 Sustaining
Membership Drive

Reveal Batrothal of

were

made

for

the

annual

chestras,

which

in\ Toronto,

took

place

and

the

trustees

of

Symphony orchestra
club tomorrow night
Rodzinski,

and

conductor,
for

assistant

-

new

and

kainin.

‘

the

musical

and

Chicago

in the Casino
for Mr.. Artur
Mrs.

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Mr.

Hanikainin

conductor

the

director

Rodzinski,

Tanno

of

Hani-

is to be

the

the

orchestra.

The dinner is the official launching
of the annual drive for sustaining
memberships, by which means each
season the anticipated deficit of the
orchestra is underwritten.
Among the Highland Parkers to
be guests at the dinner are Mr. and
Mrs. George Robert Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Fancis M. Knight, Mr. and Mrs.
L.

F.

McClure,

W. Murray and
liam W. White.

Mr.

Mr.

and

and

Mrs.

Howell

Mrs..

Wil-

timers

and

four

newcomNew

hold studio’s stage these days, rounding into shape the twentieth anniversary
production
.of
Threshold
Players, “Claudia, which will be presented in Glencoe May 16 and 17.

is another

”

Canada,

and

which

ae

William

W.

and

Mrs.

White

Several

Park women
the Mesdames
J.

D’Ancona,

other

John

Garcia, L.. F. Harza, David Levinson,
Walter E. Lilienfield, Richard J. Loewenthal, S. J. Lunding, James Mac
Murchy, Arthur Marquette,
Donald
Nichols, George W. Ross Jr., and
Harold G. Schick.
ELIZABETH

Miss

1,

cleaming

aaa

WH

|

Bride

The engagement of Miss Marjorie
Leaming to Edwin B. Jordan was
announced at a party given by Miss
Leaming’s sister, Mrs. John McGuire,
on Friday, May 2. The wedding will
take place some
time during the
summer and the couple plan to make
their home in Moline, Ill., where Mr.,
Jordan is employed.

At Trinity Church
The regular monthly meeting of
the woman’s auxiliary of Highland
Park’ hospital will be held in the
parish house of
Trinity
church
Wednesday morning, May 14, at 10
o'clock.
Luncheon will be served at
12:30 p.m., directed by Mrs. Charles
Husting,

luncheon

chairman:

Members and friends are urged to
attend and lend a helping hand in
making surgical dressings, since the
hospital is greatly in need of them.
Dressings are made at each monthly
meeting
and
also
at the
smaller
weekly gatherings held every Wednesday morning at the hospital.
Mrs. George O. Strecker is president of the auxiliary.

GAGE

but

not

Park

Highland
the cast by

Park is represented in
Elizabeth Gage, of Ban-

nockburn,

formerly

of

Highland

Park, cast as Julia, Claudia’s sisterin-law.
She was the only woman in
the

cast

of

“Yellow

Jack,”

and

are

“George
three

newcomers

to acting.

pro-

Washing-

members

of

to Threshold,

Madame

Darusch-

Theodore
E.
Schulte
III,
plays Claudia’s husband, David,

stranger
is

to
his

the
first

footlights,
Threshold

who
is no

although
lead.

His

associates go much further back than.
his appearance in children’s roles 15
years ago.
His mother, the late Ruth
Schulte,
was
one
of
Threshold’s
earliest earliest leading ladies in such
well
remembered
shows
as
“The
Barker,” “Meet the Wife,” and “The

Patsy.”
peared

Mr.
in

Schulte

“Ts

Life’

recently
Worth

ap-

Living,”

and in several plays at Northwestern
university.
He was active in Princeton Triangle shows
Theatre Intime.
Maxine Stetson,
cook, has divided

and
cast
her

the

Princeton

as Bertha, the
time between

directing and acting.
She also appeared in “First Lady,’ as well as
“Personal Appearance,” and dirécted
the

one-act play

“Fumed

Oak,”

which

marked the post-war revival of Threshold

Players

on

March

29.

She

well known on the North Shore
her dramatic book reviews.
Bertha’s

by Sam

husband,

Vernon,%«

Fritz,

is

the Romance lanat Northwestern
out
the
cast
as

|

%

and

Glencoe,

Wienecke’s

Hard-

ware, Glencoe, and at L. and A.
Stationers in Winnetka.
Seats for %
the two performances will be reserved
as was always the custom formerly,
but will be on a first come, first
served basis.

is re-

membered
for her part in “First
Lady.”
Recently
she appeated
in
“Hawk
Island”
and
“Our
Hearts
Were Young and Gay” for the Deerfield Stagers.
Virginia
Gosling, who
plays the
title role, is a 19-year-old student at
Lake Forest college appearing in her
first major production.
She was in
the cast of “Junior Miss” at the
college this year.

this

Hospital Auxiliary
To Meet Wednesday

cast

Mr. Vernon

Threshold

Jerry, who “lives on the party line.”
Sitting out front directing the show
is Nancy Pershall, deep in the mechanics of her twenty-second play for
Threshold
Players.
She
is
being
assisted by Mary Hardy.
~ Advance sales of tickets for “Claudia” are being
handled
by
Mrs.
Arthur Wienecke, 680 Vernon avenue,
Glencoe.
‘Tickets are available at
Fell’s clothing
stores in Highland

Highland

DeLeuw,

the

Holbrook, head of
guage
department
university,
rounds

deeply interested are
Charles Boand, Harold
Charles

notably
ton Slept Here.”
The remaining
ductions,

of

Marion Kelso, who plays Claudia’s
mother, has appeared with the Evanston Woman’s club players.
William

L. F. McClure are co-chairmen oi
the Highland Park committee of the
orchestra.

school.

veteran

theatre.

attended.
Mrs.

Trier High

ka is portrayed
by Helen
Foster
Golder, wife of the new rector of St.
' Elizabeth’s Episcopal church in Glencoe.
She studied at the Goodman

recently

Mem bership Drive at Dinner

dent

old

drive for sustaining memberships in
which the Women’s committee plays
an active role.
Mrs. MacArthur and Mrs. Upham
also reported on the meeting of the
Sixth Biennial Conference of Women’s Committees for Symphony Or-

To Launch Chictin Orchestra
A most outstanding social occasion
of interest to music lovers in Chicago
and the nearby communities this week
is the dinner to be given by the presi-

Four

ers are walking the boards of Thres-

is

for

played

faculty member

at

Sohn
Miss
Miss

Lays

lo

Rosemary

Ko

Rosemary

ter of Mr. and

Whd

L. Browne,

Mrs.

Lyman

daugh-

L. Browne

of La Grange, will become the bride
of John H. Lemmon
of Highland
Park on Saturday, June 14, at La
Grange.*
Miss Browne was graduated from —
Illinois State Normal school, Normal,
Ill. and is a teacher in Harvard High
school, Harvard, Ill.
Mr. Lemmon is manager of Alden
Harris, Photography, Highland Park.

Wiss

Viewe 4 esis
4°49 i

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Newey recently announced the engagement of
their daughter,
Houston Farris,

Nancy,
to Kenneth
son of Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Farris III of Springfield, Ill.
Miss Newey is a senior at Northwestern university and a member of
Alpha Phi sorority. Mr. Farris is a
member of Phi Gamma
Delta. No
date has been set for the wedding.

Arden Shore Card Party
regular
The
Arden
Shore
card
party will be held Monday afternoon,
May

12,

at 2 o’clock,

at

the

Mrs. Konrad Schreier, 701
ton avenue, Lake Forest.

home

of

Kenning-

�=

: ek, ee
‘Cachanged

Vs

Legion Auxiliary

|

Initiates 13 New

Members Thursday

Saturday

* Thirteen

_Af

SE

fames

Chik

Miss Betty Calzia, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Calzia, Highwood,
and

Adolph

John

Rosalini,

son

of

Mr. and Mrs. John Rosalini, Highwood, were married Saturday at 10:30
a.m. at St. James church, the Rev.
Martines officiating.
The bride was attired in a bridal
satin gown with yoke of nylon marquisette, lace bodice and long sleeves.
The

gown

was

buttoned

down

the

back and made with a bustle and a
two yard train of imported French
lace. She carried a bouquet of white
rosebuds.
The bride’s sister, Miss Jeanne Calzia,

was

maid

maids were
Highwood

Spring
bride.

honor

and

Miss Antoinette
and

Miss

Anne

brides-

Grotti of
Vecchia

Valley, Ill, a cousin
The attendants wore

gowns of
and
their

man

of

of the
yellow

into

can

Legion

the

members

Highland

Auxiliary,

held) Thursday

Polka-Dot Charmer!

were

initi-

Park

Ameri-

during

services

May

1, at the

evening,

Sure Summer
this

Henry
Grossmann,
Jerry C. Leaming,

beguiling

Fashionable

Legion hall.
New members include mesdames:
Clarence Engdahl, Norman Freberg,

Miss

Ray Grossmann,
Harriet McGuire,

Margaret

Leuer

Henry

Mrs.

Eitner,

Mrs.

Philip

Mrs.

Donald

Cole,

Ann

and

Mrs.

Halterman,

Bernardi,

and

print!
drap-

SIZES:
9 to

Miss Ruth Rechtenwald.
The initiation team was composed
of the following ladies: Mrs. Chris
Matthiesen,

side

ed cascading peplum.

Katherine
Petik, Karl Salo, Frank
Weber, John Willner, Miss Marjorie
Leaming,

flattery in

Miss

Mary Picchietti.
Mrs, Matthiesen, who is Poppy Day
chairman, urges each member to turn
out and help with the sale of poppies
on Monday, May 26.

17

10

to

44

144%_

to

22%

@

Accessories

@

Millinery

@

Costume

@

Bags

Jewelry

y

J

moire and matching hats,
bouquets
were
of spring

flowers.
Clarence
best

of

ated

new

Rosalini
and

was

ushers

John

and

a

in the

reception

for

100

guests

H. PRIOR,

Mildred Walldren

Jr.

Photographer

Mor-

dini and Joseph Mordini.
Following
the ceremony
a_ wedding breakfast was held in the home
of the bride’s parents for members
of the bridal party.
Relatives and
the immediate
families attended a
wedding dinner in the afternoon in
_ the home of the bridegroom’s parents
held

PERCY

his brother’s

were

1026 WADE
Specializing
tm
unposed pictures
party, wedding or
Tel.

H.

P.

3199

ST.
natural
of your
reception

Highland

of Deerfield
|

Park,

635

was

To Hold Fair May 15

picnic luncheon of
will be served on

the triangle green at Ravinia.

DEERFIELD

Shop

ROAD

“The Shop With You In Mind”’

DAY
CAMP

‘Ravinia Garden Club
Members Plan Outing;
Plans are completed for members
of the Ravinia Garden club and their
guests to visit the interesting and
beautiful Morton Arboretum at Lisle,
Iil., on Thursday, May 15.
Following. luncheon, which is to be
served at the
Spinning Wheel
in
Hinsdale at 12:30 p.m., the group will
attend a lecture at the Thornhill
building on “Plant Aristocrats”, to be
given by E. L. Kammerer, arboriculturist on the staff of the Arboretum.
The annual Ravinia Garden club
fair is to be held on Saturday, May
24, under the chairmanship of Mrs.
A. G. List. Members are planning for
a busy day selling flower, vegetable,

Apparel

Deerfield, Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 806

evening.

and herb plants. A
home made foods

Woman's

Ill.

Full,

exciting

mer

activities

to

9

and

Swimming

program

————

car FRE
FN EREEZERI &lt;&amp;
of

for BOYS,

GIRLS,

ages

- horseback

~FOOD

sum-

ages
4

to

provided - Call or write for folder.

Valley

-

4g"
a
Edtee
HH

We

~ _

&amp; Mrs. J.
Thompson,

GETTING MARRIED?

wy No

If you don’t have a Home Freezer, order yours today. |
FRIGID FREEZE, 12 cubic ft. _.................. now $399.00
ALSO

MANY

Distributors of Home

OTHER

&amp;

SIZES

Farm

Freezers

We Carry A Complete Line of Food
Also A Complete Line of Supplies.

Raymond

Directors

att

deliver—Deerfield - Highland Park - Northbrook - West
Lake Forest. Call Enterprise 1215 for Highland Park
&amp; Northbrook.
For Deerfield—Phone
860

Route 22, Deerfield, Ill.
LAKE FOREST 796 Y2

Mr.

[Rovree,

8.,

riding

Sunshine

SERVICE |

4

crafts - nature study in wooded
playground.
- _ Transportation

On

es

Frozen Fruits
‘
Fruit Juices
Vegetables—Lge. &amp; Small Size

Turkeys

Dairy Products

Fish

Pork
Calves

-

Veal

Liver

Chops
Chops

-

-

Pork

-

Beef
Tenders

- Steaks

Lamb Legs

- Also Whole
Processed

Pastries

ao

Meats

Beef Tenderloins,

Pet Foods
&amp; Sea Food

Frozen

- Geese

- Capons

Squabs

Bendfelt Ice Cream
Pt. 32c
1% gal $1.20
All Kinds, 21% gal. $4.75

A wedding album from Alden Harris, Photography,
is something of which you will be’
forever proud,

- Ducks

Chickens

Carcasses

©

Cooked

— Be Sure of the Finest —

St.

Johns

Ave.

Highland

Made

By

Famous

We Specialize in Processing Meats

ALDEN HARRIS, pictograpny
7: S.

Foods

Park

Your

Home

(Lowest

Chefs

Ready for

Freezer.
Prices)

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
Clarence S. Wilson

724

Deerfield

Rd.

;

- Deerfield,

III.

�ey

“Let Freedom Sing”
S

| Simiot ‘Stumn Chas: 3
Schedules Annual
Exhibit May 24

To Be Staged Friday
At Lincoln School
“Let
Freedom
Sing”,
a
music
drama, will be presented by the music
department

$1 19. 95
Tavs why Magic Chef
is the No. 1 cooking choice
of women all over America.
They know that Magic Chef's
48 advantages will make
their cooking easier, better
and more appreciated.
IMMEDIATE

ERONY
314

Waukegan

Ave.,

COLUMBIA

305 Waukegan

H.

Tel.

HOUSEHOLD

under

direction of

was

of

Lin-

handled

Mrs.

by

the

Alfred

Apitz,

following

stu-

dents :

Scenery,
Elizabeth
Lewis,
Jardine, Jessie Hadley,
Pat

2041

P.

APPLIANCES

Ramon

Cimbalo,

George

Freeman,

sie

Tel. H. P. 1533

Ave., Highwood

auditorium

Hocking,

Sturgis,

Jimmy

Janis

Jeane

Ronald

Mary
Floyd,

Donaldson,

Wessling, ElBevins,

Salyards,

Barry

Bud

Wal-

ters, Jean Cederborg, Jeanne Holden,
Barbara Barnes, Ann
Curtis, Debby

Ross,

WET
BASEMENTS
WATERPROOFED

Nancy

Smalley,

Jerry

son, Donald
May,
and
programs,
Tom
Palmer

Wilkin-

Dave
and

Cox;
John

Goodman;
posters,
Ann
Morrissy,
Ellen Chaplin, June Anderson, Rita
Witte, Tom
Keogh, Stephen Ross,

RAVINIA
PAINTING STUDIO
For ‘Youngsters

All

J. MOONEY

For

information

HORTENSE
900 Wade

EM.
ad

SPECIAL!!

CHRYSLER

Charge

Tune-up

Boil-out

exhibit,

———

should

106 S.

Parts

Used

PLYMOUTH

PARK
First

club,
enter

register

with

in the

Mr.

San-

exhibit.

Mother-Daughter Fellowship
At First United Church
Mothers and their daughters will
“fellowship”
together
at the First
United Evangelical church today at
7 :30 p.m. Mothers are invited to bring
of any age.
The
their
daughters
opening part. of the evening will consist of special numbers from various
groups

in

ing will

the

be

Inga

and

church

lowship

and

highlighted
Moen.

A

the

by

will

by

picture

of the junior

department,

period

even-

a talk

motion

members

primary

Sandy
tumes,

and

a

fel-

follow.

St.

2500

Klee
and
Larry Heap;
cosFrederica Skidmore, Margaret

Anthony, Marjorie Eckelman, Mary
Louise Dalla Valle, Catherine ‘Lencioni, Frances Tomblin, Susan Lencioni, Nancy Dalla Valle and Mary
Lou Owen.
Costumes are being handled by Lincoln
school
teachers
assisted by
Mrs.
Ann
Braeside school.

Miss

Helen

makeup

Boyce

and _ parents,
Petranek
of

is

committee,

chairman

ot

assisted

by

the following parents:
Mesdames Gordon Parks, James P.
Moore, Claud Robinson, Walter Holden, Marvin Lawrentz, John Maxwell;
David
Cox,
William
Salyards Jr.,
John F. Morrissy and Claude Stunkel.
Program choral numbers will be
sung by the sixth, seventh and eighth
grade girls’ glee club.
Program narrator is Ann Morrissy.
Jimmy Batt is conductor of the first
grade rhythm band, and Cathy Maxwell will be orchestra bells soloist.
A

tom-tom

solo

will

be

played

Prudy Keogh.
Vocal
solos throughout
gram will be sung by the
students:
Larry Pagenkopf, Gordon
Clarence Anthony, Sherry
Jessie Hadley, Tom Palmer

by

the profollowing
Chalmers,
Howard,
and Mar-

Anthony.

A violin solo will be played by Elspeth Maxwell and a whistling solo
performed by Larry Heap. A group
of fourth grade boys will play a
selection using tonettes.
Student crew assisting in the production

HIGHLAND

C. A.

born, or with Mr. “X” at the community center.
No entry fee is required.
Awards will be presented to
worthy exhibits.
Parents are invited to attend the

garet

on

2 p.m.

all or part of their collection

the

APPROVED

Additional

call

STEINER
H. P. 3723

MOTORS

&amp; Carburetor
CHRYSLER “6”
CHRYSLER “8”

at

10 lessons for $15.00

650 McDANIELS AVE.
Tel. H. P. 6443

Motor

24, starting

will be shown
Mediums

Term Starting Saturday, May 10
from 1 - 3

‘

Complete

May

Mrs.

1534 Judson

Complete Basement Cleaning
and Redecorating Service

JAMES

day,

Sanborn, adult leader of the
will be in charge.
Anne
C. Phelps, director of music.
Art production for the performance, |
Boys and girls who wish to

DELIVERY

HARDWARE

Highwood

at the

coln school Friday evening, May 9,
in
cooperation
with
the
Lincoln
School PTA, under direction of Miss

The second annual junior stamp
exhibit to be sponsored by the Community
Center Junior
Stamp
club
will be held at the center on Satur-

are:

stage,

John

Cox;

curtain,

Bud

Walters,

David

Jack

Zeigler,

Barry

Sturgis,

Cox;

floor

spots,

Philip Seitz and Joe Alford.
Student ushers are Nancy Smalley,
Barbara
Barnes,
Susan
Lencioni,
Meta Schwartz, Barbara Norden and
Alice Witte.

�Thursday, May 8, 1947

Page

THIRTEENTH

Champion Masoni

ANNUAL

15

Bowlers

EVANSTON
ANTIQUES
Exhibit and Sale
MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY
May

19-20-21
10 a.m.

Thursday,

to
10

a.m.

Admission

WOMAN’S

CLUB

-22

10 p.m.
to

6 p.m.

75c

OF

EVANSTON

Chicago Avenue and Church
Evanston
Chicago

Street

Sponsored by the
Rockford College

Club

ROSES FOR MOTHER
8

will make a gift she will remember everytime
she looks in her garden. We have a lovely
selection of Tea
and Climbers.

Roses,

Floribundas,

Shrubs

GARDE
“Every thing
RoW
thie
614 GREEN:
BAY “ROAD...
Phone’.

KENilgorth

Garden.’
KENILWORTH

Photo

Redeemer Guild to

a spring rummage
bly hall, 587 West

Hold Rummage Sale

The Redeemer guild of Redeemer
Evangelical Lutheran church will hold

2330

ELVIRA
HEALTH
SALON

JUST
INSTALLED

First

304 Railway Ave., Highwood
Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

Wednesday,
p.m. and on

Prior,

Jr.

May 14, from 7 until 9
Thursday morning, May

15, from 9:30 a.m. until 12 noon.
A variety of material and clothes
will be on sale. Mrs. Charles Pantle,
chairlady of the sale committee requests those desiring to contribute
material may do so by leaving packages either at the church hall or personage,

and

if any

package

set aside for Lutheran
it may .be marked and
other usable material.

| GET SO DARNED MAD!

I had

sent

it

CLEANERS
know

from

perience

I
ex-

that

it

would have
been

cleaned

to

look like new!

ERMINEOTTO CLEANERS,
INC.
F. FISHER, Pres.
ALL PHONES — HIGHLAND

PARK 3710

is

to

be

World relief,
shipped with

to ERMINE

Bank

H.

sale in the assemCentral avenue, on

ial

If

Member of Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
“y

Percy

When I think of
the mistake I made
in sending that
dress to ihe wrong
cleaner.

320 NEW
SAFETY
DEPOSIT
BOXES
The
National

by

THE TOP BOWLING
TEAM OF THE MASONIC
LEAGUE
of
eight teams received trophies at a dinner held at the Masonic temple
Saturday evening, April 26. George Glader, at the right, is making’
the presentations.
Holding trophies, left to right, are William Fossvender, E* T.
Skidmore, Larry Crowley, Hugo Schneider, “Red” Iverson and Frank
Siljestrom, captain of the team.

�MORAINE HOTEL|

| To Commemorate Mother's Day
Club Meeting May 14

At Emblem

Mother’s day will be commemorated
at the regular meeting of Highland
Club
No.
113
on
_ Park
Emblem
: - Wednesday,

May

14,

in

the

newly

The

iy

their mothers to attend the meeting
with them. Mothers of all Highland
Park Elks are also especially invited
to be the club’s honor guests of the

George

Bock,

fiext

Monday,

May

accompanied

‘attended

/
for

the

Mrs.

the

new

Mrs.

Mrs.

Cyril

Beaudin,

Archibald

Duffy,

and

Mrs.

mothers

of

small

“Flowers

ture

in

Action’,

produced

by

John

Baked

3

of May 20, at 2 o’clock.
The program is under

Mitchell

the

Hansen.

North

everyone

Shore

chil-

Ott

small

«Way

At Elm Place School
at

7:45

o’clock

in

the

pic-

will

under

the

direction

several

of

Bert

375

ing will
the

be, taken

Music

Place

school

fund.

are

All

the

©) FEATURES PUBLICITY
INC

friends

cordially

of

of
Elm

invited

“Took,
chum—either
change
to
Zagalia’s gasoline or don’t park
so close to th’ speaker’s stand!”
401 Waukegan

Closing
COME

Dresses

EARLY WHILE
THEY LAST

®@
Join

@
Our

&amp;

Blanket

Somenzi

Club

Highwood

Mon.-Thurs.-Sat.,

9-9

Tues.-Wed.-Fri.,

:

bce

ALN

1455

p.m.

9-6 p.m.

xfer
Sy aminesvt

AA

RAN

a

in Tk

sik

com?

tg

eae hs

%

kk he

j ape

Sih

asl

Olives

Waikiki

Sweet

Potatoes

Polonaise

Cheese, Pear and Red Cherry

Lettuce and wut adis Salad, Chef’s Dressing

GROCERY
&amp; MARKET
ROGER WILLIAMS AVE., RAVINIA
Park

6585

&amp; Vegetables

BE SURE TO EAT

&amp; Sons

336 Railway Ave

Hawaiian

Candied

ROUND STEAK
PORTERHOUSE STEAK
POT ROAST
RIB ROAST OF BEEF
GROUND BEEF
LEG OF SPRING LAMB
LOIN LAMB CHOP
BUTTER—Special at
ARMOUR BACON
COLD MEATS

Ave., Highwood

Out Spring and

Summer

Jumbo

Fresh Asparagus,

Carrots

Meats

Zagalia’s Service Station

to

~_attend.-

Royal

EXTRA FANCY STRAWBERRIES
FLORIDA ORANGES
GREEN ASPARAGUS
HEAD LETTUCE
GREEN BEANS
CALIFORNIA CARROTS

Greene

benefit

Ham,

Fruits

numfour

selections.

for

Cured

Highland

the

There will be no admission charge
for this program but a freewill offer-

Mixed

GREAT-NORTHERN

Hank

through eight under the direction of
Miss Betty Hahn will provide vocal
numbers and the Elm
Place band
will play

Sardine Canape
Grapefruit Juice
Half Grapefruit
Broth, Carolina

be

Jesse Lowe Smith auditorium of Elm
Place school.
The musical program will consist
of both vocal and instrumental
bers.
Children
from
grades

Amsterdam

Strawberry Shortcake, Whipped Cream
Sherbet
Apple Pie
Strawberry Sundae
Lady Baltimore Layer Cake
Cherry Pie
Pineapple Sundae
Butterscotch Sundae
Chocolate Sundae
Baked Apple
Fruit Jello
Liederkranz, Camembert or Blue Cheese with Crackers
Coffee
Tea
Milk
Buttermilk

The annual spring music program
will be presented on Thursday even15,

New

of
and

fee

Our

Hot Rolls

of

club,

to see

admission

in

Radishes

Mother’s Day Salad—Cottage

pic-

auspices

Garden’

is welcome

ture. A
charged.

Spring Music Program

May

Sugar

Snowflake Potatoes
Buttered New Peas and

Winnetka, will be shown at the Ravinia school auditorium the afternoon

| To Diesent Annual

ing,

Garden

Hearts

Crisp Head

M.

8:30 pm.
£ ROOM

Sirloin Victory or Filet Mignon Saute, Marchand du Vin
Calf’s Sweetbread and Capon a la King, en Casserole
Fresh Half Spring Chicken, Southern Fry, Clemenceau
Roast Prime Ribs of Beef au Jus
Roast Stuffed Tom
Turkey—Chef’s
Dressing, Giblet Gravy,
Cranberry Sauce
Roast Stuffed Watertown Duckling, a l’Anglaise, Wild Rice

meet-

a motion

DINNER

Broiled Whole Live Baby Lobster, Melted Butter
Broiled Fresh Lake Superior Trout au Beurre Noisette
Fried
Jumbo Frog Legs, Biloxi, on Toast, Tartar Sauce

Shown at Ravinia School May 20

Abercromby,

Norman

at

Celery

“Flowers in Action” Will Be

Waukegan

Mrs.

children

dren to attend this final guild
ing of the 1946-47 school year.

Emblem club recently. They included:
Mrs. Sheahen, Mrs. Charles Elwell,
Mrs.- Sam
Bernardi, Mrs. Leonard
Steffen, Mrs. H. J. Eberhart, Mrs.
Earl McGath, Mrs. William Dorick,
‘Mrs. William. Kelly, Mrs. Joseph Bernardi,

for

to

LUXE

Choice of
Lobster and Crabflake Cocktail
Orange Juice
Florida Fruit Cup, Grenadine
Tomato Juice
Apple or Grape Juice
Wine Herring Tidbits
Cream of Fresh Mushrooms, Chatelaine Chicken

Thomas
Hart, Mrs.
Mrs. Alex
Rafferty
J. Goeckner.

small

Noon

DAY

Sunday, May 11, 1947.

the nominating comMrs. John
Dompke,

the

it possible

ceremonies

of

of

12:00

for

Iced

charge

husbands,

their

by

;
officers

year

p.m. It is hoped this service will make

12, at 8 p.m.

installation

the

A report-on plans for the second
annual
school
picnic, to be held
Wednesday,
June
‘11, also will be
‘given. Mrs. Walter R. Amsteen is
chairman of the picnic committee.
Girls of the eighth grade will take

in Elks hall, All officers must attend.
A group of club members and officers,

of

from

DE
~

the
Mother’s
guild
of
will
school
Conception

chairman,
Mrs.
Sam
,Bernardi,
Jr. and Mrs. A.

Archibald
Abercromby,
Mrs.
Nafe
Larson, and Mrs. Max Engels.
The new board will hold its first
business meeting of the 1947-48 fiscal
year

meeting

Members of
mitee
include

Another feature of the meeting will
be the initiation of 12 new members.
Hostesses for the evening will be
Mrs.
John
Lenzini,
Mrs.
Claude
Mrs.

Served

ings.

evening.

Mitchell,

SPECIAL

be held Wednesday afternoon, May
14, at 2:30 o’clock in the basement
of the rectory. Election of officers
will take place during the proceed-

invite

to

urged

are

last

members
of
Immaculate

- § p.m. Mrs. Raymond Sheahen, newly
installed president, will preside.

members

MOTHER’S

to

Of Year Wednesday

a
will include entertainment,
which
reception and refreshments, will folbusiness meeting at
~*~ low the
club’s

‘All

Guild

Hold Last Meeting

program,

The

hall.

Elks

remodelled

Mother’s

+ ‘ ne

ON

Dk

uneeeree

ea

�Thursday,

May

Highland

8,

1947

Page

Park Moose

Officers Are

Installed

|Dorie Weber Wins
Dorie
High

Weber

school

meet.

of

won

Highland
the

|

Dorie has been in Seattle, where
swam
with
six other members

Title

Swimming

1947

Park

the

Women’s

Senior
Central
A.A.U.
swimming
championship in the
100-yard
free
style at the Town
Club of Chicago on
:
Saturday, April 26.
The Town club 400-yard free style
1elay team on which Dorie also swims
lowered the Central A.A.U. record
by more than 5 seconds at the same!

Thomas

Pan

A.A.U.

club

team

in

women’s

meet

held

the

|
|
|

R.

National

Friday,

Chalmers
You to His

ROYAL OAK
SCHOOLING

STABLES
SHOWS

The first and third Saturdays
of each month

during the summer.

ROYAL

OAK

STABLES

County Line Road
Photo

by

George

Marshall

ence Roleman,
retary.

assistant

Y.W.C.A.

sgt.

at

arms

and

Lawrence

Chambers,

OUR

Calendar

club.

SUNDAY, May 11,
3 until 5 pm. Art

Amateurs

ante

TYPEWRITERS

ee

All Work

Board
club.

6eet
p.m. Pi tate
Delta

Birthday dinner and

meeting.

NOW
Office

ice

followered
d

Creative

by

r

rar
awards

]

GROW

Shrubs

Trees

Roses

Vines
Annuals
Peat Moss

meeting,

c}
luncheo
n

CLAVEY,

b

Shrub

Typewriters
|

ae
Toda

525 Central Ave.

INC.

ii

One

or a Forest

—

il
files

Not

A

Weed

Y
ae

.
Sight:

In

&lt;&gt;

CHANDLER'S

‘

daily until dark.

SKOKIE BLVD. &amp; CLAVEY RD., HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

AVAILABLE
T
*

rder

writers
1s

WILL

Evergreens

ELMER

Guaranteed

estore

THURSDAY, May 15,
a.m.

MONEY
ee

Fruit Trees
Perennials
Fertilizer

REPAIRED

BY EXPERT REPAIRMEN

May 13,

10 am. YWCA
8 p.m. Mothers

10

YOU

PLANTS

Open

it oun tea and exhibition.
3
until 5 p.m Bible
class.

eS

SAVE

Locally grown, each plant carefully selected and balled
in the fields to bring savings to you — CASH &amp; CARRY.

SATURDAY, May 10,
9 p.m. Saturday evening
for

CAN

sec-

THURSDAY,
May 8,
12 noon Council luncheon.

TUESDAY,

WE

/

_
J

Tel. H.P. 3100

early, After A SCOTT
a"

LAWN

CARE

Treatment

Dandelions, Plantain, Buckhorn, all broad-leaved weeds
melt away when you use Scotts Weed Control. A meal of
Turf

Builder

transforms

ling green lawn.
Scotts Seed.
SCOTTS

LAWN

shade;

terraces

$6.25
prices.

25

SCOTTS

Bare

Ibs.

TURF

SEED—For
or

level

- $29.85.

KILCOYNE

at weddings.
Deerfield

678.

His

takes

baby

During

pictures

pictures
phone

in homes

are

strike

and

candid

shots

excellent.

His

write

53, Deerfield.

Box

phone

disappear
lawns

ground.

Scotts

in
1 Ib.

for

25 Ibs. - $2.25
10,000 sq. ft.

when
full
-

you

sun

‘5 Ibs.

Shade

food

feeds

plant

or light

$1.25

Dense

BUILDER—Notrishing

Clean and odorless.
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds

JAMES

pallid, sickly grass into a spark-

spots

-

same

for all grass.

2500

sq.

ft.

SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Quick, permanent destruction of weeds without harm to the grass. $1.25 and $3.85.

is

ed US EN
365

Roger

Williams

ETTER

she
of
Sat-

urday, and Sunday at the men’s pool of
the University of Washington,
The
irls
ran
into
fast
compe:
tition when
they came up against such
well known swimmers as Anne Curtis, Brenda Helser, and other holders
of national and world records in their
events.

|

Invites

Shown above are: seated, left to right—Thomas V. Stilwell, re- | ——
tiring governor; Edward Wollenberg; Alfred Saloneke, secretary of
the all-state
Moose
association
and
installing officer;
Anthony
Porco, governor; Harry Roberts, trustee; Wilfred Seguin, treasurer;
and Robert Bousson, Junior Governor.
Standing: William Kilellea,
trustee; Robert C. Mett, Sgt. at Arms; Leonard Stratford, Inner
Guard; Russell Early, Outer Guard; Charles Winkler, trustee; Clar-

17

IH AR

DW

ARE
Tel.

H.

P. 4387

�HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

GEORGE WINKLER
AND
EARL MAY, left
and right (not a pun),
are seen staging a fine
show of pugilistic techniques in the opening
bout at the third annual Elks boxing show

t |
|i
|
\

|
|

y

|

|
|

~

1S YOUR
Highland

BUSINESS!

Park is a better, safer place to

live because at the hospital, there is a cap-

able staff alerted 24 hours a day to provide
emergency treatment
the injured and sick.

and

hospital

care

for

April 25. Both boys are
members of the Highland Park Boys’ Boxing
club
which
recently
closed
its
season
as
champion of the American Legion 10th District conference.
Photo

by Percy
Prior, Jr.

H.

And yet, not a single cent has been spent
in the last 25 years to enlarge the hospital's
building facilities—even though the popula-

tion it serves has grown over 130%. The
present Building Fund Campaign is vitally
important to your family, because no one
knows where (or when). illness may strike
and we MUST have a hospital large
.enough
4 :

{

to take care of the health

our growing

needs of

community.

One of Your Neighbors Will Call
For Your
When

your

calls,

GIVE

gener-

ously . . . give MORE than you first thought
you would .. . spread your contribution over
a 3-year period, to make your gift as large as

possible.

Ten Pin

Bowling
American

—Lavater

HIGHWOOD GLASS
AND PAINT CO.
Ave.

News

Legion Bowling
May 3, 1947

League

Tower
Casino
Siljestrom
Coal
Washington
Gardens
Duffy
&amp; Duffy
Cleaners

Phy: Gre

EOE REPROD. 2.x. ccoiicc

Vogue

Cleaners

Tommy’s Service
Press Print Shop

Hi. P. 531

ae

Station

Anchor
Insurance
Highwood
Bump
Shop
Labor Temple
Tavern
Glader
Tazioli
Excavating
Manhattan
Hat
Shoe
John
B. Nash
Joe’s
Tavern

Hooker Paints
Venetian Blinds
Window Shades
Lighting Fixtures
Picture Framing

Onesti

Bros.

This

son.

4

winds

Don’t

night,

7:30

up

our

forget
p.m.,

1946-47

our
May

party
10,
Carl

bowling

on

butions are deductible in computing

LOOK

the in-

tax.

MAKE
A 3-YEAR CONTRIBUTION
HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL
‘525,000 BUILDING FUND

FLOOR

AT
YOUR

1947.
G. Arnswald.

SANDING

DOWNING
Our

AND

FINISHING

25th

Year

RUGS
RUBBER

TILE

FLOOR

SHOP

in Highland

Park

373 Roger Williams Ave.

Tel. H. P. 566

FURTH &amp; COMPANY
Funeral
936 E. 47th

Advisers

Street

and

rs

Chicago

LSA,

Directors

All

Phones

IMPORTANT

Garnett e Lo.

YOUR FLOORS
FRIENDS DO!

WOOL AND COTTON
LINOLEUM — ASPHALT AND

Kenwood

:
sea-

Saturday

Only the generosity of public spir-

ited citizens during this drive will make the
enlargement of the hospital possible. Contricome

Highland

potence.

961 Waukegan

Contribution

neighbor

He knows not how ro speak who
cannot be silent; still less how to act
with vigor and decision. Who hastens
to the end 1s silent; toudness ts im-

0700

ANNOUNCEMENT

We
offer complete
and
highly
adequate
facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known
Furth staff,of directors.
AN OUTSTANDING
PROFESSIONAL
RECORD
OF
56 SUCCESSFUL
YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

�HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL
IS

YOUR
BUSINESS!
Have you made your contribution to the Highland Park Hospital Building Fund? It is impor-

tant to your family’s health that our hospital be
enlarged ... that its facilities be modernized. A
lot of money is needed to get this job done—but
if each of us contributes to the limit of our ability [1T WILL

BE DONE

sad the entire com-

munity will benefit!

he

4

az f
Sates
sea

WHEN YOUR NEIGHBOR CALLS ©
MAKE A 3-YEAR CONTRIBUTION
TO THE HOSPITAL BUILDING FUND

fa

sponsored

by friends of the Hospital

a
ES

advertisement

RE

This

A
a£7

�Bat

ata

3

He

,
Ser
ae

ae

ee

;

om

Te

7

Stok

SNe

«

Sop

hist

:

MOVING

AND

n

YS
uegear
i
&gt;

4
‘

;

Aes

=

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ie

SSE

—

. re ae

+

©

:

dS
?x

a

es Spee ;
ey sa

oieoe
a

ike

oy

;

OF HOUSEHOLD

give

The following letter was
last week by Joseph Weng

AGENT ALLIED VAN

nett’s

LINES

STORAGE
374 Central Ave., Highland

Park

band,

shop.

Dear

Coeoeeeeeeneeese@

Ison’s:------------;
heclon

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.

Lt.

In

it

received
of Gar-

the

Davidson,
now with

Col.

H.

D.

writer,

formerly
her hus-

Davidson,

Let Mother Have Day of Leisure
A Mother’s Day gift that’s bound to be most appreciated by mother is a dinner in her honor with
the family serving as:cooks and dishwashers. for
the day. It isn’t the actual rest, but the sentiment,
that mother. will enjoy most. So show her you
really enjoy honoring her.

Mr.

Weng:

We still haven’t heard from your
friend so don’t know if the strings
ever reached him or not. They definitely were not returned to Frau
Schmidt who still holds the registration slip on them nor did he ever
answer her letter.
You saw the pictures of the German Youth class that comes to my
quarters weekly on Wednesday afternoon. I am writing to ask you if
either you or Mrs. Weng know of
any former Bavarian who would be
interested in assisting me to sponsor
some of these younger German children.
We have a German Youth center
in

Erding,

a

population

of

about

2,000 including the outlying districts
of the Erding Landkreis and at our
base parties have about 2,600 children
from infants to sixteen years. I personally have fourteen girls ages from
7 to 14 who sew here at the quarters
and then we have, the Colonel and
I, five boys of two different families
who are 7 to 12 years old. I am not
able to do much with the boys as
are

things

scarce

Film

here

but

we

Developed

FREE
a hector Recipe“
Baked

Beans de Luxe

If your film is purchased from

5 CERTIFIED

FRANKFURTERS,

cut

us we

Preparation Tips
Vegetables
for the
relish
tray
(radishes, carrot sticks and celery)
may becleaned
the day before, wrapped
in a clean damp towel, and chilled.
Prevents any last m inute rush.

film

in inch-length

SPECIAL SPRING
CLEARANCE

t
I
t
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
t
I
I
I
I
I
i
t
I
I
i
t
4
t
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
i
I
1
I
I
I
I
I

cr

Too many cooks won’t spoil the
meal if you keep the menu simple and:
if everyone has his assigned tasks. The
_ key to simplicity is baked beans de
luxe with Certified Frankfurters.
With this tempting dish serve a relish
tray, cabbage salad, Boston brown
bread (you can buy it in a can) and
fresh strawberry sundaes.

the

AT NO CHARGE

pieces, and mix in carefully. Cover and bake in a slow oven, 325° ee
about 2 hours (adding more water if needed to keep beans moist).
Uncover the last half hour and arrange
:
5 CERTIFIED FRANKFURTERS
(remainder from
1 Ib.) on the top as shown above. Serves 5.

Keep It Simple

will develop

The baked beans may also be
pared on Saturday except for the
ing. On Sunday, put them in the
and go off to church. They’ll

prebakoven
bake

‘without any peeking on your part.

Now

SALE

In Progress

Paper - Film - Supplies

Wilson’s

Mayonnaise

to

bound to follow, so it’s off to the
kitchen with the “‘cooks’’ to make
Mother’s day one of complete rest.
A happy day to you,
NN
TOTTI

7NED

k

moisten.

When dinner is over dishwashing is

George Rector

Alden Harris
PHOTOGRAPHY

7 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland

3

but

do

the

Park

—

songs

from

that

picture

ever

since. They
thought that a lovely
show. My children usually sing all
the time they are here when they
are not gossiping about their daily
doings. It. is too bad I can’t understand everything they are
talking
about but I am a lazy individual and
haven’t put

forth

much

effort

toward

learning Deutsch.
We had thought we would be returning to the States this month but
from all appearances it will be at
least two or three months longer.
I don’t mind so much now as the
countryside is putting on its spring
dress and the scenery is wonderful.
The winter was one of the worst in
German
history and we were discouraged.
If any further information is requested on this German Youth project or any one should be interested,
am

willing

to

cooperate

with

him

by giving any data or handling any
contributions that may be extended
toward the betterment of the rising
German generation.
With the very best regards to you
and your family as well as the girls
in the

shop, I am

Sincerely yours,
Virginia Furrow Davidson
Address:
Lt. Col. H. D. Davidson, AC
Hdatrs. Erding Air Depot—Box
APO No. 207, New York City

7

Sponsor Games Party
The Ladies of Viking will sponsor
a games party Thursday, May 15,
at 8 p.m. in Witten hall. The public
is invited to attend.

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION

Second helpings of cabbage salad
will bein order if you add green pepper
and finely minced onion to theshredded

_cabbage, then mix with just enough

nd

at remaking clothing from any scrap
of material. I brought only my old
things with me so as they are falling apart, they are given to the little
girls whose
mothers do something
with them.
The other night the Colonel was
at the Youth Center inspecting the
club and saw that they were teaching
English to the younger children but
there were not enough books to be
had. The Education and Information
section of the army has requisitioned
these primers but to date they have
not arrived from the States. If you
know of any German-English books
that could be used for this purpose,
we would be glad to hear of them.
Any games for children would also
be appreciated; paper, crayons, drawing books from the dime stores, well,
just anything to keep these children
off the street and to teach them
there is some good
in this world
after all.
I have found these children to be
very receptive to any new ideas and
they are very obedient children. Recently they had the movie, “Going
My
Way”, in the Erding German
theater. They have been singing all

I

Wask and soak overnight in 1 quart of water
2 cups pea beans
1% tsp. salt, cover and simmer for about 1 hour,
Add
6 small onions for the last 20 minutes. Drain, readding
serving the liquid, and transfer the beans to a 1}4 quart casserole.
Mix together
%tsp.dry mustard
~
2 tbsp. brown sugar
% cup molasses
¥, cup catchup
1% cups bean liquid. Pour over beans in casserole.
Add

in

Germany, describes the rehabilitation
efforts being
made
upon
German
children. The accompanying pictures
also were sent by Mrs. Davidson.
14 April 1947

H. P. 181

By

beauty

Virginia Furrow
of this city and

them

the clothing, that is a different st
The mothers and girls are very adept

Youth Rehabilitation

GOODS

&amp;

@eeececceeeeesee®

Virginia F. Davidson
Writes of German

PACKING

“Gite

:

322 N. First St.

Tel. H. P. 77

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A’ SPECIALTY

|

�Thursday, /May

8,

Page

1947

A Party for German Children

D. B. A. PRODUCTS
« TELEPHONE
744 WAUKEGAN

DEERFIELD

21

CO.

3

RD.

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

Presents 3 Smashing Spring Cleaning Hits!
FURNITURE
CLEANER-POLISH
@

Reveals

and

Preserves

Natural

Beauty

@ Cleans and Sparkles in Same Operation
© Produces a Dry, Gleaming Finish
®

Resists dust.
16-0z. Bottle

@
..

Lasts for days
1 Gal. ..

75c

$4.50

WINDO-SHINE
@
®

Superior Glass Cleaner
Polishes brilliantly

@

surface
Leaves no

was arctan,

@

Used on windows,

mirrors, plate glass, or any glass

hard-to-remove

16-0z. Bottle

.. 25c

film

1 Gal. $1.50

NO-STREAK CAR WASH
Reduces car washing to a minimum
Removes

dirt

only

Unharmful to either Simonize or wax
Only wash and hose to produce a lasting lustre
16-0z. Bottle
Can

.. 50¢

be purchased

»

from

your

1 Gal.

.. $3.00

neighboring

dealer

or direct from D. B. A,
ALL THREE

Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

2600 CHILDREN
IN ERDING,
GERMANY,
attended
a _ preLenten party in the city’s theatre given by American army Officials.
At the top children emerging from the theatre are being given
candy bars donated by the military personnel of the American base.
Mrs. Davidson can be seen in the upper left corner.
The lower picture is a down-in-front view of a small portion of
the

many

hundreds

of

children

who

attended

the

party.

. (Story on opposite

16-0Z. BOTTLES

$135

SPECIALLY

Announcement!
The Black and White Cab Company of
Highwood

now

offers

its

patrons

page.)

instant service with its two-way

Opening

Announcement
We

Wish

to Announce

that

dispatched cabs.

20c

STAND

Blvd., just north of

County

Line

radio

Special Introductory Price

our

FRUIT and VEGETABLE
Skokie

PRICED

Road

In Highwood

&amp; Immediate Vicinity

Is Now Open for the Season
FRESH

SUPPLIES

OF

FRUITS

RECEIVED

HARRY

AND

24 Hour

VEGETABLES

Service

DAILY

HENNING

400

Phone

337

�NEW

FLOORS
AND

AND

SANDED

CENTRAL
for

sanded
finest

Mrs.

meeting

on Morflay,
house.

president

5218

of

will
Miss

Chase

will be the speaker.

Stewart

and finished
homes
along

_

over 1606
the North

Evening

church

parish

ILL.
7120-M

Martha’s

Trinity

oh Hold Tea Tosiateaie for Mothers | WE
\
JALL NEED OUR Stak

hold

guild of
its

May

Mothers
regular

12, in

Josephine
House

the

Ewalt,

auxiliary,

This promises

to

be a most

interesting and informative

talk

members

urged

and

and

friends

to attend.

are

who

have

children

OF GOOD HOSPITAL CARE!
Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the

enter-

ing kindergarten this fall (1947-48)
are cordially invited to a registration
tea to be held in the kindergarten
room of Oak Terrace school Thursday, May 8, at 2 p.m.
A program will be presented by this
year’s kindergarten children.
Children entering kindergarten must be
five years old by January 31, 1948.
Bring child’s birth certificate.

Highland
$525,000

Park Hospital
Building Fund

A Mother's Eye View
of Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
By

Mrs. Norma W. Robinson
Lake Bluff, Illinois

A shimmering blue lake girdled by
pine and white birch trees gently
rising from the water’s edge—this is
the first impression gained
by a
nature loving mother upon the occasion of her initial visit to Camp Ma«Ka-Ja-Wan.
Her
delight is intensified by a motor boat ride across the

lake to the camp landing and a closer
view of this Scout community.
Our visitor puffs her way up the
path

towards

Headquarters

buildings

noting with envy the ease with which
myriad Scouts scurry both up and
down hill. She stops to examine the
water
pumping
station then
later
enjoys a refreshing drink from the
hill top fountain.
Lunch in the vast dining hall is
quite an experience for one who previously thought that two boys of her
own were noisy. Heaping plates of
nourishing food are cleared in no
time, whereupon lusty boyish. voices
ring out in songs and cheers. Then
suddenly the room is almost empty
and the boys are lined up outside
waiting their turn to purchase candy
bars.
An
afternoon tour of inspection
takes the visitor over more hilly terrain by well-trod paths through the
woods of six separate Scout villages,
each with its circle of sturdy log
cabins. Their neatness
is amazing
when one recalls the usual state of
a boy’s room at home.
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan’s hospital building,
with its efficient trained nurse and
ample supply of medical aids, it is a
reassuring sight for mother. So, too,
is the water front, which is so carefully supervised for safety in every

UMMER-COOL SILK
epeeee

Adaptable to your town, country
and travel plans—this

one. of the many

dye silk in red, green, mavy or
black with white polka

aquatic

sports.

Many

boats dot the lake and some boys are
even fishing.
One of the most interesting sights,
in this mother’s opinion, is the out- |
door amphitheater built on a hillside
sloping down to the lake. It offers a

shirtwaist

classic, exclusively ours. Pure

sieieinreeset
R ALES
LOL
spy?

| have
of the
Shore.

Saint

STEWART

8. PARKWAY
PROSPECT
HEIGHTS,
Phone Arlington Heights

Martha’s Guild

To Meet Monday, May 12

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

SHELBY

Ask

Saint

OLD

perfect
only of

dots.

view
from
every seat,
the Speaker’s platform

not
be-

low, but also of a panorama of natural
beauty which includes lake, trees, and

Sizes 10 to 16. $49.95

the

blue

canopy

of

sky

above.

The mother ends her visit to Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
with a firm belief
that it is an ideal vacation spot for
her
the

son. He
company

is enjoying himself in
of other boys
whose

interests are similar to his, and at the
same time,
able Scout

under the supervision of
Leaders,
he is learning

and doing
make him

many things which
a better citizen of.

world.

Lathereda
THE DRAKE SHOP+IN THE DRAKE HOTEL

THE

950 SHOP « 950 N. MICHIGAN

THE

THE

NEW

EVANSTON

SHOP

« 1636 ORRINGTON

OAK

PARK

SHOP

« 730

AVENUE
LAKE

ST.
ae

New Address
E. Van Buren Street

Harrison

3747-3748

will
the

|

�Thursday,

May

8,

1947

Page

Downey Veterans
Rush Completion of

Teen-Age Club to
Sponsor Spring
Dance Saturday

Memorial Poppies
are

Disabled veterans at Downey hospital
rushing completion of memorial

poppies

which

will be worn.

throughout

Highland Park and Highwood in honor
of the war dead on Poppy day, May
26, according to Mrs. Chris Matthiesen
and Mrs. Bruno Bertucci, Poppy chairmen of both units
Legion auxiliary.

of

the

American

Making poppies at the hospital is directed by the Illinois department of the
auxiliary,

which

provides

instructs the workers
flowers

produced.

the materials,

and

pays

for the

Veterans

of

Highland
which

and

is

Park

board,

by

dance

the hands of Dick Eubanks,
of

Teen-Age

sponsored

‘Recreation

continue until midnight.
Arrangements for the

club,

Playground

will sponsor

a

the

club;

Dave

are

kets may be purchased from any mem-

standing

munity

The

party

band

for

will

open

at

the
9

p.m.,

event.|
and|

ROTA,

At a quiet place in WISC. north
Woods.
Good fishing on a dandy

vice

president, who is serving as ticket
chairman; Mary Lou Cameron, social
chairman, and Bob Peddle, publicity
chairman.
All high school age boys and girls

semi-formal spring dance in the auditorium of Lincoln school on Saturday
night.
The club has engagéd an out-

dance

Honeymoon

in

president

Gerhardt,

are
ber
day

invited
of

to

attend

Teen-Age

center,

the

club,

party.
at

or at the

lake.
Completely
furnished
lake
shore cottages.
Rates for May and
early June $20 to $35 per week.
You will like it here.

Write

Tic-

the

door

for

Leonard

Com-

reservations

J. Kovar

PLEASANT VIEW RESORT
SIREN, WISC.

Satur-

night.

a

Pee

both

world wars are employed, older veterans of World War I who have made
poppies

in previous

years

working

by side with the younger
of

the

second

conflict

side

disabled men

who

are

making

the flowers for the first time.
“The work is enjoyed by the

men,

who benefit from it in two ways,”
chairmen explained. First, making

the
the

poppies is beneficial as occupational
therapy, providing interesting occupation for hands and minds during the
long days of hospitalization and convalescence. Second, the money earned
enables the veterans to help provide
for themselves or their families, and is
a powerful morale builder.
“Because of increased public response
to the Legion and auxiliary Poppy day
appeal, more veterans are being given
employment this year than ever before.
Every person who wears a poppy on
Poppy day not only pays tribute to the
war dead but helps the war’s living
victims toward recovery and _ rehabilitation.” -

Butterscotch
Royale

witht

T

NOse

ICE

CREAM

GOLDEN

RIB® o*”

Thirteen ‘to Receive
Diplomas At Glencoe

Congregation School
The

largest

senior

class

in

the

his-

tory of the congregation, will be graduated from the high school department of the religious school, North
Shore

this

Congregation

Friday

Israel,

Glencoe,

evening.

Thirteen

graduates

will

participate

in the sabbath services and receive
diplomas:
Edith
Altheimer,
Auron
Balkin, Lois Grauer, Edward Kahn,
Edwin Levy, Sharon Linick,
Edith
Meyer, Joan Peirce, Thomas Roos,
William Ruekberg, Martin Steinberg,
Mark

Stone

The

Day
by

and

Bruce

Wertheimer.

Baccalaureate

You
Rabbi

Live

In,”

Richard

of the

will
C.

F. Mecklenburger,
congregation,
and
chairman

sermon,

be

“The

delivered

Hertz.

Albert

president
Abel E.

of the
Fagen,

religious

school

com-

mittee, will present the certificates
of graduation on behalf of the congregation.

MU
Quick
Se
397

Central

Tasty ribbons of mellow butterscotch in
satin-smooth Sealtest vanilla. It’s yours—
and the whole family’s—to enjoy. Get this

Service

treat today at your neighborhood
In bulk or package.

aaa
Avenue—Room

Highland

Telephone

Park

H.

P. 1553

store.

But, be sure—look

ICE

CREAM

|

for the Sealtest red emblem of quality.
12

Vow is- Seattest time!

BEST

BY.

ANY

TEST

aa=&gt; Tune in WMAQ Thursday, 8:30 p. m.—“SEALTEST VILLAGE STORE” qm
~

23

�Page

24

4

Thursday,

Lecturer Deals

With Post-War World

And Spiritual Needs
A confused and unstable post+war
world
needs
to review
the great
moments of its own history to find
that the key to permanent peace lies
within the spiritually inspired words
of the Bible, Ralph E. Wagers, a
member
of the
Christian
Science
Board of Lectureship, told an attentive audience Monday night in First
Church of Christ, Scientist.
Not only has’ the Bible influenced
the entire constructive history of the

a
THE

COMPLETELY

THAT’S

BETTER

AUTOMATIC
BUILT

TO

HOME

DO

A

English-speaking

LAUNDRY

BETTER

turer
Rights”

JOB

te RE-VERSO-ROL
More

thorough

washing

added,

rinsing.

founded

the

“the
upon

Bill
it,

he

dries, dripless,
for the line.

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and.

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gradually

times

wash-

ing and rinsing cycles.
je LARGER CAPACITY
10 full pounds dry weight.
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clothes

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use

of

hot

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electricity,

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OT OMES

of it! All you
‘do is put
in Launderall—add soap—flip

your clothes dewy fresh and ready
for the line. It even cleans itself and
a switch—and your washing is done!
shuts itself off. Let us demonstrate
Launderall does everything else
KMeN OR BRUNO
GS
Launderall’s
outstanding
adfor you automatically—washes, P” Gruatantood by
vantages to you today—you'll
Good
Housekeeping
double rinses and spin dries voy
RY
never be satisfied with less.

Of Charming Exterior Here Drawn
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On Which We Are Accepting Orders

314 Railway

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HARDWARE

Ave., Highwood

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305 Waukegan

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Protected by 20 Property

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Priced at from $15,800 to $16,700.

Tel. H. P. 1533

c,
Also

In Bills-Protected

Smart

Ranch

Houses

Northbrook

Ready

in Fall.

With Every Best, Latest Feature
Bargains, New: $11,000 to $13,000.
Close to Park, Youth Center, Stores.
Near Schools, Churches, Rail-Station.

human

ever

Phone:

ORLAND

Lincoln

TOWERS

FRANKLIN,
Popular

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&amp;

Touhy

high

building

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costs.

information,

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STATE 0266

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Without
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Entertainment 9 until closing
Delicious Food at Moderate Prices
Cocktail Lounge
Dine in a Distinctive Ultra Modern Atmosphere,
Air Conditioned to Insure Maximum Comfort — Ample, Parking Space.

Two

THE BILLS REALTY, INC.,
110 S. Dearborn Street, Chicago,
Gentlemen:

The place for family dinners

to

Copyright,

3365

|

|

power

which

be,”

is

he disclosed.

Name:

Address:

under

the

direct

auspices

The
Mother Church, The
Church of Christ, Scientist,

110 SOUTH DEARBORN

Avenues

spiritual

The lecture was sponsored by the
local Christian Science church as a
part of a nation-wide tour by Mr.

“Fine

Illinois,

for

Mr. Wagers went on to say that
this spiritual power, unlike material
energies, is: wholly constructive and
“will hold in check the potentially
Destructive physical forces with which
the nations are now confronted.”
How will the power of God hold
these forces in check?
In the same
way that Jesus healed the man with
the withered hand, raised Lazarus
from the dead, and stilled the tempest, the speaker replied:
His explanations of the spiritual import of
these historic events, along with the
momentous rediscovery of the application of spiritual power in this age
by Mary Baker Eddy, Founder of
Christian
Science,
highlighted
the

ton,

Lincolnwood,

to God

lecture.

Walks; Sewer,Water.

Ov BELLS

at:

they turned

more valuable to the human race than
any form of material energy could

Wagers,

A Smart North Shore Restaurant

reason,

guidance, the lecturer explained. And
he continued, “the irresistible impulsion of the divine idea launched this
country on a social, political, and
economic program that is destined to
make individual freedom and responsibility the basis of an enlightened,
progressive,
and
enduring
civilization.”
The need for this spiritual enlightenment, Mr. Wagers declared, was
the
basis
of his lecture,
entitled
“Christian
Science:
A
Prophetical
Religion.”
For this religion, he said,
has enabled its students clearly to
appraise the effect of the Bible upon
human
affairs, and
to understand
how to reason from a sound metaphysical, rather. than from a human
premise
for the solution of their
problems.
From this vantage point of spiritual
reasoning,
the
lecturer
continued,
Christian Scientists assume an unusually constructive position in the
postwar world.
Through their textbook, Science and Health, “which is
not another Bible, but rather a key
to the inspired passages in the Bible,
Christian Scientists are utilizing a

Every City Convenience and Utility:

offset

HOUSE

1947

Concrete Roads,

Our present low land prices

The GLASS

8,

the latent power within the Scriptures for “the healing of the nations,”
the speaker attempted to convey to
his Highland Park audience that the
confusion in the world today indicates “no inadequacy of divine government” but rather the inadequacy
of mankind to fully “honor the presence and power of God.”
|
When the framers of the Constitution were confused by the conflict of

moral and

‘

45 Apvennisto WES

SHERONY

of
said.

guiding

No bending or stooping—
it’s waist high.
ye SAFTI-LATCH
Protects careless fingers
and hands.
% HYDRO-PEL DRIVE
Scientifically

lec-

human thought up to the apprehension
of man’s true identity as a child of
God.”
During a full hour’s discourse upon

*&amp; ROTO-DRIER
Damp
ready

is

but

Also, its spiritual illumination solidifies the frame-work of the Constitution of the United States, Mr. Wagers

with

and

peoples,

affirmed,

May

of

Firs¢
in Bos-

Massachusetts.

Dr. Rose on Wake of News
Committee for Annual Dinner
Dr. George A. Rose of Highland
Park was a member of the committee
in charge of the sixth annual Wake
of the News dinner and homecoming,
held last evening in the Terrace
Casino of the Morrison hotel. Five
hundred contributors and their guests
attended the annual affair.

INSURANCE
HILL
372 Central

&amp;

STONE
H P. 64

�Value

$400,000 Appraised

of the Finest Dresden, Silver, Home Furnishings, and Art Treasures
We

Have

Ever

Offered

for

j

Sale

at

Public Auction
To

Be Sold

in Our Art Galleries at

CHICAGO

BROADWAY,

5250-56

Tuesday and Wednesday, May 13th and 14th at 7 p. m.

s

Illustrated above are a few of the thousands of exquisite items now on. display.

Inspection Saturday and Sunday, May 10th and 11th, 12 to 5 p.m.

DESCRIPTIVE

CIRCULAR

ON

REQUEST

hirano Art Galleries
R. ROBERTS

5250-56 BROADWAY

H. GOLDSTINE

Auctioneers. dnd Appraisers

CHICAGO. (40), ILL.

-

LONGBEACH 7257-8

�Page

26

Thursday,

Fashion Show Will

and Miami
model.

Highlight Final
Meeting of ORT
The

Women’s

American

spring

and

Ort,

summer

hats, furs and bathing
be shown by Bramson’s

Ort

members

will

This being the final meeting of the
year, an installation of officers will
North

Shore chapter, will sponsor a fashion
show on Wednesday, May 14, at the
Villa
Moderne,
Skokie
at
County
Line road.
Latest

Beach.

gowns,

apparel will
of Evanston

take
show.

place
After

ful years
Moore

preceding
completing

as head
will

be

the
two

of Ort,
succeeded

Albert N. Sacher.
All those who join

Ort

fashion
success-

Mrs.

Fred

by

Mrs.

on this day

will be luncheon guests of the organization.
Members are asked to bring
guests.
Luncheon
will be served at
12:30 p.m.

Rudy Vallee and

with

Rudy

Vallee,

screen

League Plans Annual

and

Chicago
a pro-

gram of entertainment.
The event closed a successful

1947

Luncheon Tuesday

Suburban
B'nai
B’rith
members
were
royally
entertained
at their
closing
_luncheon
and_
installation
Tuesday afternoon at the Villa Moderne,

8,

N. S. Catholic Woman’s

Irv Kupcinek at
B’nai B’rith Affair

radio star, and Irv Kupcinek,
columnist, presented
Times

May

first

The

annual

spring

North Shore Catholic
will be held at the

luncheon

of the

Woman’s
Georgian

league
hotel,

Evanston, Tuesday, May 13. The Rt.
Rev. Msgr. Reynold Hillenbrand of

Winnetka will be guest of honor. Mrs.
Franklyn Doan, president-elect, is in
charge of the day’s arrangements.
Other
guests
will
include
Mrs.

Arthur G. Mohaupt, first vice president of the 10th District Federation
of Woman’s Clubs, and Miss Helen

a
Ni
Cotes, SAVING

Ganey,

president

Council

of

presidents

of

the

Catholic
of

the

Archdiocesan

Women.

league

Past

also

will

be

present at the speakers’ table, and
Mrs.
Anthony
Molinare,
retiring
president, will preside.
The luncheon, planned with bridge
to

follow,

is

the

closing

event

of

the

club year, and also will serve to introduce the newly elected officers of
the league.
Installed with Mrs. Doan as president, will be Mrs. Harry C. Anderson
of Winnetka, first vice president, Mrs.

Water... SAVING
PAY VL

Joseph Pleck of Glencoe, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Harry Bruce,

also of Glencoe,

corresponding

secre-

tary.

New

directors

Crane

| man

of

Redding

include

Highland
of

Mrs.

Jacob

Park,

Mrs.

Earl

Mrs.

John

Gor-

Glencoe,

of Winnetka and
Molinare of Wilmette.

Mrs.

Anthony

OUR COMMUNITY’S HEALTH
IS EVERYBODY’S
BUSINESS!
Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the

WE'RE DEMONSTRATING THE

BENDIX

Highland
$525,000

Park Hospital
Building Fund

automatic

Home Laundry

year for tue organization under leadership of Mrs. Joseph Wertheimer of
Highland Park. The gavel was turned
over to Mrs. David Ettelson of Wilmette, new president, and other
cers were installed as follows:

ALL YOU DO I$
SET THE DIAL
AND ADD
SOME SOAP

Mesdames
“Carl Reimsh,
Raphael
Hoffman, Earl Lewis, John Garfinkel,
Myron
Herzog,
William
Feldman,
Joseph

YOU DON'T
EVEN PUT
A

IT’S THRILLING WOMEN

,Weiss,

BY THE HUNDREDS!

of

Glencoe;

Mrs.

Jacques

Saihin

and Mrs. Abe Fell of Winnetka, and
Mrs. Aocher Moment and Mrs. Herman Berman of Evanston.

Women

DELIVERY —

are

saying

they

never

knew

you

could get clothes so clean—and not even stay
at home! Come in—see the most amazing
washday miracles ever—with the Bendix doing all the work!

COME IN FOR YOUR BENDIX DEMONSTRATION NOW!
IMMEDIATE

Mortimer

Come in— see the Bendix fill itself with water
—wash clothes super-clean—rinse 3 times—
change its own water—damp dry clothes
—clean itself—drain itself—shut itself off!

HAND
WATER !

IN

Wertheimer,

F. L. Rosenthal and Arnold Holland,
all of Highland
Park;
Mesdames
Jerome
Natenberg,
Earl
Wechter,
Morris Blumberg and Max Goldberg,
all

:

15 MONTHS

TO PAY

HIGHWOOD RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE CO.
917 Waukegan

Ave. —

Highland

Park

1% Blocks North of Moraine Road, East of the Tracks

TEL. H. P. 4003
LE

a

LE A

Te

LTTE

offi-

LI

Tc

DEB

A

ES

ERO

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EERIE

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Solaete] Spaghetti

�Giants Play Two
Games At Oak
Park Saturday

Morton Second
Parker Victim

THE FIRST THING
To REMEMBER |S
To KEEP YOUR
EVE ON THE.

Highland Park Faces Powerful
Huskies Away; Meet Waukegan

By 15-0 Score
Highland Park Sets Sights
On State Golf Championship
By Steve Herz

By Ray Geraci

Highland Park’s defending Suburban League Champion Golf team won.
two conference meets last week by _
shutting out both Thornton and Mor_

Highland Park High school’s baseball team, which to date has a record
of

four

will

losses,

three

and

wins

travel to Oak Park Saturday to meet
header.
the Villagers in a double
The Little Giants, though woefully
weak in the pitching department,
still
have a chance in the Suburban League
race.
Thornton

Aa
/

'

»

_
E

Sets

ton with 15-0 scores. Despite unfavor-_
able weather conditions, which have ©

not exactly
Giants have
pressive

Thornton’s Flying Clouds are setting a torrid pace in the conference
race for the Suburban League pennant. The Clouds have yet to lose a
ball game in seven starts. Highland
Park baseball fans will get an opportunity to see Thornton on May 1/7,
when they will be in town for a
double header with Highland Park.
With a good day there should be a
large crowd at the game. |
Giants Face Bulldogs
A team which has felt the sting of
defeat by Highland Park, Waukegan,
will play a single game at the High
School Athletic Field on West Park
Avenue next Tuesday afternoon at
4:00 p.m.
Four Games Left:
The baseball season is rapidly coming to a close with only four games
remaining. Highland Park will end its
season on May 20 at New Trier. Although the weather has been a little
better suited for football than baseball, Highland Park has played all
its games according to schedule thus
far this season.
Remaining Baseball Schedule
Sat., May 10, O. Pk. (There, 2 games)
Tues., May 13.... Waukegan (Here)
Sat., May 17 Thornton (H, 2 games)
Tuesday, May 20 . New Trier (Here)
May 19 to 24 District Baseball
May 26 to 31 Sectional Baseball
June 5 to 6 State Finals

weather

Des Plaines May 16
Neild’s Sport

Shop

Park’s top major
team,
is scheduled

nine; Highleague
softto fire the

opening gun in the 1947 night softball
season
under

here
the

Friday night,
May
16,
lights
at
Sunset
park

against a team from Des Plaines.
Another important practice session
will be held Sunday afternoon at 2:30,
on the Sunset park diamond, Manager Robert “Bocker” Peterson has
issued a request
present
at this

for the
buted.

home

that all players be
practice.
Uniforms

opener

will

be

distri-

Amedeo

Make

A

Moosehart Relays
Last Saturday
800

athletes

nois

high

urday

Park

from

schools

in

the

34

northern

competed

fifth

Hospital

$525,000 Building Fund

IIli-

last Sat-

annual

Moosehart

relays.
Highland
Park was _ represented but was unable to place. Four
records
were
broken
in
Evanston set a new mark

the
meet.
in the 440-

yard relay with a time of 45.6.
ston

also

established

a

new

Evanmark

in

the half mile event with a time of
1:34.8.
New Trier’s two mile relay
team set a new record with a time
of 8:45.5, while La Grange’s distance
medley relay won in 8:23.3 to break
the

last

record.

+

BROAD

Sarney,

Trier,

third;

Elgin,

by

Laz,

second;

Richard
despite

wet

Sheridan, —
the cold —

grounds.

The

other

_

Brown,

Froviso,

fourth;

King,

Evanston, fifth.
Distance, 21 feet.
POLE
VAULT—Laz,
Aurora
West
Evanston,

tied

for

first

‘Naperville,
third and

and

New
and

Glenbard,
and
for fifth. Height,

HIGH
JUMP—Won
by
Long,
Blue
Island;
Beck,
Bloom,
Piskel,
Naperville,
Harmet,
Oak
Park,
and
Haycock,
Maine,
tied
for
second,
third,
fourth,
and.
fifth.
Height, 5 feet 7%
inches.
SHOTPUT—Won
by Peterson, Oak Park;
Rodez,
Evanston,
second;
Bostrom,
Whea-

ton, third; Young, New Trier, fourth; Lencioni, Geneva, fifth.
Distance,
48 feet 5
inches.
DISCUS—Won
by
McDonald,
Oak
Park,

erside,

third;

Derr,

Downers

Grove,

153

feet 10 inches.
:
YARD DASH-——Won by Conrad, Oak
Weigel, Main, second; Hilliar, New
third;
Lencioni,
Geneva,
fourth;
Bloom,

fifth.

fourth;

Lougy,

Whitney,

Grange,

Oak
Fark;
Miller,
Riv-

De

100
Park;
Trier,

La

Peterson,
second;

fifth.

Time,

Distance,

:10.4.

200 YARD
LOW
HURDLES—Won
Robertson, New Trier; Meyer, Geneva,
ond;

Holman,

Evanston,

Oak

fourth;

Park,

Scharil,

third;

Oak

by
sec-

Fulton,

Park,

fifth.

:23.4.

Grange; Kemper,
Marengo,
third;
Jantzen,

York,

Proviso,

fifth.

by

Dreutzler,

Proviso, second;
Ellis,
Sycamore,

fifth.

Time,

Time,
La

Finney,
fourth;

4:39.

ONE MILE RELAY—Won by New Trier
(Saplding, Staffey, Gilbertson, Dold); Riverside, second; Joliet, third; Maine, fourth;

team, and this should prove
Remaining

WE

ALL NEED OUR SHARE
OF GOOD HOSPITAL CARE!
Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the

Oak

Park,

ord).
TWO

Park Hospital
Building Fund

fifth.

MILE

Time, - $8:35.8

RELAY—Won

(Young, Fisher,
ond;
Evanston,
Downers
Grove,

Lundin,
third;
fifth.

by

Tuesday, May 13--W stdbabsin: (Ther
e

Monday,

(ties

New

rec-

Trier

Jacobi) ; Argo, secOak
Park,
fourth;
Time,
8:25.5
(New

zler);
Naperville,
second;
Elgin,
third;
De
Kalb,
fourth;
Sycamore,
fifth.
Time,
8:23.2
(New
record;
old record
8:38.5,
by
Riverside.)

800 YARD
RELAY—Won
by Evanston
(Howe,
Gathany,
Holton,
Burton);
Oak
Park,
second;
Joliet,
third;
New
Trier,
fourth;
York,
fifth.
Time,
1:34.8.
(New
old

record,

1:35,

by

Riverside.)

SPRINT
MEDLEY
RELAY—Won
by
York
(Tiedemann,
Patterson,
Anderson,
Dykema);
Hinsdale,
second;
Proviso
and
Blue
Island,
tied
for third
and
fourth;
Evanston,

fifth.

Time,

1:41.

440 YARD
RELAY—wWon
by Evanston
(Burton, MacLean,
Gathany,
Howe);
Oak
Park; second; New Trier and/Froviso, tied
for third and fourth; Bloom, fifth.
Time,
745.6. (New record; old record,
:46.1, by

De

Kalb.)

.

May

19—Evanston

:

_

(Here)

Tuesday, May 20—Proviso (There) _:
May 23-24—STATE MEET

f

r

ss

Preliminary
discussion concerning
reorganization of the Highland
Park
oe 16-inch softball league was
held
ho
n
ne i
center last Thursday

”*

.

7

—

_ Teams
represented at this meet- _
ing were: Duffy and Duffy, Invader’s,
—
Elm

record; old record, 8:46.9 by’ Aurora East.)
DISTANCE
MEDLEY
RELAY—Won
by
La Grange (Little, Eckdahl, Milner, Dreut-

record;

ae

Golf Schedule

Saturday, May 17—DISTRICT

.

Highland
$525,000

to be a

very interesting golf meet.

| League Thursday

second;

and
Greinke,
fourth;
Meafie,

oad

Meet to Organize
16-Inch Softball

Invitational

Soph

Minorini, 89.

In the other league match against
Morton played at Sunset Valley Golf
Course, Highland Park defeated Mor-.
ton, 15-0, on Friday May 2. It was the _
Parkers second straight league win
and fifth of the current season. (Because of the deadline last night results against New Trier are unavail- _
able.)
ee
On Tuesday afternoon the Parkers will travel to Waukegan to face:
their strongest rivals. The Bulldogs”
have always come up with a good golf
Bs

Park

Oak

Tuesday—Golf—At Waukegan
Baseball—At Waukegan
Sophomore baseball at Morton

Aurora

Milland,

at

Saturday—Basebali
(2 games)
Track—Frosh

JUMP—wWon

West;

Events

Sports

Coming

Summaries:

ville,
fourth;
Uhlar,
315.4.
MILE
RUN—Won

_

Spring football training which was
to have started on April 15 and last
into the month of May ended after
only a few days because of lack of
players.
Coach Dave Floyd would
continue the training if there would
have been at least 22 boys reporting
daily, but because of various Spring
sports most of the boys were unable
to attend football.

;

120 YARD
HIGH
HURDLES—Won
by
Watson, Evanston; Meyer, Geneva, second;
Scharli, Oak Park, third; Zolvinski, Naper-

3-Year Contribution
to the

Highland

Spring Football
Ends Because of
Lack of Players

800 Athletes At

Time,

HELP BUILD A GREATER
HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL!

and

by the wid-

were;
Mouse
Ori, 79, Deno Mel-—
chiorre, 81, Richard Flynn, 82, and

Aurora
East,
Dunning,
Thompson,
Wheaton,
tied
12 feet.

|

Lee

his opponent

winning scores in the Thornton meet

McClenaghan,
York,
tied- for

Neild’s Will Open

The

victories.

est margin was
who
shot
a 78

King,

land
ball

been helpful, the Little
turned out two very im-_

Defeating

Pace

Season Against

aed

Place,

and.

VFW.

Fell’s

and

Moose, also prospective league mem.
bers this year, were not represented.
_
_ Proposals were made at the meet-

ing that the age limit be lowered from _

25

to

18 years;

feebe raised

additional

umpires.
audience
the

money

to

Last year,
volunteered

various

These

also,

that

the

entry

from $10 to $25,

games.

proposals

be

used

the

to

pay

Loe
are

a

men from the |
to officiate at —
to be

taken

ie e
up

et

at the meeting, today, at 8 p.m. inthe Highland Park Community cen- —
ter. All team managers and players —
interested in this league are asked ©
to be at this meeting.
ad
Practice and dress rehearsal will be _
held May 15 at 7 p.m. in Sunset Park.
Those players who are not already

registered, may
at this time. ©

sign up with
Seacal

a team ©
ae

�YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME
A BUY
FOR MEN!

PO-DO }

© 37¢c SHAVE

CREAM

:

j

DRUGS witn a REPUTATION”

wep

Lather or Speedy Brushless

)

39¢ Shave LOTION &amp; f,;/
P

AT

THURSDAY

201 Central Ave.
SUNDAY'S the Day y/

wr

RIGHT

fiz
RESERV.

/

~

\

$2 BARBARA
CLEANSING

GOUL
CREAMS

e SPECIAL... for Dry Skin
e POMPODN ... for Any Skin
ay

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3

Freshest and finest at

Gift to Win

a Warm

Welcome...

GIVING PERFUME?
Choose TRIOMPHE

6 BS

Walgreen’s! Lb., from. .

SPECTALS

SPRING

Bubble

Choose a Gorgeous Gift Box!

CHOCOLATES ..FOR
A SWEET MOTHER!

Precious 1% ounce ina
stunning boudoir bottle . .

1 25

Bath ----..----------- Il oz. Je

Formula 20 A. Shampoo ---.-- 89c
$1.00 D &amp; R Deod. Cream

coc
w Hes
Barb
foe

Pee

tere
rn sree

eg eRe

Ne

UP

euia Pilg &lt;5

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Bag

Grass

x

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Cc
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ee

5-Ib.

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Seed

Dish

For HER Gift

Prize Present

CLOVER

POWDER

COMPACT

YANKY

DUSTING

ologne—
noc

:
ao¢
pee eae

ee

12

fice

Cloths
ee

a

:

er

ke om

ye

or lips
. 238

—

&lt;&gt;

782

you'd love to tell her—the way she'd love to hear

Mother’s Day

2

FEVER

amin

ee-[]5¢% &amp; 25¢

—-...------------

ci
ts

SPRING

i
f=]
SEND
MOTHER YOUR LOVE
"sw \@ed
Greeting Cards to express your sentiments the way

sy

Ropes - oer

Chen Yu’s New

PILCHER

eon

------------ $] 89

Nylon 50-ft. Clothes Line

Reber

A Hudnut Gift

Tube 3 9

1
meee

---. 69c

e

Ly

to 2 be

Greetings

59c
soe

15¢

2%15¢

7.

we

Wf

| WILDROOT V
$I

Bottle

CREAM-oIL

Was

_ALKAae

SELTZER

Tube

ges on
CREAM

moranae NEMA SS A434

‘NY

�| Town Talk

me

_ North Shore Area

Talk on Children’s
Summer Reading for
Green Bay PTA

Scouters to Fete

Dean Scoutmaster

Mrs.

“Bob” Townley Started in
Scouting When Scouting Started
This year marks Robert Townley’s
25th anniversary as Scoutmaster of
Troop 13 of Kenilworth. The Kenilworth

Boy

Scouts,

Scouts

and

Scouters

Shore

Area

observe
gram

council,

together

of

with

the

are

North

planning

to

this event with a special pro-

to

be

held

in

conjunction

with

the annual Kenilworth spring court
of honor at the Joseph Sears gymnasium May 21.
Altogether “Bob” Townley,\who for
the past five years also has been a
Scoutmaster and Cubmaster in Braeside, Troop 38, has spent 37 years
in Scouting. He started in Scouting
when Scouting started.
Young Scoutmaster
He was born in Allerton, Iowa,
and spent most of his early years
in Milwaukee, Wis., where he became
a charter member of Patrol 1, Troop
1, of
troop

the Central YMCA,
the
organized in the state of

first
Wis-

consin. A month after joining the
troop, he became
its Scoutmaster.
_ Organization of Troop
13 of the
Tabernacle Baptist church in Milwaukee and later of a troop of Italian Scouts in Racine, subsequently
fell to his credit.
Mr. Townley attended Northwestern university, where he played three
years

the

of

track

football,

team

was

for

a

member

the

same

of

length

of time, and also was on the wrestling team. He was elected to Deru,

honorary society, and received the
Big Ten Conference medal, graduating in 1921. While still a student at
Northwestern,

he

served

as

Scout-

master for Troops 1, 3, 5 and 8 of
Evanston!
Directs Athletics
Before going to Kenilworth, Town-

Inger

your

lawn

with

children’s

libra-

rian at the Highland
Park Public
library, will discuss “Children’s Summer Reading,” at a meeting of the
Green Bay Road school PTA today
at 3515: p.ak
Mrs. Boye’s talk will be a feature
of the organization’s final business
meeting

of

the

vear.

During the meeting, Mrs. Charles
Guyott, treasurer, and various committee chairmen will present reports
and officers of they PTA board for
the coming year will be elected.
To enable all mothers to attend
arrangemeeting,
this afternoon’s
ments have been made to provide
care for the children on the playground and in the kindergarten room
Refreshments
at Green Bay school.
kindergarten
with
served
be
will
mothers acting as hostesses.
Bee Ue Ree A US ek
os 0 te wakes
ley was athletic director at Northwestern Military and Naval academy,
and has been an athletic director in
Kenilworth for the past 25 years.
Actually, he is the “Mr. Scoutmaster” of the, North Shore Area
for

council,

he

has

the

longest

serv-

ice record in Scouting of any Scouter
in the organization.
A
veteran
of World
War
I, he
spent 23 months in service, 18 months
of which were put in overseas as top

sergeant

with

a

machine

gun

com-

pany of the Third division. After going through the Meuse Argonne campaign, he spent eight months in Germany on occupation duty.
Mr.

Townley

spends

all

his

sum-

with millions
plants.
Call

with

a triple

Shade,

tion

of

SCOTTS

WEED
weeds

IT’S

LATER

Summer’s

ih
goats]
1416 Ib.
5

to

permanent

grass.

$1.25

thickening lawns on
1 Ib. - $1.80

SHERONY
314 RAILWAY

WHEN

$3.85.

poor

HIGHWOOD,
H.

YOU

days

MOTHER
smart

Phaetons.

Broughms,

and_

in Spider
to

have Dinner at the aristocratic Moraine
Hotel. Or if Mother was of a little
later

vintage,

she

came

in

a

puffing

Winton, Stanley Steamer or Woods’
Electric. Through all of these years the
beauty and the reputation of the Moraine has
survived.
Mother will be
thrilled

with

Sunday,

as

dan.

H.P.

having

YOUR

soil.

dinner

there

guest.

801

next

Sheri-

with

and

pierced

Steaks,

P. 2041

Rd.

Chicken,

up a family
Dinner there
12 Noon on
At 4 P.M.

Glenview.

now

and his —

appearing

at

Room,

Have

you

seen

HAVE
“THE

AT

YOU DINED
COMMADORE”?

This is a newly opened Cocktail Lounge ©
and Restaurant on Skokie just south.
cf County Line. It’s an exceedingly —
good looking place and the food is
attractively
served.
Featuring
both —
Italian and American Foods. A la Carte _

or complete Lunch and Dinner. Open —
until

the

pricés.

wee
(500

small
ft.

south

hours.
of

Pleasing
Villa

Wm

party
next
Sundaily.

Buzanis

enlarged

and

re-

decorated Studio of these wel! known
Decorators? Truly it is so glamorous,
so distinctive, so beautiful it will take
breath

away

and

leave

you

ONLY

LOVE

YOU CAN BUY—
A DOG

So quoth a sign in front of a Dog
Kennels in the East. And isn’t it true!
Take good care of that Dog who gives

new

touches,

be

sure

~

you unbounded love and devotion. When

_

you are away you'll know he is safe
and happy if you send him to the But-~
terworth Kennels to Board. Big cool
buildings, large shady grounds. Li-

censed Veterinarian in attendance. 2810
Park

Ave.

H.P.

2967

Lee

GOOD TIP
MOTHER’S DAY

Mother is certain to be delighted with
a handsome Bag for HER gift next —
Sunday. At The Town Shop I discov_
ered almost unheard of values. Genuine
Leather Bags originally priced up to
$10.95, at a Special Selling of $3.50. —
Under arm and top handle styles in
Black,
Brown,
Navy.
Beautifully
equipped and with Zipper. fastenings. —
Many are Mam’selle Originals. Also
good looking styles in Patent and
Forstman Twill. 504 Central Ave.

Ruth Wakefield —
OUR COMMUNITY'S HEALTH
IS EVERYBODY’S
Make

A

3-Year

BUSINESS!
Contribution

to the

Highland

Park

Hospital

$525,000

Building

Fund

and

Have

You

Entered the

“CLEAN

UP”

ex-

claiming “oh” and “ah”. If you’re planning to do your house’ over or add some
fresh

Mo-

derne)

AND
HIMMEL
DECORATERS
the

|

atop the Sky Club may be re- —

owner.
LUBLINER
INTERIOR

the

ADV.

Chops,

Lobster Tails. Make
to have a memorable.
Sunday. Open from
days and Holidays.

|
:

served for large Parties, Banquets, and |
Conventions.
;

FOR

Arrow.
Smaller
The Key to your
and Rhinestones
Earrings, Sterlsmart styles from
Davis.

Ave.

Sky
Club, located on Harlem and
North Aves. én the Oak Park borderline. It’s well worth the drive to eat —
the splendid Food served at this out- |
standing Dine and Dance Spot, and to
be able to dance on a large, smooth |
dance floor to the music of such a
band.
The
big,
beautiful
Twilight

A

Rhinestones

Linden

Bernie Cummins

are

4444.

MOTHER DEAR
HERE IS MY HEART

your

ILL.

Orchestra

GIRL

Surreys

896

and

DINE AND DANCE
FAMOUS NAME BAND

The popular

starlight

set arrived
and

A

THINK

WAS A

Chicago’s

destrucand

HARDWARE

AVE.
Tel.

THAN

golden

Waukegan

CONTROL—Quick,
harm

an

nites are just around the corner. Be
ready to have your Porch, Sun Room,
Garden furnished smartly and comfortably. Grace Herbst, Interior Furnishings, shows all of the lovely Summer
Furniture being featured in our famcus magazines. Miss Herbst will help
you plan the complete arrangements
but does urge you to place your orders
now in order to avoid disappointment.
563 Lincoln. Winnetka.

featuring

prices.

without

refinement

Will be played by Hildegarde on the
Hammond Organ at Glenview Country
House—Come Sunday—Mother’s Day.
The Food Mother loves will be served
there, too. Complete Course Dinners

to banish
and
the

same

beauty,

Furniture,

Occasional

accessories.

TO

THE MUSIC
MOTHER LOVES

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—Long lasting grass food. 25
Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft. 100 Ibs. - $6.50, 10,000 sq.
ft.
SCOTTS

it’s

rounded

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For lawns in full sun or light
25 Ibs. $29.85.
Scotts
shade. 1 Ib. - $1.25; 5. Ibs. $6.25
fot Dense

TO MOTHER
HER HEART

with a Rhinestone
Ear-Rings to match.
Heart comes in Gold
in Pin and ntatching
ing Silver Jewelry in
$1.00. Sherman and

of
husky
grass
an the magic of
Control
Plantain

smart

wonderful
food.
She'll
like
Henri
Gendron’s
Orchestra and if she’s a
dancing mother she'll enjoy that too—
after Nine. Frank Hutchins and his
staff to bid you and Mother a cordial
welcome. Skokie at County Line.

of

meal

Scotts Weed
Dandelions,
like.

of

4

etc. Showing exclusive Fabrics, Lamps,

Costume Jewelry makes a nice Gift
for that best friend of yours—Mother.
Chandler’s in Evanston have the best
assortment. A large Gold Heart is sur-

key.

Turf
Scotts
restore
to
Builder
grassfood
health and color. A sowing of
Scotts
Seed to cover the lawn

play—-a

cause

ee

Shades,

Three hundred and sixty five days
out of theeyear she gives to usx—ONE
day a year we give to her. Make
Mother’s Day — next Sunday
a
gala affair by taking her out to Dinner. She'll adore Villa Moderne be-

mers cruising in Canada as head of
the senior division of ‘Camp Koochiching. He is the holder of the Silver
Beaver award and the Scoutmaster’s

FEED, SEED, WEED
SCOTT’S LAWN CARE
PRODUCTS
Beautify

Boye,

HERE’S
BLESS

—

consult

them as to color schemes, arrangements

SLOGAN

CONTEST?

—

�THE

GREAT

ATLANTIC

&amp;

PACIFIC

TEA

co fe

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NYA

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Stationery at

| Library Notes

Postoffice Here
CHILDREN’S

DEPARTMENT

“Spring
came walking
through
the
grass;
I heard her happy footsteps pass;
I went outside and took her hand,
And followed her across the land.”
(Wynne)
We have been waiting for spring this
year, but now we can finally feel and
see the awakening

of Nature

all around

us. There js that “something” in the air,
the grass is green and growing, and in
the

trees,

back

where

their

the

buds

wintershells,

are pushing

the

birds

around

under

are

singing.

‘Get

out

and

tramp

open ‘sky, along the bubbling
brooks, and follow the rabbit
through

the

little
paths

According
to Postmaster
Daniel
Cobb,
Highland
Parkers can send
messages to any part of the world by
air

mail

for

10

cents,

provided

they

Immediate

use a variety of special lightweight
air mail stationery now on Sale at
the postoffice. The stationery is ready
stamped, consisting of a combination
envelope
sells for

and sheet of notepaper,
10 cents apiece.

and
kaos

Letters to those in military service
abroad still can be mailed at the 5
cent air mail rate.

OUR COMMUNITY’S HEALTH
IS EVERYBODY’S
BUSINESS!
Make A 3-Year Contribution
to the

the woods!

Highland

Park

$525,000

Building

—&gt;

‘

Service

Typewriters, Adding Machines,
Calculators, Registers, |
Pick up and delivery
511 Waukegan, Highwoo
Tel. H. P. 5505

| —
re

“That ain’t fair!
Just ’cause my
clothes
weren’t
cleaned
at
DeLuxe!”
‘

Pick Up
Phone

and Delivery Service
Highland Park 455

DeLuxe

Cleaners

454 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
GOTT LA
CET TES AT

Hospital

Culhgan Leollte ve

Fund

Stop at the ponds and watch the little
tadpoles

race

around,

or

see

the

long

jelly-strings, like beads on a necklace,
which contain the eggs of the toads.
There

may

be a turtle around,

and

ats:

per-

haps eggs, buried in the soft sand along
the
the

edge. And don’t forget to listen to
frog chorus from the swamp,—the

WHAT’S

bell-like notes which truly announce the
coming of the Spring. The swamp is
also the place where you find the skunk
cabbage

with

here

for

some

time,

but

tuneful

songs

are heard, and flashes of bright, fresh
colors among the trees and bushes herald the steady stream of new arrivals
from the South.
Where there is a bit of soil available
grows a yelow dandelion. The forests
are bright with spring flowers, and in
the gardens and the woods along the
roads in our neighborhood, the daffodils aare blooming.
Doubleday—Birds Worth Knowing
Hylander—Out of Doors in Spring
Limbback—American Trees
McKenny—A Book of Wild Flowers
Olcott—Our Wonderful World

: Wesley Church Supper May

church

the

will

public

May

14,

Marshall
affair.

serve

a

supper

is invited
in

the

church

Ledlie

Dinner

on

to

will

be

which

Wednesday,
parlors.

is chairman
served

Mrs.

of the
at

TRADEMARK ?

Uh

5:30

p.m.

Outstanding

y

Duracleaning preserves the
fabric.
No
scrubbing.
No
soaking. SAFE .. . even for

may

wish to inquire into our Benefit Cooking

School Plan.

It

is an attractive plan to raise
money

for

and

services of Miss

the

Advisor,

club

activities,

are

Vi-

Service

available

with-

out cost to your group.

/

Recommended
foremost

by

America’s

furniture

and

de-

partment stores from ‘coast
to coast.”
@ Colors revive. Wool fibers regain resilience. Pile unmats
. Tises.
@ Duracleaning is donein your
nome.
@ Mothproofed also...
if desired.
“Coast to Coast Service”’

Phone, today

.

.

Phone Deerfield 444
Chicago

.

. AMBassador

3222

Duraclean Co.
Division

of HOME

Waukegan

SERVICE
Rd.,

or permanent

CoO.

.

A

new

Krypton

lamp

Acceptance
in over 200,000
homes in America,

powerful

throughout forty

known.

It

states.

zero-zero

fog for more

airports

throws

We offer a
closed, sealed softener. Requires only
a few seconds for
| exchange.
GUARANTEED

F Gocranieed ‘ey
Good Housekeep 8/7
N22 soveanste WS

Nationally
Advertised

Py 4c he
jade ah

the

li gh t

can _ penetrate
than

feet upward.

Speaking

of lights...

tiny

pilot

Gas

range.

possible

for
most

artificial

a thousand

light

on

oven

for

a

the
“CP”

makes

you

to

it

have

Automatic Oven Lighting .. .

Deerfield

CULLIGAN SOFT WATER SERVICE
1S AVAILABLE TO YOU. FOR
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION

no matches .. . just set the
temperature control and turn
on the

oven . ..

|

it’s lighted.

Per Month
For the Average Family

We will build complete with canopy
roof.

$975
Natural

Wire

CULLIGAN

be

Gas

Will

SOON

here!

Water

FOR ESTIMATE

SERVICE

H. N. GAMLIN
150 S. FIRST ST.
H. P. 5102 - 4274

Associa-

groups

skill that goes back
more than ten years.

antiques.

OGREEN PORCHES

CALL

other

water conditioning
@

839

Bronze

Teacher.

and

ola Decker, our Home

14

The Woman’s Society of Christian
Service
of the Wesley
Methodist

THE

BEHIND

CULLIGAN

its large purple-streaked

shathe, one of the earliest signs of
Spring.
The bluebird and the robin have been

Parent

tions

Deerfield

416

366 Central Ave., Highland Park
Highland Park 342
Kenilworth 2207

NORTH SHORE

Gas

“The Friendly People”

T. P. “Tom”

CLARK

Div. Mgr.

CO.

�Dro

§ %

Girl Scout Doings

Teeter teny

Say Mtuart Room

Troop
Court

GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50
SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Hotel
Newly

Ballroom

hart.

Pool

Available
NOW OPEN

Kenmore

to

the
by

the

girls

Edward

Edward

were

were

had

a

May

1,

Jr.

and,

local

served

after

were

the

refreshments

Brownies,

made,

held
Loeven-

Alt,

which

a special

the

project,

doll

Public

in

house
the

made
which

Ravinia

lit is removed

8000

and
is

the

‘treat.

from

furnished

now

Barber

the

home.

_venhart,

presented
the
of the girls in

guests

girls.

children’s

The girls have been working on
Interior Decoration and, as part of

at Granville

___ Phone: ie santa

troop

ceremony,

and

the

on Thursday,

of Mrs.

Mrs.

school

Executive
Director,
badges.
All mothers

Private Rooms for Weddings, Banquets and Business Meetings.
Swimming

Ravinia

of Awards

at the home

Sovereign
Decorated

22 of

a

on

display

Shop.

When

window,

it is

leaders

are

Loe-

Mrs.

Besides
Mrs.

at

the

Community

center

are

Perreault,

J.

F.

Priddat,

CAMELS

Raymond

25,

Brownies

of

the

Marvels,

NO

Wings,

LIMIT—All
Cigarettes

carton

Guaranteed

of

receipt

Satisfied

FRESH

Customers.

or

order.

LARGEST CIGARETTE MAIL ORDER COMPANY
IN THE MIDDLE WEST. Est. Over 25 Years

samme!

EDWARD

SALES

of

10

Lucy

Nellis,

Greta

Lund-

Mary

Allen,

Peggy

Grey,

Pkgs.

(200 Cigarettes)
MINIMUM
3 CARTONS

Insured

gee) aie ete ci

Thousands

Nadine

Include

for

SPORT HASH

postage

HE'S BEEN SPENDING SO MUCH
TIME IN HIS VICTORY GARDEN
HE KIN USE THEM BETTER'N
His IRONS |

HAMMOND
INDIANA

and

day,
land

May
Ten

formed

and_

#

bo
.’ om

;

their customers.

the

High-

coming

matches

weeks.

Veteran Apartment
Joseph
ject for

A. Nelson’s apartment
veterans, now
under

OETA

the

American

North

Shore

Veterans’

committee,

chapter.

“Mr. Nelson’s plans indicate that
he has given thought to the real
housing
needs
of former
fighting
men,”
Steel observed. “Building.
a
is

beyond

men
in

the

during

civil

life.

means

of

their

first

Many

city

Mothers’ Day, May 11, as a symbol of

and

A

Washer

Radio

VT

alts

SUTINEl APPLIANCE

305 WAUKEGAN AVE. = »
HIGHWOOD,
PHONE HIGHLAND: PARK 1533

ILLINOIS

many

few
apart-

Mr. Nelson’s
children.
If

type of young

on a coI am sure
attract
a

family.”

“Congress, inspired
sure

groups,

has

by selfish pres-

systematically

plans for public housing

construction

price

controls,’

For Mothers Living: Flowers Bright
For Mothers’ Memory: Flowers White

is

the

exceptional

private

builder,

A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited
THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN

Your Florist Can Wire Flowers Anywhere

Very Reasonable

Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Mr.

like Mr. Nelson, who is public-spirited
enough to give veterans a break.”

Northshore Garden of Memories

»

and

Steel added. “The result has been to
deny
servicemen
the
homes
they
dreamed of a couple of years ago
in foxholes. Our only hope right now

@ Flowers for her home

@ Flowers for your Church in
Memory of Mother

°

Plans of the Central avenue project
include community laundry facilities
and play spaces especially designed
for youngsters.

wrecked
TA

procon-

struction
at
323
Central
avenue,
earned praise this week in a statement by William Steel, chairman of

for

@ Mother and Daughter Corsages
for your daughter and her mother

a

Satur-

AVC Head Praises

desirable

Cw?

day/ss Wa, Jf

We’re experienced too.
Our long
years in the appliance business
has made
Columbia
Household
Appliances aware of the needs of

and gratitude. Place your
with your florist. Be sure
flowers that best express
for Mother.

at

he decides
to set it up
operative ownership basis,
that
this
investment will

Send your Mother lovely flowers on
your love
order now
to get the
your love

held

inter-lodge

in

ments bar children. But
project
will welcome

next Sunday, May 11, is

Flowers

Oil,

announced

to be

24, at 8 p.m.,
Pin alleys.

scheduled

years

her with

Bros.

Other sports activities were planned.
Exalted Ruler Sam Bernardi named
the following chairmen: Tom Russell
to head the softball committee and
Bill Chambers to head golf activities.
A number of lodge golf teams will be

home

remember

immediately

tournament

young

Mothers’ Day

Braun

In Highland Park

and
service
within
150 miles — 12c for
% cartons — add ic
for
each
additiona’
carton.
Prices subject to change.

CO.

son,

mixed

fourth

Lennox,
Babs Jacobs, Courtney
Bowes, Lynn Jonas and Peggy Buchanan. ‘Mrs. Wetherton Cherry is
leader of the troop.

$1.21

Orders

and

night.

Much credit for a successful season was given to Ed: Schwalbach and
Ed Welch.
Frank Goffo was named
bowling chairman for the coming sea-

North Chicago.
There
are- two remaining sessions on Wednesday, May
1 and Friday, May 9.

strom,

Carton

Thursday

champions of the Elks bowling league,
were awarded cigarette lighters and
the
team
was
inscribed
on
the
Emmett Duffy trophy which can be
claimed by a three time winner.

Ryan and Roy O. Nereim.
Council
representatives
from
the
following
towns are present: Evanston, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka,
Lake
Bluff, Mundelein, Park Ridge, Libertyville, Glenview, Waukegan
and

bers

°

An ambitious sports program for
the near future was planned by Elks
lodge committeés at a bowling banquet held at Sunset Valley club last

Mes-

“treat,”
songs,
and
the making
of
May day umbrellas were part of the
activity enjoyed by the two new mem-

PALL MALL
RALEIGHS
KOOL
REGENTS

| Bowling Banquet

dames R. D. Cahn, Wetherton Cherry,
Leonard Davidow, Wyatt Jacobs, P.
E. McFarland, Gordon Parks, Bryan

grade at Elm Place School, have two
new members.
In the ceremony on
Thursday, May 1, Janet Laegler and
Iris Meitus were welcomed.
A

e
°
e

Sports Program At

Duncan

Morgan and Mrs. Robert Billeter.
Members of the local Girls Scout
Council who are participating in the
Council Members Course being held

Troop

LUCKIES
.
CHESTERFIELD
OLD GOLD
PHILIP MORRIS”

Elks Plan Ambitious

|planned to give the doll house to a

CEMETERY

Prices
Phone Maj.

1067

�“April Building Report _
ae

ian

1m

April, 1947.
Permits For:
ep ee ne A
eprivate Garages
EZ Alterations:
1 Alterations

of

1, 1947

the

Building

Department

for

the

month

Valuations
RS $168,919.00
as
3,900.00

Ny any is Dada ead dikes ER
(Citas! 1) oi ree
ea

ot

Fees
$ 573.08
16.01

(8.) &gt; dwellings): 5.3) 60294 Ger Sa
(A.&amp;P. business buildings)
...........

31,618.00
1,000.00

117.43
4.34

3 Apartment Buildings (la apartments) .............
1 Industrial Building (coment block plant) ....-......
1 Temporary Building (per ‘council action) ..........

94,500.00
4,000.00
700.00

318.00
14.34
3.34

The store will employ 30 persons
and will be managed by Walter Davis.
It will be under the supervision of

Oriental

William

Silverware

—

China

—

Porcelains

—

Jewelry

—

Lewis.

31 Total Permits (30 Perm.—1 Temp.) ............... $304,637.00
$1,046.54
5 Electrical Permits
ee
cae aa
eB
£1525
i Pan wed Metes Pere
FFs bess dice ho a benbab ba cips 2). opine!
Ae
re
TI
a
ag heed cab so se SMe gre Oe hain hee Mie way
12.00

Pick

Up and

RADIO SERVICE

Building

Comparative

Number
Number

Department

and

value

buildings

Jan.

19
31

..............4.. $146,465.00
. 304,637.00

to April,

Accumulated

No.

1946

79

755,227.00

Accumulated

No. and value buildings Jan. to April, Inc. 1947
Respectfully submitted,

70

835,400.00

Inc.

P: EB. COLE
City Engineer and Acting
vision
tions.
The

Remodeled
A&amp;P Store
.
Will

Open

Tomorrow

area

in

Building

charge

store,
of

8100

of

Inspector.

Chicago

opera-

comprising.an

overall

square

feet,

has

365

Roger

Ravinia,

Williams

II.

by J. P. Smith,
A&amp;P

Food

vice

at 56 First|
this week

president

Stores’

of the

Midwestern

di-

vations

a

include

delicatessen

new

“Protect the Things You Own’

PRESERVE

ATTENTION GOLFERS!

Your

Wood

Shingle

Roof

with
our
scientific
treatment
applied hot.
The shingles still
retain their natural appearance.
Repairs made if needed.

P.

FLASH! Notice to all Golfers,
you can get rid of that nasty
slice or that diving hook and
keep from gaing into the rough
or out of bounds! You can do
it by use of our simple ground
a

few

Harrison
Rods

for

our

Squirrelproof

Wild Birds Add

of

you

practice

will

der
er with this ad to

|

Golf Direction Control
ea

ia

A

oc

Feeders

Charm

are

to

now

Avenue

4, Illinois
3777

available

Your

Garden

Audubon
Feeders
keep
birds
in full view
while
feeding.
STRUIRRELTS
COEREAT
fos ices aceueo thins phe ih ovaspeeua ia reba $5. 5
PUTONATIG PREOEE
ec
ice tas cerestsgeapecsenenal $2.50
SQUIRRELPROOF
“EYE-SAFE”
FEEDER
.........000000..0... $4.75
TY SGIRe, OP MERRIE Los gah senstons~chcecesenss instesseakadenptbec abun $2.50
CRAIG
PRMMIO cris ckesienccesioes heii ons td een
ee
$2.25
Squirrelproof Stands for feeders
ATTRACTIVE
RUSTIC BIRDHOUSES

audubon gy workshop
NOT

INCORPORATED

GLENCOE,
Drexel

ILLINOIS

Ave.

Tel.

Glencoe

TELEVISION INSTALLED
RUSSELL’S

HUDDLE

Boxing, Baseball, Wrestling
&amp; News Every Evening
i

NIGHT

HARNESS RACING
WITH PARI-MUTUELS

Every NIGHT except Sunday

MAYWOOD
NORTH AVENUE
On the Edge

e

POST TIME 8:15

PARK

at RIVER ROAD
of CHICAGO

¢

tender

@

&amp; os

practice

have complete direction control. |. Don Don't wait.!
Send $2.00 cash or money or-

Chicago

K
.
Estimates

rugs
Your

,

“&amp;

Without Obligation

*Mlbdinall? Rilef te

Neighborhood”

Midwest Asphalt

‘Roofing Corp.
P.

GC.

Box

Ist Nat’L Bk. Bldg.

103

H. P. 756

‘

Auctioneer

Wabash

in half the

shots at your favorite driving
range or golf course. All this
comes to you in simple form
without a lot of complicated
instructions and with a small
amount

609

Mooney,

South

in 6

&gt;

with

229

wisn wn cours

+

device,

Martha

Ave.

H.

WILLIAMS, BARKER
SEVERN COMPANY

been

re- | completely remodeled and will feature
supermarket,
streamlined
A
where
department
bakery
new
modeled from the original store to}a
shopping products will be displayed in glass
the
speed
and
facilitate
activities of Highland Park house-| showcases and shelves.
Other innowives, will open tomorrow
street, it was announced

Carpets

....&gt;....... 2,095.79

Data

and total value buildings April, 1946
and total value buildings April, 1947

&amp;

Husenetter &amp; Cronkhite

520

by the

—

Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service

Delivery

Total Building Department Fees...
2... cece eee cee eee $1,106.79
Pe aiitdey Sewer thot oe. 5 ics shies con 00 2 OE OR
ey: $ 70.00
Tae ees
TO
A
ao
i eo eh eae iE Oe
gee eee
60.00
ag Se.
Seg pe pe
pee Ones
ne nacre eres eer ns Cae hey tee
755.00
ce Ceeieel ret ANNO FES sacs
8 ow oo Vn Fico tg owes eed od ep
50.00
Tre ray. MEP iiat). Fo) isa) oak an oats ES
Ga eWay ee ae
44.00
Timpiet GR MeN.
Ses
tS ak, Ram ess othe dine bene’ ae Ys
10.00
fees collected

Rugs

Pianos — Libraries.

Brass

Total

FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought for Cash

ment.

oe

is a report

a frozen

a

following

department,

DEVO:

The

dairy

food and ice cream section, and a
large refrigerated
produce
depart-

RS-Bo &amp;

May
Honorable Mayor and City Council
City of Highland Park, Illinois
Gentlemen:

unit, a

1559

�l\Lake County ACCW Tie @utst Speaker
oe

VILLAGE PANTRY
644

Bank

A

Lane,

Lake

GOOD
TO

THE HOME CLINIC

Forest

Spring
time
is garden
Call your home clinic for
mates on landscaping, tree
gery, on lawn care.
Free

PLACE
EAT

rent

DONALD

R. CHRISTMAN

DEERFIELD-BANNOCKBURN

|

EIRE DEPARTMENT

INDIAN
On
Offers

June

Deerfield,

30 —

Aug.

Morris and Dorothy Shaw, Directors
Northport, Michigan

Ill.

FOR YOUR BOYS — A COMPLETE
EXPERIENCE WITHIN THE NORTH SHORE
|

;

of

year

Wednesday,

AREA!

Boys 5-12. Under the direction of three Lake Forest Academy
faculty members. Swimming, Boating, Fishing, Games, Arts
&amp; Crafts, Athletics.
Capable Staff.
Emphasis on Health,
Happiness, Athletic Training and Character Building. Season June 23-Aug. 1. Hours 9 A.M.—4:30 P.M. For information
write Lake Shore Summer Day Camp, c/o Lake Forest Academy, Lake Forest, Ill., or call L. F. 2833 or L. F. 2790 evenings.

is the

Rev.

George

The

Rev.

James

Page,
kakee

Swim-

4 weeks $185.00, 8 sooo +5350. OO,
Will make personal
inclusive fee.
interview.
Write for folder.

Clubhouse

Road

program

ming, Archery, Tennis, Volleyball,
Basketball,
Dramatics
and
Crafts.
Resident Registered Nurse.
4 &amp; 8 week pee

Saturday, May 10°
Deerfield

Traverse

Canoeing,

club

tive director of
nounced
that
one of a series
by the council

Girls 8-16 yrs.

a delightful

activities—Riding,

PRIZES
MUSIC

Briergate

girls

CAMP

Famous

Northport, Michigan

AMVETS, POST 63

At

Michigan's

Bay

AND

DOOR
GOOD

BEACH

The

May

21,

Rev.

land Park

Lutherans

C.

Curry,

®

PAID

Timothy

Hurley,

C.P.,.

Mt.

Adams,

Cincinnati, Ohio, a well-known
speaker, will deliver a discourse in
keeping with the spring season, and
assisting at the church service will
be the Rev. F, M. Flaherty of Antioch, district adviser.
During the business session, “Our
Responsibility to UNESCO,” will be
the topic of Miss Helen M. Ganey,
THE REV. ARMIN OLDSEN
Chicago, ACCW
president, who reThe
Lutheran hour is featuring
cently represented the National Council of Catholic Women at the meet- guest speakers on coming broadcasts
ing of the national commission on while the Rev. Walter A. Maier, the
Lutheran hour pastor, is in Germany
UNESCO in Philadelphia.
studying
the educational system and
The district chairmen, Mrs. Wileducationa} needs in Europe.
liam Vogel of Waukegan
and
Miss
The Rev. Mr. Oldsen used as_ his
Nell O’Brien of Grayslake, will make
annual
reports of their respective sermon subject Sunday: “No Reason
for Fear.” He is also to appear on
‘| committee activities.
the Lutheran hour Sunday, May 11,
~ Women will be. in attendance from
and Sunday, May 18.
Antioch, Barrington, Buffalo Grove,
Park,

OR

Full Salary While Training

Center,

Fox

delein,

North

Libertyville,
Lake,

Chicago,

Volo,

Wadsworth,

Lake

Forest

and

Good

Liberal discount on all meals and

Lake,
West

Palatine.

Starting

1844

AS:
Girls

Salary

CHICAGO'S
aed
WO ace Ce
HOUSE

merchandise

plus many other employees’ benefits.

APPLY TO STORE MANAGER AT NEAREST LOCATION
501
1601

Central

Ave., Highland

Orrington

942 Linden

Ave.,

Park

296 Deerpath,

784

Woods
‘2 S. Genesee

Lake Forest

1141 Central Ave., Wilmette

Evanston

Ave., Hubbard

St., Waukegan

Elm

St., Winnetka

135 S. LA SALLE ST.
ANDOVER

2200

Mun-

Wauconda,

Y

Counter

Fremont

Round

L

POSITIONS

Highwood,

Grayslake,

]

EVENINGS
—

Deerfield,

Forest,

ree

® Sandwich Girls

DAYS

Lutheran

church service followed by a business
session in the parish hall. The Rev.

®

Girls

the

Lake, Will, Grundy and Kancounties.
It will combine
a

You

Cashiers

e Cigar

on

execu-

Since

WELL

of

Valpar-

the ACCW, has anthe open meeting is
of 14 being sponsored
throughout Cook, Du

WALGREEN’'S
PERMANENT

pastor

church,

Ballweber.

Lake

Offer

Oldsen,

Lutheran

aiso, Ind., was the first of a series
of guest speakers heard by High-

| Highland

Can

Armin

Immanuel

hour Sunday over WGN
at 11:30
at 2 p.m., at St. Mary’s in Buffalo |
a.m., WCFL, at 6:30 p.m. and WIND
Grove.
Mrs. Alex Rafferty Jr., 628 | at re 30 p.m.
Laurel avenue, Highland Park, district president,
will
chairman
the
meeting.
Pastor of the host parish

637 Laurel Ave.
Highland Park, Il.
or Call H. P. 4766

By

On Lutheran Hour

The Lake County district, Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women,
will hold its final meeting of the cur-

sultations.
Write:

DANCE
Sponsored

Plans Final Meeting
Of Year Wednesday

time.
estisurcon-

�7

D

on

(Continued from Page 8) ~
April

28

will

be

announced

Thursday

next

the

ct

47

LEAGUE
Yous

“ collaborated
the tie for

Colemans,

long-time

incumbents,

three
games
to
Hart,
a notch,
while
Hart’s

team by three wins moved ahead of Anderson, who dropped two games to the Wachholders.
High scores for the evening were Ralph
Dunham’s
588; Charles Killian’s 529; and
James
McGarvie’s 524.
The
Team

Ww.

Dunham
RN
ico
Anderson

ST.

aia

se

ss wdc

wc

in

first

and

1

place

in

won

second

59,

lost

34;

place

won

51,

game

for

the

women—198.

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
LEAGUE
The results of the Sweepstakes
of this
league held May
2
1947, are announced
Raymond

F.

Spars,

ist—$15—G.

4th—$5—C.

Segert,

Emery,

5th—$2.50—J.

L.

N.

Teeter,

McCleary—1248.

G.

Gilbertsen—

Bleimehl

Name

THE

10,

and

8:15

a.m.

.|

served

BETHLEHEM

by

6:45

CHURCH

9:45

ST.

Bethlehem

Sits.

Ambieee

PAUL’S

EVAN.

FRIDAY,

May

Church

choir
Com

school

meets.

worship

9

sink,

9:30

Sunday

church.

;

‘

ae

ay

May 14
WEDNESDAY,
7:30 p.m. Bethlehem choir

will

a.m.

observance

mothers
all
practice. | will
sing.

NORTH
WEEK

at

wi

with

Thursday

lumber

nited

classes

ere

the

special

recognition

o

a

Vacation.”

j
.

“

afternoon.

:

canvas

ES

covered

:
some
causing

&lt;

o

the

damage

|

:

fire ig-

trash

which

pile

when

cmery

up

The

sacks.

A

fire

caught

ie

to

lumber

ue
avenue
lagher,

choir
Junior
The
sermon
series
on

spent.”
Second
of

Your

burning

were

lumber,

The

oe

new

,

/

house

bei

built

i

in
being
1S
Highland

at

by

ult

1038

Osterman

Willi

Cal

lillam

y

Park

al-

contractor.

i

BROS.

FIRST ST. S

END

the

visual educational
department.
,

WAPP
22-24

on

new

per cement

school

eee

‘‘Planning

workmen

league.

11

May

a.m.

of

new

7:30 p.m. The Council of Administration | for all ages.
Special
will meet
in the social rooms
of the| Program in the junior

the

May 17

theme,

nue

rehearsal

at

The Deerfield volunteer firemen answered a call at 1038 Osterman ave-

10
choir

banquet

Fire Department
Makes
Prompt Call &amp; Saves Wood

858

bowling

of

|

WomStories.

CHURCH

Road

Deerfield

Junior

|SUNDAY,

direction

under the

will

as|

Winifred

Bible

14

8 p.m.
The
Golden
Band
meet’ at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jacobsen in
Highland Park.
The program will have as

ee

May

sae aee

service.

of

Miss

REFORM.

night

Last

p.m.

7

—

&amp;

on

638 Waukegan

SATURDAY

Morning

meet

May

Choir rehearsal.

SATURDAY,

luncheon

Speaker,

Phone

lea

9

association.

p.m.

You
ellowship meets
discussion and recrea-

8 p.m. Council meeting.
FRIDAY,
May
16
7 p.m. Annual bowling
ehurch.

children

its

ee

11

The

a.m.

Bowling

"

a

a.m.

10:55

The

The Bethlehem
May

SUNDAY,

8—

May

p.m

ete

for

troops

bird: topis: Chalk Talk
p.m. Choir rehearsal.

p.m.
Junior
church for

7:30

tacw ae

THURSDAY,
May 15
1 p.m. Annual spring

the|an’s

:30
at the
tion.

WEDNESDAY,

scheduled.

(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Boezlter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace

of

775

oF,
yMONDAY,
May
12
Girl
and
Boy
Scout

Confessions.

breakfast

PRICES—THURSDAY,

Mary

Bleimehl

1909,

when

passed

she

Chicago.
Surviving her
are
two
Peter of Chicago, William
Ia.;

and

one

away

sister,

moved

to

brothers,
of BoxAnna,

of

Knoxville, Tenn.

PHONE

FRIDAY,

H.P.1676

SATURDAY

Turkeys | PURE |
Lb.
39 2c

LARD

Lb.

'

Rindseve

ee

Bird

PEACHES |

BOC

| ee

| |. Baby

OR eae.

| ae

Bird

Frozen.

9

ima

Bi

Frozen.

gee

rk

pe
ae

aa

6th &amp; 7th

BROCCOLI

~~ MiB e | pkg... 29¢ | pkg... 19e | pkg. ....... 23¢ | pkg. ...... 39¢
89c

CHICKEN

SHOULDER

THitsmMS

|

LEGS AND

89c

| CHICKEN

(0. 35-2.55:.....,

MECKS

te

BEEF

Beans

yi lrait

‘e (¢KEMS | GREEN PEAS | CORN W.K. | Applesauce
BREASTS

259¢

Bird

SPINACH

eis

Ib.

hoe

Bird

pkei&lt;...c:: 29¢

Bird

Chicke

PRESH GROUND“...

|

Rib

Ib. 39%

WINGS

&amp;

00 oe

19¢c

EVISCERATED

LAMB CHOPS lb. 29c | DUCKLINGS '. 59c |Frankfurters '»- 49c
nn.

ies

-

ia

ee

LAMB

Ist to 5th | PX8-----25¢ | BACON

Ib.

| Suck

HAMS
Whole

|* 54

Bo | haze | stn | 5S
Birdseye

Ribs

Y,

|

MILK
Grade A

| Che Ee

PEE e000 23¢

IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 25th SUMMER IN HIGHLAND PARK
WE

OFFER

Activities

Sunday dinner guests at the home
of Mrs. Carl T. Anderson of Chestnut street were Mr. and Mrs. H.C. J.
Willard of Winnetka.

THE

FOLLOWING

Limit

ASPARAGUS

Tender

Green

Cut

Limit

PORK

&amp;

BEANS

Monarch,

2 Cans

SUPER

BARGAINS

SOUP

Campbell's

Cream

While

While

2 While

17¢

Supply

Lasts.

Supply

value

Limit 2 cans While

Lasts.

17c¢ value .................... the can

Sauce,

in Tomato

of Spinach,

Supply

Spears45c value .............-..------2022022-- the can 25¢

2 Cans

Limit
Mrs. Harry Muhlke of Central avenue will be hostess to members of
her club on Friday evening, May 16.

|

=.

APRICOTS Premier Whole, 49¢ value 0.0. cccecentienenene the con Bc

’

Deerfield

ER

The pound sesnseesenstneseenenetee

Saturday following a heart attack.
Funeral services were held Tuesday
afternoon at the Lauterburg and Oehler funeral chapel in Deerfield with
the Rev. Hugo
Leinberger
of
St.
Paul’s church officiating and burial
was in Wheeling cemetery.
Born in Deerfield, Miss Bleimehl
lived here until after the death of her
in

HAMBURG

CHICKEN

Dies

Burial in Wheeling

holm,

Holy

mothers.

8:30,

Stryker—1313.

1245.

mother

Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY,
May
4—

r afe

Ass’t.
E
11:30.

secretary:

2nd—$10—E. Spahn, A. Ward—1285.
8rd—$7.50—-R. Willen, E. Seckler—1278.

Miss

7,
6:30

57

7
5

high

Mary

CHURCH

Sullivan,

Masses:

48
49
50

lost 42.
G. Capitani had high series—589; Gene
also
had
high
gameg-226 ; Gert
Barber

by

unday

Daily

will

Deerfield

,

Friday Evening
PAUL’S BOWLING
LEAGUE

Team

had

O.
'
Masses:

37
39
45
47

Wachholder

CATHOLIC

C.

hes

ew
54
48

5
eed eau
’
'

SUNDAY, May 11
.
9:45 a.m. Church school.
11 a.m. Sunday kindergarten
ao
3 to 5 years of wee

Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor

Rev.
Ss

standings:

a
a
aes ibe
NE
2g ol cae
MIMS
TR UN aS ooo cas uc hccsgu sin cibakenens
ONE
6 phlei
i ie vlna
Ts

Teams

CROSS

THURSDAY,

with
the
first place

were
dispossessed.
This
is the
way
it
happened—Coleman dropped three to Marsicek while Killian was busy taking two
from the Cunninghams.
As long as this was
moving
day, the
Dunhams
dropped
moving
them
back

HOLY

49
56

HOLY
CROSS
CHURCH
Reported by Charles

and

ore

L.
37
37
43
44
46

rececioek

E.

5

_ the beatitudes, ie “Blessed
eens,AreAve thethe, Meek.”’ —

ey YTERIAN CHURCH

Rev.
B.
re
7

:

)

a

The
Marsiceks
Killians to break

eT
.

(

oo OR

ce

6

‘

LEAGUE

MO
is perc ccdcatln irae
eas sag
BP
io enc
Ree oe
Sparrows
PURE
ee eo
Orioles...
NI
pl

ey

oe

Phone

We
are getting all set for next week
Thursday
when
the
Sweepstakes
will be
run
off.
This
will
be followed
a week
later
with
our’ annual
spring
banquet,
reports Arthur Merner, secretary.
Standing of the teams:

MRR

oe

week.

Evening

BETHLEHEM

Id

eer, fi e

"

10c

Lasts.

-..........---------.-2e eens
Supply

Lasts

the

can

5c

5

�~ LETREPLACE
ME REPAIR
OR
THAT
. LEAKING OR WORN
OUT ROOF
40 Years Experience
Along the North Shore

Free

Inspection
Estimates

BECKER
970

Ave.

—

CO.

Hubbard

Ph. Winnetka

Woods

742

: ee

TODAY

heat

per

358

or

HIGHLAND

gallon

PARK

to

359

EXCAVATING
AND TRENCH WORK
BLACK DIRT
FILLING DIRT
DRIVEWAYS BUILT

LOUIS
DAY

AND
“A

TAZIOLI
NIGHT

Veteran

-PHONE
of

H.

Foreign

Hesler,

and

chosen
on the

Featuring Marjorie Pfister as piano
soloist,
the
Highland
Park
High
school orchestra will present its annual spring concert on Sunday, May
18, at 3:30 p.m. in the high school

Gail
to be
com-

P. 4662

added

to the list of other

auditorium.
The program will consist of Concerto No. 1 in 9 Minor for Pianoforte
by Mendelssohn, Symphony No. 8
in B Minor (Unfinished) by Shubert,
Hillbilly from the Americana Suite
by Morton Gould, Overture to Magic
Flute, and Einekleinenacht Music by

speak-

school.

save you money.

GLENCOE

Bill

ers who will speak at the grade
schools. The students will welcome
the incoming freshmen to the high

ECONOMICAL - - - TOO!
maximum

Collard,

Whitehead
have been
the
student
speakers

been

Use Sinclair Super Flame Fuel Oil
Gives

Rae

mencement
program
at
Highland
Park high school this June.
John Hill and Ruth Rogan have

For Real
OIL HEATING
COMFORT
CALL

Marjorie Pfister Featured on
Program as Piano Soloist

Choose Speakers for
HPHS Commencement

and

ROOFING

Linden

Give Spring Concert May I 8

Swimming

Club to Give

Mozart.
Marjorie Pfister began her musical
career when she was four and one-

Performance of Ballet
Swimming in a ballet on Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday, May 8, 9, and

half years

10,

The first program will: be given this
afternoon (Thursday) at 3:45 o’clock
for the high school students. A Friday night performance will be pre-

ber of this year, she enrolled as a
preparatory student at Northwestern
university, where she has since been
accepted as a freshman for next Fall.
She is studying under Miss Jean Van
Shick, and next year she will be a
pupil of Mr. Kurt Wanieck at North-

sented

western.

the

High

Penguins

school

attraction

of

will

of

for

Highland

present

the

the

of

Park

their

main

year.

parents

of

Penguin

members, and a matinee will be given
at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 10, for grammar

school

and

high

school

Music

wn

students.

CG owed :

wot? wtanki

on?

:

A

or

¥

at

the

surprise

sented

&lt;0

wv

at the

Morley
Park.

School
In

Octo-

The concert will be sponsored by
the music committee of the P.T.A.,
of which Mrs. William D. George is
chairman. Tickets may be obtained
from members of the music department

:
grind

old,

in Highland

door.

attraction

during

is

to

be

pre-

the performances.

for those-who want

Wars”

Contact

(same

size)

or

Oversize

prints from all film,
Ultra
fine
grain
developing
for
miniature film.
Quality enlargements.
Sparkling color prints.
Photostatic copies of your important
documents.

AMPLE
FILM

STOCKS OF FRESH ROLL
&amp; MOVIE FILM IN ALL
SIZES
Phone

BRANDT

MEL

and

his

“505

FIFERS,"

CAMERA

BETTY BOLT and her FASHION PARADES,
FREE
—
Rhumba
Lessons

every Wednesday
DEL

RENE'S

Daily

and Saturday, 2:30 p.m.
ORCHESTRA

nightly.

Blue Moon
GOLD-N- RICH

Mail ; Orders

for

at 4:30 p.m.

your dancing enjoyment—starting

vor

EVANSTON

1645

Orrington

® Distinctive
flavor and tex~ ture in a nat
ural semi-soft
cheese.

CO.
STORE

Ave.

Davis

2363

9:30-5:30 Mon. &amp; Thurs. to 9 p.m.
Chicago
Store
34 N. Clark Street
Phone: FRA. 2230-1

BLUE MOON

FOODS, Inc.

THORP, WIS.

Featuring
WE

MARIANNE

FEDELE

Lyric Soprano

SELDON
Irish

HAVE

HYBRID

REED

A

TEA

GOOD

and
In

Tenor

@

JOHN
S. Waukéyan

OF

ROSES

Pots

@

Evergreens
@

Shrubs

Perennials
OPEN

840

SUPPLY

CLIMBING

DAILY

FIORE

Rd.
Phone

NURSERY

West Lake
Lake Forest

Forest
476

Rte,

42-A

�rs

on

A

Me

Cha

ret

Sunday

: thas spent the past six months, to the
home
of her daughter, Dr., Dorothy
Sugden Davis of Deerfield road.
Mrs. C. Russell Sugden went to
Winnipeg, Canada, last week because
of the death of her brother.
Mrs. George Engstrom of Central
avenue and Mrs. A. T. Weinstock of
Winnetka, formerly of Deerfield, left
on Monday for a several days’ visit
with Mrs. W. L. Walton in South
Haven, Mich. The Waltons are also
former
Deerfield
residents.
Mesdames
Engstrom,
Weinstock,
and
Walton

planned

a

number

of

bird

study trips while in Michigan.
All
' were members of a bird study group
here in Deerfield.
Mrs. Engstrom
does national migration surveys for
this area for the government and is
an authority on local ornithology.
Mrs. Adin Finley and son, Laurence
(Buddy), of Hazel avenue, spent last
week in Faribault, Minn., with
the

Finley’s elder son, Eugene, a senior
at Shattuck military school. Eugene
is a member of the crack squad which
presented special drills. The junioraoe dance was also held last weeken

Phone
Res.

Phone,

Deerfield

Waukegan
J.

&amp;

Park

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hudson have
returned to their home at Peake Island, Maine, after a fortnight’s visit

W.

“The

Golden

Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Morgan and
eleven year old daughter will be moving from Highland Park to the village

Guests
Mr. and

Rob-

the

bought

have

They

ert Ramsay house on Meadowbrook
lane, formerly leased by Mrs. J. R.
Hopkins and the late Mr. Hopkins.
Dr. R. G. Heupel
spent a few days
friends in Phoenix
zona. He flew by
and reported rough
and hot weather in

of Deerfield road
with
week
last
and Prescott, AriAmerican airlines
weather en route,
Arizona.

Mrs. Ward Gauntlett of Deerfield
road was hostess at a small luncheon
on Tuesday at her home. Mrs. G. W.
Heupel of Clinton, Iowa, was an outof-town guest.
Miss

Ida

Knaak

and

Selig are roommates
Lake

Zurich

704

Bowling

Waukegan

Highland

at 8 p.m. in
Mrs. Harry

Park.

last week at
Mrs.
James

the home
Tibbetts

of
of

Chestnut street were Mrs. Tibbetts’
parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Shoemaker and daughter, Jane, of Detroit,
Mich.

road in Highland
Mrs.

Robert

E. Pettis

is

brook

Guire

of Rosemary

Sr. of

MeadowMc-

Robert

son,

to-

went

terrace,

noon

at her

Mrs.
avenue

home

W. D.
will be

on

Chestnut

POWDER BOX BEAUTY

SHOP = -

street.

5 on Monday

BEAUTY

Dorothy,

Mr.

Gillen,

Mr.

90

Free
762

Waukegan

Rd.

DEERFIELD

POCKET
884

NEWS

NEWSPAPERS
Home
Delivery

CIGARS

Deerfield

758

AGENCY

(PENGUIN-DELL)

Waukegan

SOFT

Rds.

DRINKS

Deerfield

&amp;

|]

BOOKS

175

SELIG

Established
1925
REALTORS
:
Real
Estate—Loans
764 Waukegan Road, Deerfield,
Edward H. Seiig
Haroid R.
Tel. Deerfield 155

II.
Vant

LUCIUS ERSKINE
REALTOR

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DIRECTORY

BUSINESS
x.

THE

GEORGIAN

DRY

816

GOODS

Waukegan
Tel.

and

Road,

SHOP

FROST’S
RADIO

GIFTS

AND

APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges
- Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of appliances

Deerfield

95

760

Waukegan

Road

DR.

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP

ELECTRIC

- Tel.

Deerfield

808
CAKES

Waukegan
Deerfield

G. C. PARKNEN,

O.D.

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
Phone
674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Road

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

122
aa

Tel.

W. 8. MITCHELL
REAL

Always

Deerfield

29

Road

Tel.

VANT &amp; SELIG
EST. 1925
INSURANCE
764

in all its branches
Waukegan
Road - Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 155

Prop.

419

813

Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

Mercer
Lumber

Lumber
-

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

Telephone
880

KNAAK’S

Companies

Building Materials
612 Railroad Ave
Deerfield,
Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

WISCONSIN
SAUSAGE

DR. R. D. MOORE
OPTOMETRIST

Sanitary and
Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR
BETTER
HOMES
Deerfield

Banfield,

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

M. A. FRANTZ

758

5$2—Eric

ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION

ESTATE
AND
INSJRANCE
#34 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Il.
Available

Deerfield

-

PHARMACY

THEO J. KNAAK, R. Ph,

Coal

Est.

Phone

756

Roads

HARDWARE

Waukegan

Road

Established

DEERFIELD
Inc.

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

TAXI

SERVICE

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD
Day and Night Service

81

Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers

Drfid. &amp; Waukegan

Rds., Deerfield

Goods

“Deerfield,

Telephore

F. D..CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,

Ill.

Deerfield,

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting

577

Deerfield and Waukegan

1884

1

DEERFIELD

CHEESE AND
MARKET
Deerfield

i

|

MAGAZINES
Service

CIGARETTES

VANT

-

oa

Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julie
Expert Permanent
Wavers
Try
our Circlette Wave
that is sprayed into your hair.

Weve

Consultation

—
—

623

eve-

SALON

—

;

motor.

Baxter of Greenwood
hostess to members of

Presbyterian Circle

G:
\

Annapolis, Md., last Tuesday, to help

&amp; Company

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.
Telephone Deerfield 33

his

and

lane

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling and
Shaping

Bowling
and Sundays

Mich.

Aboard Ship
Walter J. McGuire

entertain-

Apparel

Grimes

Arbor,

ing at luncheon and bridge this after-

635
Deerfield
Road
Tel. Deerfield 806
Open Monday Evenings
We invite Charge Accounts

Franklin

Ann

with

Park.

WALLDREN

Women’s

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. Brower
and daughter, Sandra Ann, of Chest-.
nut street spent the past two weeks
with their parents in Lansing iat a

a friend, George Sollitt of Evanston
Mrs.
David
Petersen
of
North return his boat to Belmont Harbor,
is
Chestnut street entertained a neigh- Chicago. The young Mr McGuire
borhood group at a shower on Thurs- ‘acting as navigator on the ocean part
day evening in compliment to Mrs. of the voyage and will, return home
John Sternig of 1134 Chestnut street. this week.
Messrs. Sollitt .and McGuire
are
Mrs. Elmer L. Clavey will be host- taking about a month to make the iness to members of her evening club land trip through the Erie canal and
next Tuesday at her home on Clavey Great Lakes in the sail boat equipped

Miss

Rd.—Deerfield

will

church

Paul’s

St.

GILLWEVE

Academy

Deerfield

Open
Saturdays

;

Charles

Dozier’s

sanatorium.

Tel.

Deerfield,

Mrs.

at Bee

a married cou-

meet Saturday, May 17,
and
of Mr.
the home

Jacobsen in

shortly.

yen yeosenen een sen cee cen see

Band,”

of

ples’ group

and family of Landis lane.

5869

POKORNY

Kies

J. H.

Mrs.

daughter,

their

with

GARAGE

Road,

MILDRED

ren
TenZenZenZeuZengen
seen teoete teen deededeedereedeteetetentey ev TOnTenZenZenZenrenleaTensen eran Seren sereny

Deerfield

250

Highland

RELIABLE
708

of the circle.
| ter is chairman

from Florida wieed ‘she

295

Il.
‘

ROYAL BLUE STORE
722 Deerfield Road—Tel, 707
“Best

Quality

GROCERIES

Always”
—

MEATS

FRESH FRUITS“&amp; VEGETAPLES
i

Seca

�F

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(Highland

REAL

Park)

NEW LISTING IN FINE SMALL
ass
HOME
—
- 1949 NORTHMOOR ROAD
_

Brick, Eng. type, 3 bedrms.,
114 bath,
att. gar., auto heat.
In excellent cond.,
freshly decorated.
Poss. 60 days....$27,500.
- HIGHLAND
PARK’S
E. BRAESIDE
SEC.
683
CAROL
COURT
Most convenient to school &amp; trans. unusually
well
constructed
Col.
home,
in
_ excell. cond; 6 rms., sun’ porch, 1% baths,
auto. ht., 2-car gar.
Owner leaving town.
Poss. May
15
$23,500.
_ THE HOME
YOU ARE LOOKING
FOR
re
EAST
HIGHLAND
PARK
y
868
LINCOLN
AVE.
In excell. loc. on beaut. landscaped lot
-95x190, with enc. ply yd. and
barbecue.
This
flexible
house
offers
grac.
living,
complete from panelled libr., sun rm., powd
rm., scr. pch. on Ist in add. to LDK, to
4
fam. bedrms., slp. pch., 2 baths, md’s.
_
rm. &amp; bath &amp; 2-car gar.
Hse. completely
_ insulated,
auto,
oil ht., lg. attic
fan
&amp;
incl. venetian blinds, hall &amp; stair carpet.
For
imme.
poss.
at the attractive
price
_
_

Pasabetehers teen thong s-&lt;cyaNecar te ciet sic

IN NEWEST

ane

$37,500.

WOODRIDGE

SEC.

ROAD
WESTVIEW
1403:
For
charm,
livability,
superlative
construction, you MUST see this Eng. brk. &amp;
timber hse. on perfectly landscaped grounds
105x155.
Complete in every detail.
Full

_ base. includes
_bar, util. rm.,

recrea, rm. with built-in
containing finest H.W. oil

burn. system.
1st Fl.: Rec. hall, powd. rm.,
lg. liv. rm., din. rm., bkfst. nook &amp; kit.
2nd Fl.: 8 bedrms., incl. master suite of
bedrm.,
dress.
rm
@
tile bath,
2 other
good sized rooms &amp; tile bath.
8rd Fl.: le.
timbered studio rm.
Entire hse. newly &amp;
‘most tastefully dec.
2-car gar.
4 blks. to
school;
8 to trans.
Worth
waiting
for
Sept. Ist poss.
$39,500.
223 MORAINE
RD., HIGHLAND
PARK
. Fine red brk. col. on ravine lot with 300
ft. frontage.
Offered first time with early
‘occupancy.
Built for comfortable and grac.
dem Hv, by W. D: Mann, architect.
Containing
4 fam. bedrms., 3 baths, 2 md’s rms. &amp;
bath, studio, lovely porches, att. gar.
H.W.
stoker ht.
Conven.
to schools,
trans. &amp;
lake.
A real value at
$49,500.

H. AND

870

R. ANSPACH,

Exclusive Agents
Ave.
Highland

Central

Park

COMPACT—WELL

BUILT

English brick. Six rms; 2 tile baths and
powder
rm.
An
inviting
pine
panelled
recreation room
in basement.
Tiléd
kitchen,
automatic
heat,
a really
charming

_

yard.

One

of

and

the

Only

$24,750.

Deerfield’s

price

for

immediate

McGUIRE
567
BY

Lincoln

best

&amp;

Ave.,

locations

delivery

ORR,

Winnetka.

modern

Tel.
P.

5

(Improved)

703

378

LLOYD

Central

&amp;

Ave.

NEW

RINGER

Tel.

H.P.

880

LISTING

entire

back

of

the

houSe,

space

is

more

than

adequate.

This home can be purchased for
the attractive price of ...... $26,500.

PAUL PHELPS,
387 Central Ave.

ALL
We

STRICTLY

have

East

side

some

very

homes

Good

PRICED

buys—Various

Also

some

list’gs

$20,000

HOMES

sizes

beaut.

Park 4580

MODERN
fine

prices

LOWER

Inc.

Highland

of

-

$11,000

Country

exc.

$50,000
- $20,000

Home

sites.

E. T. SKIDMORE &amp; SON

332

N.

St.

Johns

WHITE
well

in

Tel.

H.P.

577

of

the

home

nicest

of

a

is

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; COMPANY
quick

1551

S.

sale

St.

Tel.

at

Johns
H.P.

SIX

ROOM

or

Clavey

&amp;

Ridge

2855

or

1491

Rds.

bungalow

and
transportation.
Stoker
heat.
Reply

near
Two
Box

Forester.

High
car

P-67,

or

451

REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

Highland

387 Central

Park

4580

OPEN SUNDAY 3 to 5:30
795 Marion cor. Green Bay
Charming
white
brick
on
large
secaped grounds.
It’s a true colonial
a lovely center hallway.
Beautiful
ease.
Living rm. is delightful with a
and open sun room. The din. rm. has
ss length
windows.
White
mod.
kit.

_

_

brkst.

corner.

_ bedrooms,

home

_ taste.

8

Pwdr.

baths,

2nd

dressing

is perfect

in detail

EAST

HIGHLAND

and

fl.

$15,000.

landwith
stairfrpl.
floor
with

has

room.

REAL

346
to

brick

4

The

in exquisite

FARK

Prospect

home

transp.,

on

schools,

large

Highland

ESTATE

Contact

lot

80x350.

stores.

Excep-

tionally
attractive
living
room,
dining
room, powder room, kitchen and glazed &amp;
screen porch.
2nd floor has 4 bedrooms,
2 baths,
sleeping
porch.
Plastered
38rd
floor with
large bedroom
&amp; bath.
Two
ear detached brick garage.
Oil fired hot
water heat.
Reasonably
priced with
unusually
attractive
terms.
Open
for
in_ spection, afternoon
2 to 5.

R.

Park

4580

B.

house, near
line,
about
McCurry,

Ad-

vertising
Department,
Abbott’s,
North
Chicago or Deerpath
Inn, Lake Forest.
=——————~—~&gt;~—=—{&amp;{Y—_—_~_&gt;_;_&gt;&amp;&amp;&amp;—~EEEEE
OFFICES, STORES, STUDIOS TO RENT
HEATED offices store space in first floor,
20x40
ft.
Howard
Huber
366 Central
Ave...
Tel. HP. 812:
ESTATE

SERVICE

SEVERAL LOTS AND
in
Ravinia,
Braeside
and
visions
in
Highland
Park
prices.
ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
16 N. Sheridan Rd.,
Tel. TPs
98
Res.

RESPONSIBLE
party
will pay
maximum
rent, year in advance for 8 jor 4 bedroom house.
Will consider buying suitable home on terms.
Write c/o H,. P.
News, Box D-75.
WANTED:
Summer
rental.
Responsible
adult couple.
Will care for your dog if
desired.
Small house near lake.
Refer-

GARAGE

FOR

ONE
CAR
frame garage
car lean-to, for sale.
Vine Ave. or Tel. H.P.

gladly

A

furnished.

Chicago.

SALE
&amp; attached
Best offer.
5860.

one
311

One,

Butterfield

FAMILY with two children, ages 1 month
and 27 months
desire rental of home
for
summer
months.
References
furnished.
Reply
Box.
G-135,
c/o
H.
News.

YOUNG couple &amp; baby wish to rent house
June to Sept.
Top rent payable in advance.
Best references.
Tel.. H.P. 390
or Rand. 73850.

with

HOUSE

2 or more

OR

APT.

bedrooms.

Un-

furnished preferred. 2 adults.
Local references. Will pay 6
months rent in advance—up to
$100 per month. Write Box H- |

yrs.

1

and

8,

5,

|

FOR

Wanted

SUMMER
furnished

U.

No

drinking

$75.
Med-

MONTHS
house

Forest,

by _

reliable

Evanston

or

S. ARMY major and wife desire house,
apartment
or room
with kitchen privilege until Sept. Ist, ’47.
Write c/o H.
P.

News

WANTED:
with two
44, Palos
787-J.

Box

=

white

girl

or

BEDROOM
to
to be shared
H. P. News

employed
woman.
Kitchen
with one other.
Write c/o
Box H-55.

HELP

WANTED

(Clerical)

STENOGRAPHERS,
TYPISTS,
OFFICE
personnel.
Permanent
position
with
a
future
proportionate
to
your
ability.
Growing
national
concern.
State
age,
experience,
references
and
salary
desired.
Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

CLERK —

LUMBER

Office salesman with or without experience.
EXCELLENT
OPPORTUNITY.
Edward
Hines
Lumber
Co.
Tel.
H.P.
STENOGRAPHY
and detailed office work.
Aptitude
for figures
desirable.
Permanent position.
Write c/o H. P. News
Box H-35.
WANTED:
Male
bookkeeper
and
clerk.
Excellent opportunity
for
advancement
in
growing
business.
917
Waukegan
Ave., Highland Park.
OFFICE CLERK
- TYPIST—local country
club—all
year
’round.
Experience
not
necessary. Good wages and meals. Write
Box H-75,.c/o H. P. News.
WANTED:
Capable and experienced secretary, for Highland Park office. Excellent
salary.
Pleasant
working
conditions.
Write H-155, c/o H. P. News.
WANTED:
A young woman with clerical
&amp; sales experience in a local established
business.
Permanent
position.
Please
give details
&amp; salary
expected.
Write
c/o Highland Park News
Box H-105.
WANTED:

Girl

for

general

permanent—must

office

have

work—

experience

in

typing and
have a good
knowledge
of
cashiering
or
bookkeeping.
Apply
at
Highland Park News, 59 S. St. Johns.

GIRL WANTED:

For switch board work

&amp; a little typing.
Also male
work
in
office.
Northmoor
Club.
Tel. H.F. 3800.
BOOKKEEPER
for
Good
pay.
Apply)
N. Green Bay Rd
HELP
SECOND

dry
cleaning
plant.
Vogue
Cleaners,
329
H. P.

WANTED

MAID:

clerk to
Country

(Domestic)

Experienced,

6 weeks or permanent,

white.

SECOND

MAID:

serving

and

required.
Forester.

Experienced,

upstairs

Reply

For

starting April 1st.

References
required.
Mrs.
W.
Brida, Lake Forest 36.
:
work.

Box
/

P.

e-

white

for

References

P-47,

c/o

Lake

SECOND MAID

to
Up
References.
smoking.
or
Phone or write Corp. F. De Witt,
ical Detach., Ft. Sheridan, Ill.

couple.
Write 833
Tel. Superior 9866.

nice

woman.
Hot water at all times.
Breakfast facilities if desired. Close to transportation.
Tel. H.P.
1449 or 427 Funston Ave.
Highwood.

85 c/o H. P. News.

FORMER
high school teacher desires apt.
3
wife
for
unfurnished
or
furnished
children

for

5527

4155.

YEAR’S
rent in advance,
plus bonus.
Reliable family
needs
5-7
room
house
or apartment.
Tel. Briargate
1823
or
address Box E-15, c/o H. P. News.

H-25.

House
or apartment.
Family
children.
Rent to $150.
Box
Park, Illinois. Tel. Palos Park

White,
4 adults.
cleaning
women.
Park News.
Box

Have cook,
Write
c/o
H-95.

laundress,
Highland

GENERAL
housework.
Small
modern
home.
No heavy cleaning.
Young
congenial
couple,
2 school
children.
Own
room, bath.
Tel. H.P. 3766 or 1940 S.
Sheridan Rd., H. rs
WOMAN
for 4 to 6 weeks to help generally around
the house.
Part or full
time—stay
or go.
References
but
no
experience

451

necessary.

Egandale

H.

Tel.

H.P.

3580

or

P.

WOMAN
TO
DO
IRONING,
1 DAY
A
WEEK.
CLOSE
TO
TRANSFORTATION.
TEL. H.P. 756 OR 746 BRAESIDE RD., H. P.
WOMAN
to do laundry for
1 day a week.
Tel. H.P.
290
Cedar
Ave.,
H.
P

private family,
866 or contact

UNFURNISHED
house, 3 or 4 bedrooms
in Highland
Park
or anywhere
along
North Shore.
3 adults in family &amp; long
time residents
of H. P.
Immediate
or
early occupancy: desire.
Write P.O. Box
$15; ae
PS

WANTED:
Woman
for efficient mending
for family for several days.
$7 per day.
Mrs. Chaplin
640 S. Linden, H. P. Tel.
HP. 6787:

SOLDIER
and wife urgently need 2 or 8
room furnished apt.
Local references if
desired.
Tel. H.P. 1558 between 9 and
5 p.m. or 897 Central Ave. Mrs. Wright.

EXPERIENCED
cleaning woman,
2 days
a week.
Also
light
laundry.
5 room
bungalow near transportation.
Tel. H.P.
4390 or 642 S. St. Johns Ave.

YOU know or hear of a 4, 8 or even a
2-bedroom house for rent, I will be very
definitely
greatful
if you
will
contact
me—R. B. McCurry, Advertising Department, Abbott’s, North Chicago or Deer-

path

AGENCY
H. P.
Be,
"87

Apt.

Tel.

room

3720.

room apt. with refined
Write c/o Highland Park

REFINED
young
couple,
both
employed,
desire four or five room apartment, unfurnished.
Excellent
references.
Reply
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.

IF

HOUSES
Sunset
Subdiat reasonable

Write

Emc/o H.

H-15.

Box

SINGLE

(Unfurnished)

WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by responsible family.
Will
furnish
finest
references.
Tel.
Central 5309.

(Vacant)

WANTED

FROM
OWNER:
8
bedroom
school
and
North
Shore

REAL

Lovely
. Close

rm.

Ave.

5

1212

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)

Lake

VACANT
FOR
SALE
If you
are
interested
in buying
East
Side lots or beautiful’ country prop., call
us re some choice listings.

PAUL PHELPS, Inc.
Ave.

WILL
SHARE
adult couple..
News

Inc.
Park

furnished apartment.

ployed woman preferred.
P. News Box H-45.

School
garage,

c/o

Highland

TO_RENT

ROOM

WANTED

This attractive seven room house in
E. T. SKIDMORE &amp; SON
excellent Ravinia location is well de332 N. St..Johns Ave.
Tel. H.P. 577
signed and convenient.
On the first
floor is a good sized living room, dinVACANT PROPERTY
ing room, kitchen, maid’s room and
Desirable location in Central resi_ bath with an unusually lovely screened dential
section of Highland
Park.
porch opening off both the living Wooded corner property.
Can be diroom and dining room. The second vided into two or three lots. Availfloor contains three nice bedrooms able
immediately
and
reasonably
and a tile bath.
The house is at- priced.
tractively priced for quick sale.
» PAUL PHELPS, Inc.
387, Central

THREE

$26,500.

1484,

Avenue

APARTMENT

large

center
hall, good
size
living
room
with
fireplace,
screened
porch
and heated sun
porch,
dining
room
and
kitchen
on
1st
floor.
Property
has
good
frontage
with
unusual depth; heat is automatic and possession may be had immediately.
Priced
for

Central

Cornell,

sections,

consisting

H. and R. ANSPACH,

ences

COLONIAL

one

built

Ave.

870

over-

looking the garden, there are two
screened porches and a glazed porch.
On the second floor there are four
large bedrooms and two baths. The
closet

ROOMS TORENT

house for sumWrite Box H4

sult—

This white shingle Colonial house
is situated on a large lot in the
choicest Ravinia location.
On the first floor a gracious hall
runs through the center with a large
living room on one side, and a good
sized dining room, and bright sunny
kitchen on the other side.
Across
the

TO RENT

WE HAVE THE EXCLUSIVE RENTAL
of a fine home within easy walking distance of the lake and shopping, for this
Summer
season
from
May
15th to Sept.
30th.
There are large liv. rm., din. rm.,
kit., ser. porch, lib., powd. rm.,; break. rm.;
3 master bedrms. with 8 tile baths; 2 md’s
rms. and bath.
This lovely furn. home is
available for $750 per mo., which includes
care by the owner of the very beautiful
eee
For
further
information,
con-

bedrooms,

8580

ENGLISH COTTAGE.

3

HOUSE

FURNISHED
seven room
mer months or longer.
125, ¢/o H. P. News.

LISTING

REAL
ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(Lake Forest—Improved)

Tel. Win.

H.P.

EARHART,

Inc.

convenience,

4% _ baths.
Egandale, H.

NEW

is

OWNER:
Southern Colonial house on
the
Lake
with
traditional
charm
plus

every

SALE
Park)

Have
you wanted a home
with a real
country
feeling,
yet
not
too
far
from
school
and
transportation.
This
lovely
modern
house situated on beautiful property,
has
special
features
such
as
a
library and
full bath on the first floor.
It has four other bedrooms, and 8 additional baths. This is a real buy at $40,000.
For details consult

this

1212

7

»

Located

Inc.

si

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

Inn,

Lake

Foret.

ROOMS

Tu

RENT

SINGLE room $5 per week and one double
room
with
kitchen
privileges
$10
per
week.
Hot water 24 hours &amp; automatic
oil heat.
2 blocks from Harbor St. Station.
Call after 6 p.m,
394 Jefferson,
Glencoe, Ill. or Tel. Glencoe 2498.

GENERAL
housework, white, ass’t with 2
small girls.
No cooking or heavy laundry.
Own room, radio, very near transportation,
beach.
Good
salary.
Write
666 Greenleaf Ave., Glencoe. Tel. Glencoe 2409
(collect).
LAUNDRESS,
experienced,
2 days
week.
Tel. H.F. 344 or write Mrs. Harry Redfearn, 1439 S. Sheridan Rd. H. P.
COUPLE:
Experienced
housework,
2 private

Adult family.
H-135,

c/o

H.

$250
P.

for
cooking
and
rooms and bath.

a month.

News.

Write Box
ae

�uae

“yo
to assist mother with

housework

&amp;

children.

cleaning. Nice room &amp; bath.
necessary.
Tel. H.P. 2787 or
_ H-115,
e/o H. P. News.

No

s

WANTED:
MEN for golf and park maintenance
work
in
Lake
Forest.
Go
wages and some overtime.
Phone Lak
Forest 1289 or 2600 for appointment or
write Lake Forest City Hall, Lake Forest, Illinois.
f

heavy

References
Write Box

COUPLE,
white.
Excellent
position
for
experienced cook &amp; gardener or houseman.
References
required.
Top salary.
181 Bell Ave., H. P.
Tel. H.P. 151.

HELPER wanted on truck to call and deliver rugs.
Good
pay.
Apply: at once.
John B. Nash, 19 N. Sheridan Rd., H. P.

COOK
for
plain
cooking.
Small
family.
Other help.
Three to six days a week.
3 p.m. through
dinner.
Tel.
H.P.
924
or 613 S. Sheridan Rd.
CLEANING
woman,
one
Dependable &amp; exp.
Tel.
Roslyn Lane, H. P.

Apply

day each
week.
H.P. 674 or 900

SERVICE

1

yr.

old;

white;

references

help employed.
Lake Forest or

Apply
Lake

one

required.

NIGHT

Rd.,

Good

SECOND MAID:
White.
Small adult Lake
Forest family. References required. Mrs.
R. Douglas Stuart, 528 Mayflower Rd.,
Lake
Forest
1024.
HELP

WANTED

N.

Second

St.,

H.

Straight
Cook,

for

‘

CHARGE OF 2 CHIL&amp; 6%
YRS.
PERM.

EXPERIENCE.

1622

S.

MAN

with

car

GREEN

for

TEL.

BAY

service

H.P.

RD.

or

3964

production|

work.
Must have good personality and
be capable
of selling
or making
estimates.
Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired.
Address
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

,

In

Person

WANTED

EXP.

LAUNDRESS

will

(Domestic)

do

laundry

home.
Tel. H.P. 1579 or.
Llewellyn Ave., Highwood.
WOMAN

day.
St,

a

desires

Tel.
2.

domestic

H.P.

5861

HOUSEKEEPER:

Woman

6184
work

or

236

by

the

370
with

at

or

Bloom
six-year

old son desires permanent position with
salary and living quarters.
References
furnished.
Reply Box 870, Lake Forest
or Lake Forest 189.

SITUATIONS

WANTED

(Miscel.)

NATIONAL
ADV. MANAGER
who understands copy, production, merchandising.
Unusual
future
for right
man.
State
age,
education,
experience,
salary
expected.
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield,
Ill.

WHITE,
middle-aged woman will sit with
children.
Day work.
Can do ironing &amp;
mending in spare time; ref.
Write P.O.
Box
885, Evanston,
Ill.

WANTED:
CHAUFFEUR
AND
HOUSEMAN.
CURRENT
WAGES.
Write Box
G-145, c/o Highland Fark News.

SEAMSTRESS
will do sewing alterations
at home,
or in your
home
preferred.
371 Bloom St., H. P. Tel. H.P. 2792.

BRICKLAYERS—6
day
Handler
Construction
Ave., Glencoe, IIl.

CULTURED

week.
Co.,
652

Bb.
OW.
Vernon

MAN
for
service
station
work.
Apply
O’Neill Service Station
Skokie and Dundee Rds.
Tel. Northbrook
352.
:
repairman—experience not necWill train—steady employment.
Apply 8 to 5.
Holland
Furnace
Company
523 Park Drive
Kenilworth, Illinois

GARDENER,
experienced,
1
day
week.
Lawn care &amp; flower beds
Tel. H.P. 344
or write Mrs. Harry Redfearn,: 1439 §S.
Sheridan Rd., H. P.
INSPECTOR for dry cleaning plant.
Good
pay.
Ideal
working
conditions.
Apply
Vogue Cleaners, 329 N. Green Bay Rad.,
Highland Park.
WANTED:
Mechanic
for
agency
at
660
Vernon
Ill.
Tel. Glencoe 674.

new Nash
Car
Ave.,
Glencoe,

would

rent

exchange
music
teaching
specialist),
stay in nights.
Hill Rd.
Tel. Glencoe 292.

room
or
(children’s
234
Maple

PRACTICAL
nurse
wishes
8 hour
duty,
6 days a week.
Tel. H.P. 5861 or 370
Bloom

FURNACE
essary.

woman

St.,. H.

P.

COLLEGE
student
interested
in elementary educ. desires work for the summer.
Care
of
children
or
light
household
duties.
Tel.
Mrs.
Witherell,
Majestic
5868 before 3 p.m. or Mrs. Rogers, H.P.
1056
after 5 p.m.
SENIOR
high
school
boy
will
your children evenings and do

yard

work

in

exchange

for

sit
one

room

with
day’s

and

board from June 1 to Sept. 1.
Best ref.
Tel. 3730 or 530 Forest Ave., H. P.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post.
We sell furniture, bric-abrac &amp; clothing.
47 S. St. Johns.
Tel.
H.P.

2744.

84-B120-In-tf

WANTED:
Two men for part time clerical
UPRIGHT
piano, in good condition.
Will
work.
One in Highland Park &amp; one in
sell reasonable.
Write Joseph Giallanza,
Highwood.
Write c/o Highland
Park]
87 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P.
News
Box H-5.
BOY’S
20-in. English
type
(hand brake)
WANTED:
Part time janitor at Ravinia
bicycle.
Brand new, $35.
Electric lawn
school
hours 2 to 5, Monday thru Frimower
perfect condition,
$35.
Tel. H.
day, 8 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday.
Tel.
P. 332 or 266 Woodside, H. P.
H.P. 4020 days or H.P. 3091 evenings,
or see D. R. Beam, Braeside school, 2322
KENMORE
Deluxe
vacuum
cleaner,
like
Pierce Rd., Highland
Fark, days or at
new.
Tel. H.P. 2996 or 321 Euclid Ave.,
805 S. Ridge Rd., Highland Park evenings
Highwood.
SALESLADIES WANTED
Full
time
work.
W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
512 Central Ave., H. P.

DAVENPORT
and
chair;
also
chairs.
Tel.* H.P.
1228 or 929
Johns
Ave., H. P.

F.

WANTED:
business

Saturday,

Young
man,
and
help
on

May

10

at

-learn
bottling
trucks.
Apply

Nesbitt

Co., 1221 Deerfield Rd., H. P.-

Bottling

Delivery

kidney
Wood-

DINING room set: 10 piece Italian Renaissance solid walnut, $500; mahogany: re$500: also
grand piano,
producer baby
9x12 Chinese rug. F. A. Beck, Saunders
Tel. DeerRd. &amp; Duffy Lane, Deerfield.
field 233-J-1.

EXPERIENCED
woman
wishes
to
cook
dinner for room and some salary.
Tel.
Deerfield 4138-J or 1057 Sheridan Ave.,
Deerfield.
;

OWN
ROOM.
HIGHEST
REF.
MORE
IMPORTANT|

OR

Apply

salary
Room

EXPERIENCED
woman
wishes
laundry,
cleaning
&amp; cooking
by
the day.
Tel.
Deerfield 413-J or 1057 Sheridan Ave.,
Deerfield.

P.

Ask

Tel. H.P. 2550.
hours.
Highland Park Hospital.

THAN

and

SITUATION

at

ASSISTANT cook &amp; dietary maid,

POSITION.
WAGES.

Board

DEERPATH
INN HOTEL
Lake
Forest,
Illinois

WANTED:
Lathe operators &amp; other machine
shop
employees.
Modern
Engineering
Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.
1057.
Tel. H.P.

NURSE TO TAKE
DREN,
2 YRS.

PORTER

starting

THE

for

BROWN
upholstered
davenport
, Style.
Tel.
H.P.
1022
or 614
path, H. P.

(Miscellaneous)

WANTED
Men, part or full time
Highland Ten Pins

189

ATTENDANTS

DEERFATH
GARAGE
Lake Forest, Illinois
Lake Forest 80

Other

USE

Divided top electric range .............. $214.50
Four
burner electric deluxe range 244.50
Divided top gas range
159.95
7.6 cu.ft. Deluxe Cold Spot Ref. .... 219.95
7.6 cu.ft
Standard
Cold Spot Ref. 179.95
combinaF.M.-A.M.
console
Walnut
ne ots Mite dag, 169.50
oe eel
GIG
&amp; Roebuck Co.
517 Central Ave., H. F.

Apply

child,

40 Sheridan
Forest
1096.

STATION

WHO

WANT
ADS
This paper is not for sale until 8:30
a.m. each Thursday.
Sellers of household
goods
who are annoyed before that hour
by telephone
calls
are warned
that the
caller has procured
a copy of the paper
in jan illegal manner.
They
are warned
to be on their guard against such persons,
who
are
dealers
trying
to
drive
sharp
bargains.
If it is possible to secure information
as to the name, address or phone number
of anyone answering any Want Ad before
8:30 a.m. Thursday please phone us.

Immediate

Experienced.
Cook,
butler
Top wages.
Small adult famBox. Q-17, c/o Lake Forester.

Experienced,

THOSE

Available

Two

GARDENER’S
HELPER:
Steady
position
by
the week.
Apply’) Miss
Mitchie
at
Lester Armour residence, Sheridan Rd.,
' Lake Bluff, or Lake Bluff 420.
NURSE:

TO

TWO
library tables, 1 round table, 3 for
$10;
also
large
2 apron
sink.
A.
J.
Johnson,
657
Deerfield
Rd.,
Deerfield.
Tel.
Deerfield
254.

DEERPATH
GARAGE
Lake Forest, Illinois
Lake Forest 80

HOUSEMAID,
white, references.
1 adult.
No cooking.
Assistance cleaning.
High
wages.
Tel. H.P. 652 after 11 a.m. or
Write Box H-145, c/o H. P. News.
COUPLE:
houseman.
ily. Reply

MAN
General Cleaning
In Garage

For

WARNING

kitchen
N. St.

TWO chests of drawers, one $20, the antique $50; Chinese, all wool 6x9 hook
rug,
rose
pattern
$50;
two
standing
lamps, $2 and $7; copper wash boiler, $4.
400 Waukegan Ave., Highwood, 2nd flr.

FRENCH
Provincial
walnut bedroom
set:
dresser,
chest
dust proof construction
double bed, with spring &amp; mattress, and
2 bedside
commodes.
Best
offér over
$200.
Also 10x14 mulberry Chinese rug.
Tel. H.P.
1238
or 2823
Lakeside
PIl.,
Highland Park.
EIGHT
piece fumed
oak
(inlaid)
dining
room set.
1152 Chestnut St.
Deerfield
or Deerfield 28.
MAH.
excutive desk,
$35; one small ice
box,
porcelain
lined,
$15;
four
panel
hand painted screen, cost new $225, price
$50.
Tel. H.P. 1179 or 533 Laurel Ave.
DINING
set, refrigerator,
baby
grand
piano, drawing table, 200 matched wine
bottles,
davenport
&amp;
chair
2.
small
rugs; misc. household items.
Tel. H.F.
484 or 1881 S. Green Bay Rd., H. P.

REFRIGERATOR:
1947 “Kelvinator,” deluxe 7 cu. ft., used only two months.
May
be
seen
at Deerpath
Inn
Hotel,
Lake Forest
Illinois.

MICELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
lawn roller for hire.
Borchardt Fuel Co.,
Tel. H.P. 67.
MARTIN
“60” greatest Out Board Motor
of all times.
Get your order in while
our
allotment
lasts.
P.
J.
Juhrend,
Salesman, 666 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield.
BOY’S blue wool suit; 2-tone brown sport
coat; 1 tan garbardine jacket; odd pants,
all size
14 yrs.; also 9x12
used
rug.
Tel. Deerfield 248 or 1024 Oakley Ave.,
Deerfield.
VACUUM
cleaner,
good
condition,
motor
driven brush type, attachments; Zenith
radio, cost $125, price $26; gardening
cart; scythe and gardening tools.
1815
Broadview Ave., H. P. Tel. H.P. 2817.
TWENTY-TWO
in. steel coal fired gravity
type warm
air furnace,
complete
with
warm air runs for 5 rooms, 8 cold air
runs
&amp;
coal
fired
hot
water
heater.
Excellent condition.
Price for immedi-

ate

Ave.

sale.

H.

Maybe

P.

or

seen

Tel.

at 723

H.P.

Grandview

3941.

springs,

LAWN
MOWER,
16 in., five blade ball
bearing, $8.
Tel. H.P. 5704 or see 723
County Line Rd., H. P. after 6 p.m.
BATHTUB,
5%
ft. R.H. corner
in tub. Excellent condition. M.
641 S. St. Johns Ave., H. P.

mattress.

MORE

BARGAINS

27-ft. prewar

903

exten.

Reasonable.

Sunnyside,

H. Pee
eek

ladder, perfect, $18;

dress. table with mirror, $10; large library table, glass top, $12; double bed
springs,
$10; exe. down
mattress, 1
new,
$30;
slide
$1; chairs,
$1
eac
lamps, games, high chair, vases, paintings
sets Book of Knowledge and Americana
and
other
books;
tools;
2 elec, i

irons &amp; board; 2 trunks, $1.50 each; —
fireless cooker, $1.50; radio, $2; maid’s

uniforms;
etc.
Fri.

household
&amp;
arid Sat.
9-4

LINDEN,

H.

kitchen
ONLY.

things,
522 N.

P.

NOW
AVAILABLE
AT
WARDS
OVERHEAD
GARAGE
DOORS
We can now supply a limited number of —
sectional," overhead garage doors, for single |
car, residential garages. Call or visit our ae
local Catalog Office for details and specifications.
aaa
Price
$67.50. Complete including all "3
hardware.
hae
Tel. H.P. 4800
28. N, First: St.
(35
MONTGOMERY WARD
;
Highland Park, Illinois
TWELVE 27x92 copper screens.
Lane Rd.
Tel. H.P. 1873.
BOOK

SHELVES,

used

used

washing

gas

stove,

machines,

r

2225

odd

fe

Dell '
; \g
three

chairs, —

small drop leaf table, used table lamps,
two
burner
electric
plates,
typewriter

desk, used
Supply,

29

electric motors.
S.

2nd

St.

Haak’s

H.

P.

Auto —

_

_

:

LARGE Burroughs adding machine in work. |
ing
order,
$35;
‘‘Electroday”
electric |
stove,
completely rewired,
1 wk.
ago.,
$90. Shown at 2455 Edgewood Rd., H, P. |

WANTED

TO

BUY

WOULD
like to buy tool house
dren’s
play
house.
Tel.
H.P.
write
Mrs.
Harry
Redfearn,
Sheridan Rd., H. P.

or chil344
or

1439

§S.

WARDROBE trunks that will stand extensive
travel..
Tel.
H.P.
4741
or write
Dr.
Burkhardt,
2455
Edgewood
Dr.,
Highland Fark.

WANTED

TO

BE

GIVEN

|

AWAY

LUMBER
to be given away
in exchange
for tearing down old garage and cartin
away materials.
489 Oakwood Ave.
Te
2008.

LOST

AND

FOUND

LOST:
Light brown leather wallet.
Identification, drivers license E. D. Slown.
Keep money, return wallet.
2300 Dewes
St., Glenview, Ill. or Tel. Glenview 185.

LOST:

Child’s

black

sidewalk

tricycle
ed4614

chain-driven, from Lincoln school
nesday morning.
Please Tel. H.P.
or 549 Kimball Rd.

ae

LOST:
Large
black and rust Doberman
Pinscher male, in Lake Forest.
Please
write
Hintzpeter,
208 S. La Salle St.,
Chicago.
,

USED

—
M

AUTOMOBILES

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern
Ave.
Lake Forest, Ill.
Tel. L.F. 606 |
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.

se
Sakae

CHEVROLET coupe 1937, new motor, new
clutch, radio &amp; heater, Stangers Garage,
133 N. 2nd St. Evenings Tel. H.P. 4223,

_
s
|

MERCURY Convertible coupe 1941. In ex-—
with radio &amp; heater.
cellent condition,
Car located at 660 Vernon Ave., Glencoe.
Tel. Glencoe 674.
PONTIAC
1986, sedan, 4-door, 6-cylinder.
1452
Waukegan
Rd.,
Deerfield.
Tel.
—
Deerfield 815.
;
s

Vine

Buick 1928, good tires. 626
H.

Ave.,

1987

P.,

6:30

CHEVROLET:

to

8 p.m.

Tudor

sedan,

tires and tubes and heater.
Good
dition.
361
Moffett
Rd.
(rear),
ae
on
Sundays
or
weekdays
p.m,

AUTOS

WANTED

WANTED

PRACTICALLY
NEW:
24
h.p. Johnson
motor.
Several boating
accessories, all
for $250.
See at 1882 Greenwood Ave.,
Highland Park.

fi

good
conLake
after

n

C.I. built
R. Sproul

FOR
SALE,
account
moving:
Full
size
walnut bed, spring, innerspring mattress,
walnut
dresser,
kitchen.
table
chairs,
small cabinet oil heater, Roper Deluxe
gas
range
like
new,
Maytag
washing
machine,
wood
turning
lathe,
chisels,
jig-saw, garden tools, lawn
roller, etc.
Rice,
1724
South Ridge
Rd., H. P.

hana

SALE

cotton

Juvenile wardrobe.

FOR SALE:

WE
HAVE a
few demonstrators
left at
25% discount.
Phileos &amp; Zenith radios.
Haak’s Auto Supply, 29 S. 2nd St., H. P.

ee

é

THREE piece bedroom suite complete with

H.P.

BEDS:
Pair of new French style twin beds,
7 ft. twins with blue upholstery on head
boards.
Complete with new innerspring
mattresses, $1380, each.
May be seen at
Davis
Storage,
879 N. Oakwood,
Lake
Forest.

fy

re a.

GIRL OR WOMAN

light

7

ELLANEOUS

|

FOR CASH

;

Good
°87 to °47 Used
Cars.
A. G. MePHERSON,
Ince.
887 E. Park Ave., H. P..
WANTED:
Convertible
coupe,
but
in good
condition,
by

naval

officer.

Lake

Forest

v

anv
size,
discharged

452.

PRIVATE party will pay ¢ash for used
car,

’41

or

see at 1248
3584.

¥
ea.

;

’42

in

Burton

good

Ave.
:

condition,

or Tel.

5

:

Will

H.P.
: ;

ae

—

�a

RABBITS,

healthy

breeding

mostly

young.

stock:

with

Fine
5.

hutch.
All:-at. a bargain.
Tel.
1636 or 625 Laurel Ave., H. P.

KERRY

Blue

AKC.
Paper
Libertyville.
Jumbus 7593

Terrier

Puppies.

‘Write

c/o

H.

P.

News

BUSINESS

“Woods
a few

hr

_

M.

&amp;

ness.

C. T. Bartlett.

PARKWAY

open

Now

in today:

Stop

cars.

for busi+

tablecloths, medepr cess throw rugs.
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
'
Prompt Service.
300 N. Green Bay Rd.,.H. P,Tel, H.P. 5804

|

~~ LANDSCAPING
GARDENS

x

— LAWNS

Hauling ‘Dirt
t

Annual

and

Manure

and -Perenpnial

FOREST

Plants

North

Highway

Skokie

BLACK

Lake

Forest

PAINTING

OPEN

FOR INSPECTION
SAT. and SUN.

MAY 8 between

10 and 3 p.m.

A complete line of building materials — stoves — shower stalls
lavatories——Toilets —— slop sinks
laundry tubs—heating boilers—
furnaces—electrical equipment,
‘etc.

There are also, complete barrack buildings to be sold in its
entirety

Ask for prices

representative
grounds.

TREES

DECORATING

WALL
WASHING
Window Washing
Storms and Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
R.F.D. No. 1, Box 246-A
Libertyville, Dlinois
Grayslake 5414
JOHN HALL’S
Tree &amp; Landscaping Service.
We trim,
remove &amp; spray trees.
Also landscaping
work.
219
Sheridan
Ave., Hwd.
Tel.
H.P. 8918.
Adjustments, or corrections of error,
on Advertiser’s written copy, not the
fault of the advertiser will be made by
correct publication without charge, only
if we are notified immediately following
publication.
Cancellations
must
be made
before
p.m.
Tuesday
for
Highland
Park
News
to be effective the same
week.
On
Telephone
ads
adjustment
is
made
only
on
errors
in
address
or
phone number reported immediately.
Copy is accepted only with the understanding that this paper assumes no
responsibility’
for
omission
through
clerical or mechanical
error.
Reply to Real Estate and Situations
Wanted may be made by phone as well
as by letter.
To reply to such adver- |
tisements
phone
H.P.
4500,
4501
or
4502
Ad
Dept.
Your
name,
address
and

phone

number

will

be

placed

at

once in the box of the advertiser.
The
Wanted
Ads
with
BOX
NUMBERS
identity of any Box Number advertiser
or any
information
not
contained
in
want ads will not be disclosed.
For the protection of our advertisers
replies
to blind
ads
will not be delivered unless the release card is presented.
Replies
will be mailed
upon
request.

Kindling wood will be given away
“free,
Contact

&amp;

on

CONTINENTAL SALVAGE
Gate 6, Bldg. No. 665

Right is reserved to revise or accept
copy
subject
to publication
rules,
To place your ad, phone H. P. 4500,
4501,

or

212 Railway

PAINTED
bookcases;
also built-in
case about 8-ft. high; mahogany
table;

end

Rd.,

tables,

etc.

Highland

Call

at

(Continued

Park.

Glenview, III.
Glenview 1641R
.

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED
No

from Page 35)

To

REDEEMER EVAN. LUTHERAN CHURCH
587 West Central avenue
H. K. Platzer, Pastor
Tel. H.P. 950
SUNDAY,
May: 11
= i
a.m. Sunday school in the church
all.
9:15
a.m.
Morning
worship
at
Lake
Forest
in
the
American
Legion
hall,
McKinley and Wisconsin avenues.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
The text
is Luke
12:48; “Much
required of whom
Much
is Given.”
11:30
a.m.
WGN
The
Lutheran
Hour
with the Rev. Armin Oldsen of Valparaiso
University
as
guest
speaker.
Repeat
broadcasts
over WAAF
and WJJD.
WEDNESDAY,
May 14,
7 to 9 p.m. Redeemer
Guild rummage
sale
in
the
church
hall.
Continued
on
15

till

12

Day

Visitors

always

@e

Phone

THE
Shermer
“WE

@

WHAT

held

YOU

Professional
@
@ Schools

Complete
-®
@

CO.

Northbrook
NEED”

Amateur

Stock:

:

Grumbacher
@ DeVoe
Prang
® Milton Bradley
@ Favor Ruhl
Picture Framing

vitamin candy way

at
House,

Winnetka

Doors

7 a.m.

to 5 p.m.

Havea

Hae

giaing. Ne

more

slender,

e. No exer-

axatives.

No

Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan

Sale

on

RS

you don’t cut out any

meals,

\ _ starches, potatoes, meats or
butter, you simply cut them down. It’s e
)
delicious (vitamin
AYDS candy before meals.

ae
in

elini

cae

conducted

ates! Se
in setae
a few

be

weeks

edical

&gt;

;

Get SLIMMER this
S
WW,

Community
Open

Rd.

HAVE

715

B. AUSTIN

class.
SerFor

Thursday, May 15
‘

Northbrook

M.

120 N. Genesee
Majestic 27
Waukegan

WINNETKA’S ANNUAL
SPRING RUMMAGE SALE
be

home

LARSEN &amp; PETERSEN
PAINT CO.

welcome.

Shore

electrical

in

Drilling
e
Tapping
e@
Assembly Operations

3

will

required

rehearsal.

Largest North

Necessary

essential

construction.

Vesper.

ZION LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Oakridge and High street
Highwood
Herbert W. Linden, Pastor
SUNDAY,
May
11,
:
9:30 a.m. Church school and Bible
10:45 a.m. Anthem by the choir.
mon
topic:
“Prayer — For Whom?
What?”

Experience

fabricate

equipment

noon.

THURSDAY,
May
15,
8 p.m. The Ascension

FRIDAY,
May:
9,
7:30 p.m. Choir

:

AND GLASS
of
EXQUISITE DESIGN

Mor-

JEHOVAH’S
WITNESS
YWCA
274 Laurel avenue
Highland Park, Illinois
FRIDAY, May 9,
7:30
p.m.
Friday
service
meeting
and
Theocratic Ministry school.
SUNDAY,
May
11,
Watchtower
study.
-.Subject:
‘‘Resurrection to a New World.”
Text: He has
fixed a day on which
he will judge the
world justly by a man whom he has destined for this and he has given proof of
this to all by raising him from the dead—
Acts 17:31, Moffatt.

May

Age

MIRRORS

bookdrum

387

Churches

4502.

The office is open Tuesday until 5:30
p.m.
Ads forwarded by mail should be
addressed
to
59
S.
St.
Johns
Ave.,
Highland Park.
Tuesday,
5:00
p.m.
Deadline on all Classified Ads
RATES:
Minimum
Charge $1.10 for
20 words or less.
Additional words up
to 55 words will be 5 cents each.
All
words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All
classified
display
ads
1 inch
or
more are charged at the agate line rate.

570

Highwood

Ave.

Glass

6.50x15;
Call at

1179

HENNING O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, Ill.
Tel. Longbeach 2404.
Fully insured

SOIL

CUT.BUILDING COSTS |

H.P.

Ave.

2764

Wholesale
| and
Retail.
SOIL
TOP
PRODUCTION
CLEAN
,
by Pitts. Lab.
&amp; approved
Tested
Rd.,
Waukegan
&amp;
Supply Field: Co. Line
Deerfield
A. F. VOLTZ
Il.
1, Glenview,
R.R.
173,
Box
Fhone
Glenview
734

Tel.

FOR
SALE:
Choice
Evergreen.
Reasonable.
Cash and carry.
Clifford C. Foote,
Rt. 45 in Half Day, just off -Milwaukee

FARM

FLOWER

Ave.

Windows,
Floors,
Woodwork
Windows and Woodwork
Washed
Floors Waxed
Storm’ Windows
Taken
Down
Screens
Put
Up
ERIC STURTZ
- JOE
BENSON
Lake Forest 2051
Between 7-8 a.m. or between 7-8 p.m.

Park

National Delivery
Service

VET,
Lloyd
Bock,
33 yrs. resident,
5438
Oakwood Ave, Tel. H.P. 1662. Will wash
and paint screens,
kitchens, woodwork,
bathrooms, living &amp; dining rooms.

EVERGREENS

HANS BAHR
Laurel

Highland

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

aine

Sprayin

Pansies

LAKE

&amp;

SERVICE

Phone

CARPET:
We may sell about 230 sq. yards
of carpet, peach color.. Newly
cleaned
good grade.
Call at 887 Moraine Rd.,
Highland Park.
5

Landscaping

SHRUBS

EVERGREEN

drapes,

‘panels,

“éurtains;

&amp; CO.

PROMPT

SURGERY

BOY’S bicycle; 4 used tires, size
dog house; miscellaneous doors.
887 Moraine Rd., H. P.

KERRIHARD
ORS
&gt;
MR. ROOT

533

TREE

INSULATION

SEARS ROEBUCK

LOCAL |
DELIVERIES

FOUR WHEEL trailer, 5-ft. 6-in. by 14-ft.
by 8-ft. high.
Inspection, one door east
of Royal Oak Riding Stable, County Line
Rd. G. Lockwood.

TREE
SERVICE
SKOKIE
VALLEY
Spraying
Treating,
Pruning,
Dangerous
Trees
Removed
Also cabling and surgery.
All property
and men fully insured.
‘
3822 Highwood
Ave.
Highwood,
Illinois
Earl Reynolds
Tel. H:P. 2663

SEE MR.

CURTAIN

LAUNDRY

Ruffled

your

serve

to

painted

HEATING

Park
O. Inman

Tel. H. P. 89
136-J-19-tf

equipment

cleaned,

In Colors for Your
Bathroom and Kitchen

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel. L.F.
has the
Our service department,
606.
modern

SPRING!

Also Available—Metal
Tile

REPAIR
FURNITURE
CRAFTSMAN
“For Work
of Quality”
Refinishing.
Upholstering, _ Slipeovering,
Zion,
88rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Tel. Zion 3496

most

FOR
Screen

.

car garage. ‘Buyer
remove.
Best offer
Ave.
Tel. H.P. 405.

TRAILERS

ON

ROOFING,

HANGING

Tel. H. P. 5676

repair.
SERVICE

FREE

Be Particular — It Costs No More
Highland

LUMBER
from
three
must tear down
&amp;
accepted.
645 Vine

INSTALLATION

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park, Ml.
29-S-3-1n-t#

PAPER

MISCELLANEOUS”

SERVICE

&amp; hung.
Gutters
cleaned
and
painted.
Vet’s Maintenance,
5124 Newport Ave.,
Chicago 41. Tel. Bel. 5030 (collect).

Jr.

MODERNE DECORATING
ee
SERVICE
&amp;

N

AVE.,
DEERFIELD
Deerfield 525

removed,

SERVICE

Vine Ave.,
‘
~~

radio

RADIO

PREPARE
Storms

i

628
Preti

car

PARK
Tel.

H-65.

CINHUMUS,
SOIL,
TOP
FLAGSTONE.
screcnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
-\
ders,
y
haulgeneral
hire;
for
saw
down, power
2
ing
and
welding.
Tel.
H.P.
39381
or
3785.
John , Tazioli.

PAINTING

vs

DELIVERY

Also

boys camp
vacancies.

Box

&amp;

WICK’S

1151

Registered

PERCY H. PRIOR,
Photographer
Specializing in
pictures of
Tel. T.P. 3199
eh

UP

stall

CAMPS

OLD
established North
- restricted,
still
has

PICK

H.P.

broken.
Can be seen near
For appointment
Tel. Coin Chicago.

BOYS

;

_ BUSINESS SERVICE

___ BIRDS, CATS,
DOGS

- FORTY

ee

doctors,

zed to 48 be.
with ALD S$ Vitamin

Gandy Reducing Plan.
seden
S only
$2.25. If not deli
20-day sappy TON PPS SK oe ras wt box

WIEBOLDT’S
Walgreen’s, Gsell Phcy, Ravinia &amp; Highland
Park, Laegeler in Highwood, Baxter &amp; Orr

in Deerfield, Drucein North Chicago nd all
leading drug counters everywhere. aay

�Thursday,

May

8,

1947

Page

Install Officials
(Continued from page 3)
retiring mayor and commissioner
accounts
and
also spoke.

The

finance

mayor

several

ments

is

at the

William

to

committee

next

What you buy is as important as what you pay. Jewel's new low everyday prices are
on regular lines of merchandise—FRESH, FAST MOVING STOCK that is in demand—not
just a clean-up of odds and ends or soiled, shop worn merchandise priced low to create
an impression. AND it is easy at Jewel to tell what you are buying and what price you
are paying.
There is no conglomeration of labels on our shelves to confuse you, but
you will find a variety and good selection of well known labels priced right.

Dies

from

father’s
business,
ceeded after the

make

appoint-

council’ meeting.

Obee

(Continued

FRESH QUALITY MERCHANDISE MAKES §
JEWEL’S LOW PRICES ABARGAIN ¢

of

respectively,

expected

standing

page

3)

to which he sucelder Obee’s death

in 1894. Construction of the
hotel was among the many

CE... 2%
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE... %

DOLE

1913

Park from

to

1914.

was

a member

and

from

1923

1899

of the
to

CHERRY

1895 to 1899, and

From

to

1913

county

1935

he

he

board,

was

oldest members
church. In his
Sunday
school

VALLEY

1%,

SALAD —

Deer-

HOLSUM

field township supervisor and overseer of the poor. In this work his
late wife, Augusta Obee, nee Meyer,
too an active part.
He was one of the
of Trinity
Episcopal
youth
he
attended

HAWAIIAN

PINEAPPLE JU!

Moraine
building

projects here on which he worked.
Mr. Obee served as an alderman in

Highland

BRAND

WIDMER'S

ts GRAPE JUICE.

OT.
BOT.

there and with two other boys, Fred
Greenslade and George Crittendon,
did janitor work gratuitously for the

ASPARAGUS,

church.
For
these
duties the
boys
were presented special prayer books,

Rich in Vitamins—Less

and in later years Mr. Obee often
showed new friends his book, inscribed in gold with his name and a
citation.
For the past 64 years he was a
lodge,

AF

of the lodge, a thirty-second degree
Mason, and a member and past com-

DQ ivorcans DH

x |

REGULAR

local
held

at

the

afternoon at 2 o’clock, Masonic services took place at the Masonic temple.
Interment was in Lake Forest cemetery, where Mr. Obee’s parents also
were buried.

Surviving him are two brothers and
two

sisters:

Fred

Obee

of

134

South

Green Bay road, who shared in the
contracting business; John Obee of
Logansport, Ind.; Mrs. Amy Scott, a
former school teacher here who had
made

her

home

with

Mr.

Obee

since

the death of his wife; and Mrs. R. D.
Smith

of Kansas

City,

Kans.

2D

\

‘“

CABAL
fe
39 South La Safle St., Chicago 3
PO

CCL

mee RL

DRIP

e

3

GRIND

12-OZ.
2-OZ
cANs ant

cAN as

SOUL
TRIM

;

| PORK LOIN ROASTS

The 99°
g
JAR

FLAVORED

SYRUP

16-OZ

Cocoa-Mars

JAR

rege

Potato

Biccuils

Chips

OVEN-READY—BALLARD

CALL CUT FROM
TENDER YOUNG PORK

LB,

WHOLE LOIN OR
FULL RIB HALF

)

EVISCERATED—INDIVIDUALLY
&amp;
.
fl

25

fewing

1-LB. 47°

.@

@

TO

READY

SEASON

)

THINGS

2

Ave.
Ta)

AND

COOK

oO:

SUDS

FINE

eae

MAKES HARD WATER ACT SOFT

NO

exes. 20°

RINSING—NO

Spic

&amp; Snand PKGS. Ajc

Bleach . . son 14°

a

ee

TOILET

SOAP—CASHMERE

Bouquet 2 ears 20°
FOR

THAT SCHOOL
COMPLEXION

GIRL

rxe, 82° § Palmolive.
WIPING

ULTRA-REFINED
DISINFECTS—DEODORIZES
Clorox

519 Central Ave.
445 Roger Williams

Cc

Jewel Meat Loaf 9: 69°

Automatic . . exc Sit | Vel mince
eee

Cc

LEAN

| Super Suds exe.«390
.%°2
CAN i9¢

MILD SOAP FLAKES

Oakite

Ready

Smoked Bults.....69°

LOADS

A MILLION

Cut-Up

2.&lt;.23° | Leg O' Lamb ...- «59

COFFEE

CLEANS

Piens “ei.

y

TASTY 9

kin: Basis

PACKAGED

FANCY TENDER FLAVORFUL—SHORT SHANK

tan 19°

FLAME ROASTED
MANOR HOUSE

Tomatoes

MH Has

IN
TOMATO
A
SAUCE
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c

‘ca 3/7

Or

CHOCOLATE

BLUEBROOK

War he re
71
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OR

12-0Z

Meat

JEWEL EXTRA-VALUE TRIM

PRESERVES

SOc PEACH
&amp; CHERRY

PEA

Stewart's aoe

ni

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OR

SPICED

os
Beans

WITH A SMILE!

Ci,

irae
Ea

c

If you
don't find this fine
juice to your
perfect
satisfaction after trying one can—
Return the other 2 cans and
receive
your
money
back.

lodge

chapel of the Kelley and Spalding
funeral home at 9 o’clock Tuesday
morning, the Rev. Charles U. Harris
of Trinity church officiating. In the

SIZE

MAYER

Luncheon
REG.

mander of the Evanston Commandery. He held many certificates for
services rendered
to the
and the order.
Religious services were

OSCAR

No2cAN FREE Chaseor

and

master

ee

Fay

TOMATO JUICE

AA RAPA

A.O.

an _ ex-worshipful

BRAND

ee

of

was

HUNT

TOMATO

HEINZ SOUPS
D cans QZ
ctorer

Acid

SAAC

member

AM,

41

MADE

WITH

PALM

REC Qc

&amp; OLIVE

Palmolive. ___

va

OILS

I3°

�Page 42

cae

ALCYON
Highland

TELEPHONE
| THU.,

FRI.,

H.

STARTS

2400
May

WAUKEGAN

SUNDAY, MAY
for 7 Big Days

11th

8-9-10

A Wonderful
Life”’

James

Stewart,

| Added:

P.

SAT.,

“It's

THEATRE

“Country

Donna

Life’;

Reed

Latest

News

SUNDAY, MAY
11 FOR
GLORIOUS DAYS
Saturday—May
17

SEVEN

Till the Clouds
Roll By”
}
i
tf
i
ij

OQ Ateretts

HIGHWOOD,

LAST

Deerpath

DAY
Olivia

Sat.

Mat.

2.to

8-9-10

4

&amp;

CLEOPATRA”

Vivien Leigh,

Claude

&amp;

Rains

“THE

Subjects

and

Laraine

Late

10

“LL

11

&amp;

12

Mat.

2

to

Wright,

4

Robt.

Highland

Park

Mitchum

Selected

Short

Subjects

&amp;

Blackie

and

SECOND

“BETTY
with

Jane

the

SAT.,

&amp;

“A

'

Andrews, Jon
Lynn Bari

SUN.,

MON.,

May

“A

YANK

Rex

Harrison, Anna
Dean Jagger

IN

Thousand

Club Lorraine

Gene

Tierney,

8-9-10

SHOCKING
PILGRIM”

Saturday

SEE AND

1:30

11 &amp; 12
Neagle,

Mature

MISS
May

MISS

Robt.

Day,

Brian

Mitchum

(new

Ave.

Starts

SUNDAY

1

GAMES

Harems

in Technicolor

“SINBAD THE
SAILOR”

Starts THURS.,

af

May

Sonny

15th

Have

- WRESTLING

of speed

and

suits

by

may

the

school,

east of Highwood
station

deposits

are

Required

Until Proofs Are Shown
H. P. 6025

JUKE

BOX

Snack Bar

Sundaes
961

- Sodas

CARRY Ave.
OUT HAMBURGERS

Waukegan

Only

be worn.

Children’s Photos
Taken in Home

STOP IN!
Weekly Program

THE

Tufts

“CROSS MY HEART”

and

time will
of form

of

Adventure

swim

breast,

for 4 Days

in the
Persia

Hutton,

crawl,

development

block

No

favorite)

DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
MAUREEN O’HARA

Betty

to

397 North Ave.
Highland Park

OTHER SPORTING EVENTS

We

Romance

ability

THE
HIGHLAND PARK
— STUDIO

Aherne,

17

MARKER”

3 CARTOONS
&amp; COMEDY
Advance tickets now on sale
NOTE: Regular performance starts
4:30.
30c to. 6:30

the

HEAR

BASEBALL

BOXING

SATURDAY

Her Monstrous Secret
Wrecked three men’s lives.
Laraine

SPECIAL KIDDIES MATINEE PARTY
One Showing Only—At 2 p.m.

“LITTLE

thru

is

stroke. Class
improvement

laundered

school

“THE LOCKETT”

Hall,

May 13 &amp; 14
GESTURE”
Victor

strokes:

to

Highwood

CUB

THU., FRI., SAT., May 15-16-17
Betty Grable, Dick Haymes

“THE

346 Waukegan

GENESEE
NOW

this level

endurance in the standard swimming
strokes. Instruction in the fundamentals of life saving and water safety
will also be given.
Suits and towels will be furnished

Mason

LONDON”

TUES., WED.
“SHANGHAI

for

and

from

con-

one length of the pool with ease and
dive or jump into deep water. Class
time will be devoted to teaching the
correct
form
in the crawl, back,
breast and side strokes.
3. Advanced. Limited to 30 pupils
per class. Open to all school children
who can pass the entrance requirements. These include ability to swim
100 yards with ease and make a running
front
dive
from
the diving
board. Pupils must be able to swim
at least one length of the pool using

and

Law”

Entertainment

Continuous

“KIT CARSON”
Dana

Best

ment

over-arm back
be devoted to

CO-ED”
William

America’

(Continued from page 3)
1. Beginners. Limited to 25 pupils
per class. Section A, from 7 years
of age to seventh grade in school.
Section B, seventh and eighth grades
and high school.
2. Intermediate. Limited to 30 pupils
per class. Section A, from 7 years
of age to seventh grade in school.
Section B, seventh and eighth grades
and high school. Entrance require-

these

News

605

May

Are First!

FEATURE

Portor,

Junior

Swimming Classes

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun.,
1:30
THU., FRI.,

We

TUES., WED., THURS.
May 13-14-15
Chester Morris, Trudy Marshall

Your

GLENCOE
_

Eve. $1.20
Children 50c

Day

“PURSUED”
Teresa

WEEKDAYS
Mat. 766:

BE YOURS”

THU., FRI, SAT., May 15-16-17
Sat.

SUNDAY

News

May

COMING:
“Sweli Guy”
and One Nights”

LOCKETT”

Raymond,

May 9 &amp;
Peter Lorre

FOUR SHOWS DAILY
noon - 3 - 6 - 9 p.m.

Adults $1.20
Children 50c

Comedy

Deanna Durbin, Tom Drake,
William Bendix, Adolphe Menjou

“Boston

thru WED.
May 11-14
Sun. Cont. from 2-11

Gene

Clyde

MON.

PLUS

SUN.

12

MIRROR”

Andy

Short

Also

Technicolor Spectacle

“CAESAR

8

“THE VERDICT”
SUN.

May

Myrna Loy, Fredric March,
Dana Andrews, Teresa Wright

P.M.

MAY
Ayres

Lew

&amp; SAT.
Sidney Greenstreet,

Also

TEL. L. F. 2106

Winner of 9

» Academy Awards 4

YEARS OF
OUR LIVES”

ILLINOIS

THURSDAY
DeHavilland,

Cartoon,

ILLINOIS

FRI., SAT.,

the

‘Miss

test."

Steak

Days—Show
Starts
7
Sundays—2:30
P.M.

“THE DARK
FRI.

THU.,

on

BARTLETT
THEATRE
Week

FOREST,

)

:

TOWERHighwood
CASINO

In Technicolor
A Musical to Top All Musicals
Based
on the Life and
Music.
of
Jerome
Kern
With
the
Finest
Cast
Ever
Put
Into
A Musical Comedy
June Allyson, Lucille Bremer, Judy Garland, Kathryn Grayson, Van Heflin, Lena
Horne, Van
Johnson, Angela
Lansbury,
Tony
Martin,
Virginia
O’Brien,
Dinah
Shore, Frank Sinatra, and Robert Walker
as Jerome Kern.

LAKE

batyert dove,

“You should
see
what’s
plates at Tower Casino!”
Spaghetti
Ravioli
-

Thru

(Continued from page 3)
Dress is optional. Tickets may be
purchased here at the Alcyon theatre
box office.
Mayor Robert F. Patton has endorsed Miss May with these words:
“As Mayor of Highland Park I am
glad to wish Miss Ramona May of
441 South St. Johns avenue, who has
been chosen
from
our
local high
school, all the luck in the world as
‘Miss Highland Park’ in the forth-

coming

Events.
STARTS

y,!

“Monie” Seeks Title

ACADEMY

Park

|

Tel.

H.

P. 1508
hcten

�BENRUS
Natural
Gold

Ca
A Sif

- ,

eos
)

.

Be

oo

A7

Wy a\X

i

KJ

\Ate
on

.

PERFECT

At Buschs you will find a large selection of finest quality diamonds. nationally advertised watches, and other jewelry offered at lowest prices. Our confidential kredit plan is at your
convenience.

PERFECT

La a

pes

$49.50

a

$1.00 Weekly
Perfect center diamond and two
genuine side diamonds in this
modern

attractive

ring

of

18-k

white or 14-k natural gold. No. 94.

a7.

MATCHED

RINGS

$1.75 Weekly
Perfect center diamond with two
genuine
side
diamonds.
18-k
white or 14-k natural gold.
Ask
for No. 98.

75¢ Weekly
17

jewel

shockproof

advertised
small
size

gold

plate

nationally

$ 6

Benrus watches with
10-k
natural
rolled

cases.

No. 33.

PERFECT
\iliy,

9.

‘

Both

$1.50 Weekly

5 Diamond
Wedding

Matched
bridal
pair
of
18-k
white or 14-k natural gold with
eight genuine diamonds.
Ask for
No. 96.

=P IAMOND

MATCHED
1

5
$3.00

Ring

RINGS
Both
oor

O

$] 4.8

Weekly

One of our latest style matched
bridal duets of 18-k or 14-k nat-

ural

$4.00 Weekly

value.

Ask

for

gents’

diamonds.

No.

twelve

50c

Weekly

Five genuine diamonds
are in
this 18-k white gold or 14-k natve
wedding ring.
Ask for
O.°333

genuine

150.

PERFECT

50

$

Per-

fect 200.”
DIAMONDS

with

BULOVA

Sparkling
perfect
diamond in
this heavy massive gents’ 14-k
natural gold ring.
A ring every
man will be proud to wear.
A
great

gold

Choice
AND

ARE ENLARGED
OF DESIGN.

TO

MOUNTINGS
BRING

MATCHED

OUT

75¢

SHOWN

DETAIL

RINGS

17

jewel

Weekly

ladies’

or

gents’

Bulova

watch with small size 10-k natural rolled gold plate cases—
ladies’ complete with band
to
match: - No: 73.

WATERPROOF
15 Jewel

Watch

wee, $4 Y-85

$6.75 Weekly
Artistic mounting of 18-k white
or 14-k natural gold with a beautiful fiery perfect center diamond and six sparkling genuine
ace
on the sides.
Ask for

Sturdy
dependable
shockproof
sport with sweep
second
and
easy-to-read radium
dial
and
hands.
An excellent timekeeper.
No. 91.

BUSCHS
Open Monday&amp; Thursday

For Both

715¢ Weekly
Three diamond engagement with
matching five diamond wedding
ring in 18-k white or 14-k natural gold. No. 93.
Buschs
Include

Prices

Always

Federal

Tax

KREDIT

Evenings

JEWELERS — OPTICIANS

1624 Sherman
Chicago
Also

4

Loop
Other

Avenue,

Store,

37

Conveniently

Evanston

E. Madison
Located

St.

Stores

�CATALOGS

FROM

OUR

OF

FTL

SE

CATALOG

Mother’s Day will be even more “special” when
she receives a smart gift from Wards Catalog! In it is a
variety of personal and stylish gifts that’s just right
for your “‘very best girl.” Any selection
will be sure to please . . . and will show your
thoughtfulness and devotion on this
important occasion! Here are suggestions
for only a few of the many attractive
items you may choose from our Catalog.
A Calf.grained plastic handbag with neat zipper
top. Decorative gold-colored rings. Abt. 12 x 8
inches.

Black, brown, navy. 20 C 4553.

$3.98

C--$3:54 Tex ine.
tax

inc,

B Hand-sewn gloves in smooth double woven cotton,
Washable. Black or white. Abt. 10/2-in.
Sizes 6, 6%, 7, 744. 20 C 2137. $1.98
C

Gleaming white handbag with simulated tortoise

shell frame. A calf-grained plastic. Double
handles. Abt. 10x8 inches.

20 C 4565.33.54

D—$2.97
tax

inc.

D Rayon crepe slip in figure-wise styling. Satin
trim bodice. Diamond-shaped midriff. Adjustable
straps. 32-44 in tearose, white. 32 Y 1160. $2.97
E Sheer silk hose.

Full-fashioned in 3-tiread.

Cotton toe. Heels, tops of heavy weight silk.
Tanbeige, 844-1044. 30C 1612. $1.69 pr., 2 pr. $3.25
F Spun-Lo Beau Dura Undies in Tea Rose. Panties:
Flare 32 C 301, Cuff 32 C 201, Brief 32 C 1. Small,
modium, large. Vest, 32 C 501. 34-44-in. bust.

Sicea. 4/2.29

F—6lcea.

TELEPHONE

4800

28.6

FIRST:

HIGHLAND.

4 for $2.29

SERA FT
PARK,

Tt.

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                    <text>He Brings a Pretty May
Peggy
O.

K.

Holts,

Kamminga,
shows

age

3, daughter

her a spray of flowers

of Mrs.
from

Richard

the May

Basket of Spring Flowers
Kamminga,
basket

looks on as Kenneth

he has brought

to her.

Photo

by

James

Kilcoyne

Holt, also age 3, son of the

�Bsie
————

eat

——_—__—_—_——

ne

he

MOTHER,

Crown

your MOTHER

the day—have

is the queen

your

family

of her realm.

dinner

at the

Moraine.
Dust off the chariot; groom the steeds;
food prepared

come enjoy

to a queen’s taste.

Plebiantly priced

MORAINE
801

N. Sheridan

Road

HOTEL
Highland Park, [Illinois

�Volume

22, Number

5

Mrs. Paul Pagett Elected Is

Deerfield School Music
Department to Present
Annual Spring Concert
The
been

evenings
set

as

of May

the

dates

President of Woman’s Club

demonstration
the

the

of

year

the

the

Spring

progress

will

be

made

revealed

The annual spring luncheon of the
Deerfield Woman’s club was held last
Tuesday at the Hearthstone. Dressed
in attractive suits and frocks, heads
neatly coiffed and topped with myriad hues of flowered and ribbon-bedecked chapeaux,
members
enjoyed
the delicious luncheon and entertainment.

;

Mrs.

Wendell

tiring
the

president,

reports

chairmen,
her

Goodpasture,

read

of

all

who

two

years

a

had
in

the

re-

summary

of

her

committee

helped

office

to

so

make

successful.

ture, Mrs. Irving Brand, and Mrs.
Eugene Becker.
Retiring Officers
Retiring directors are.Mrs. F. C.
Ritter and

Mrs.

Robert Ramsay;

Mrs.

F. W. Nolde as first vice president;
Mrs. Fred
Marx
as_ corresponding
secretary; and Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture

from
comes

as

president,

the executive
a director.

but

not

board,
The

retiring

as she be-

treasurer,

Mrs.

Norman
Hamilton,
who
succeeded
Mrs. George Ubl following the latter’s

now

takes

office

for

a

full two year term. Prestidigitation

Due to the many parts of the program, it will be necessary to have two
nights set aside for this event but it
be

Membership

resignation,

in

concert.

should

Is Successful

8 and 9 have
for

Concert of the Deerfield Grammar
school music department. The event
is to serve as a review of some of
the music work done during the year
and, also, as a part in the celebration
of National Music Week.
The music department was completely re-organized at the beginning
of the school year and much of the
work which was set up in the program had to be started on a very elementary level. It is hoped that some
during

Ladies’ Night” Dinner

remembered

that there

Mrs. Paul Pagett, chairman of the
art and literature department, had arranged the program and introduced
Miss Frances
Ireland,
“The
Lady
Magician,” who explained much about
sleight of hand tricks and gave a
clever performance.

will

be a different program each night.
Tentative plans
call for the first
night’s program to be predominately
but not entirely, vocal music while the
second night will consist of instrumental music.
In the vocal events, every singing
group in school will be presented.
- This will include each room and grade
in
the
school.
The _ instrumental
events will include, band, orchestra,
first and second grade tonette players,
a beginning violin group, and some
band soloists.
“Next week’s paper will disclose

Garden

Wrong Medical Records
Cause Mix-Up for Deerfield
Marine

Deerfield Post,
American Legion
Buys Todd House

court.

Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture
The Retiring President An unanimous ballot was cast
ing secretary, and director.
Following is the complete
officers

and

directors

Mrs. Paul
President,

Vice

Mrs.

regg

Corresponding

gatherings

New

are

dis-

cussed in the ideals of Rotary which,
in the last analysis, is “Service above
self.” The following members of the
Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary club attended:
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Kress of
Winnetka, Mr. and Mrs. John van
der Woerdt, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas.
Adams, Dr. and Mrs. E. F. Munro,
Walter O’Neill, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Carter, and Charles C. Livingston, all
of Northbrook.
No one from Deerfield attended.

serve

of
for

Pagett
Mrs. Robert

President,

Rotary
International’s 147th District Conference was held at Rock
Island on April 25 and 26, Rotary
conferences are always inspirational
subjects

list

:

ander Willman
Recording Secretary,/Mrs.

At District Conclave

in which

to

1947-1948 :

Second

Rotary Club Represented

for

the election of the new president, first
vice president, treasurer, correspond-

President,
First Vice
Johnson

Deerfield-Northbrook

Leonard

A. Olsen

Leonard A. Olsen, son of
Mrs.
Paul Olsen
of Hazel

more specific information
regarding
the program for
each
night,”
explained L. Paul Brown, music supervisor.

It is reported that the Deerfield
Post of the American Legion has
purchased the Woodman Todd house
at 849 Waukegan road as a future
location for their headquarters. Mr.
Todd and his family will remain there
until October 1 during which time he
expects to build a home on the east
end of the property
facing Todd

Tour

A garden tour has been planned for
later in the summer, date and particulars to be announced later by the
garden department
chairman,
Mrs.
Ambrose Cox.

Secretary,

J. A.

L.

AlexVie-

Mrs. W.

E.

Sheehan

Directors,

Mrs.

Wendell

Mr. and
Mrs.
David Inman Jt... at
304 Deerfield road, just east of Mrs.

Successful

The

Rev.

A.

C.

Kuehn,

pastor

of

the

building

per;

Party

The Mothers’ club of Holy Cross
school was very pleased with the fine
response from the women of Deerfield to its second card party, held
Friday evening at Holy Cross church.

Increasing

About one hundred attended the
annual ladies’ night dinner of the
Deerfield
Chamber
of
Commerce
Thursday evening in St. Paul’s church
dining hall, a very successful social

the monthly

part

greater

the

which

at

event,

business

meeting

of

was

dispensed with.
|
og
Milton A. Frantz, the president,
presided. The Rev. Mr. Hugo Lein-

berger gave the invocation. Following

fully to the

church

left showing

their

Funeral Services Held for
Mother of Mrs. E. E. Huff
Funeral services for Mrs. Joanna
Knapp, 73, who died April 20, in the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Edgar
E. Huff, Valley road, Bannockburn,
were held last Tuesday at the chapel
at 825
Waukegan
road,
Deerfield.
Mrs. Knapp was born in Stouffville,
Ontario, Canada, and had lived in Detroit until about two months ago. Shé

leaves

another

daughter,

Mrs.

Schaeffer, Glendale, Calif., and/a
G. C. Knapp, Detroit.

1, B.
son,

_

the dinner new members were announced and the evening’s entertainment was turned over to the genial
Richard

F.

ee
ye!
x

Hamill,

chairman of the
committee,
who
acted as

program
master of ceremonies.
Miss Gloria Anfruns,

_

accomplished

musician, and a student in the School |

,

of Music at Northwestern university
opened and closed the program with
piano selections,
Nick Tomei, magician, of Highland

Park delighted the audience with his

tricks

to

and

used

many

demonstrate

his

performance.

of

sleight

Chief of Police Percy

the

lav

diners

of hand
:

Mclaughlin

supposedly cut the necktie of the Rev.
|
Mr. Leinberger in half; Mrs. Larry
Carr and Mrs. Arthur Ullmann held
torn bits of paper which turned into
most amusing objects; Clarence Wilson aided in the card tricks and
looked

very

embarrassed

when

a

iursing bottle, complete with milk
and nipple, came out of his pocket.
Lewis Stryker allowed himself
to
get into the guillotine and the
audience nervously watch the knife
descend upon the helpless postal clerk
,©

—but

his

head

is still

in tact.

,

There were many other audie
nce
Participation tricks and all enjoy
ed
the evening of fun.
21

New

\:

x

Members

: New members who have been taken
into the Chamber of Commerce since
Milton
Frantz
took
office
three
months ago are reported by the membership chairman, Percy McLaughlin,

Church of the Covenants, Lake Forest, of which Leonard and his par- as follows:
ents are members, had announced a February
William
Barrett, plumber.
special prayer service in his behalf
Albert Bennett Home Service Co.
in
connection
with
the
regular
Larry: Carr, import and insurance,
Deerfield Construction Co.
Wednesday evening service and the.
:
Edwin Gillen, beautician.
news of the error arrived just in time
J. Franklin
Grimes,
millwork.
Virgil Hagie, garage.
to change this to a period of thanksJoseph
Pokorny,
garage.
giving instead. The many neighbors
H. L. Peterson, wholesale oil.
Ruth
R.
Pettis, Deerfield Review.
and friends who had come sorrowDr. C. R.

Goodpas-

Construction
Co. is in
of building a house for

Inman Sr.’s home.
mit is for $15,328.

Deerfield, will finally receive his discharge from the U.S.M.C. effective
May 16, and is now home on terminal
leave. Due to a mix-up in his records,
not only was his discharge delayed
unnecessarily but an incurable tropical disease of another Marine was described on his records as being his
affliction and although he never for
a minute believed what the doctor
told him, the news caused his relatives, neighbors and friends several
days of grief and heartache before
the error was discovered.

happiness.

Home

Deerfield
the process

Mr. and
avenue,

Event

\

:

Sugden, physician.
Henry Tuttle, expressman.
John J. Welch, postmaster.
Ralph
Wickersham,
service station.
Kottrasch Bros., horticulturists,
March
Norman Anderson, butcher.
Karl Nagel, carpenter.
John Anfruns, mill foreman.
April
A. P, Good, retired.
Justin Weinshenk,
importer.
James
Kilcoyne, photographer.

Phil
Films

Johnson Shows Norway
for Kiwanis Club

Phil Johnson,
local restaurateur,
showed pictures of his recent trip
to Norway at a meeting of the High-

land

Park

Kiwanis

club on

Monday

evening at Sunset Valley club,

ay

�BS wayom IgA

ine

REVIEW
P

| Thursday,

May

1,

MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS

é ve

|

Vol.

1947

22,

iy

THE FORREST PASLEY FAMILY —

No.

5

THURSDAY, May 1—
12:15 p.m. Rotary Club.
1:15 p.m. St. Paul’s Woman’s Guild. .
2:30
p.m.
WSCS
of
Bethlehem
church.
3 p.m. High school PTA,
8 p.m. Eastern Star.
8 p.m. Amvets’ auxiliary.
FRIDAY, May 2— |
7:30 p.m. Spring Fling for 7th &amp; 8th
graders at Deerfield School.

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
745 Chestnut St., Deerfield,
Illinois
Ruth Pettis, Editor
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday
Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate— $3 00 per year.
Single Copies —— 5 cents.
;
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK.
OFFICE»
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park,’ Illinois
Telephone H.P.
4500

year

MEMBER
Editorial Association
National
Tllinois Press
Association
‘Entered as second-class matter Novem
ber 27, 1944, at the post office at Deerof March
Act
the
under
Illinois,
field,
By 4879.”

8 p.m.

TUESDAY,

on

vacant

our

over

for

Cordially

years.

23

yours,
Robert S.

Ramsay.

Do Deerfield Residents
Want Light Manufacturing
‘In

a

recent

of the

meeting”

“open

,
Deerfield appeals board on zoning
ing
reject
or
ving
appro
of
the matter
ng
a factory’s application for a buildi
matter

The

aired.

permit was

of

ad-

an
mitting factories was discussed in
of
issue
14
ber
Novem
the
article in
the Deerfield Review. In this article
the following question was asked:
“Do Deerfield residents want light
&lt;
manufacturing?
In the article the opinion was expressed

“Those

quote,

that,

in Wood-

land Park and Briarwoods, far remote
from industrial areas, are not so vitally concerned.”
A study of all purely residential
that

- communities

subsequently

have

admitted manufacturing will disclose
that it is impossible to confine manufacturing to any one locality. The
spread
of manufacturing
effects
through the entire community like

wild

fire.

Therefore,

when

utilities

in,

is

in

the

spot

for

choice residential building. There 1s
only a limited amount of vacant real
North
estate remaining along the
Shore

and

I

believe

the

shore-line

towns have passed the rapid expansion period and that their growth will
level off. The West Skokie communities are one of the sections of Metrothat will naturally
politan Chicago
grow when residential building returns as did the shore-line communities in the ’20’s.
is strategically located
Deerfield
between the estate region of West
Lake Forest and Morton Grove where

May

card

to

right:

Mrs.

Pasley,

Edith

The Forrest Pasley home is at 1057
Sheridan avenue. Several years ago
the

Pasleys

Dattilo’s

bought

house,

Mrs.

which

Catherine

they

have

re-

Ann,

two

children,

Jimmy, age 5, and Edith Ann, age 3.
Mrs. Pasley is the former Dorothy
Lundquist, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Lundquist of Odessa, Fla., forit will naturally draw to it families
who will build substantial homes and
the effects will be beneficial to local
business and will raise all property
values without unduly raising taxes
or reducing the quality of municipal
The cost of all municipal services
bears a direct relation to the number
of residences and not to the size of
a residence. As a community grows
and vacant real estate is improved,
the
community
receives
additional
taxes but loses property from the tax
roll that has been an asset and not
a liability. As an example, approxi-

mately 70% of the real estate
paid in Deerfield is split between
School

and

Grammar

tax
the

School,

yet there is no increase in school
‘costs until homes are built. Also it
costs just as much to provide sewer,
water,

and

other

services

for

the

small home as for a larger home.
Yet the amount of tax collected per
home may vary 500%)!
School Costs Will Increase
Finally, those of us who have chil-

dren should
costs. It now
year

to

look
costs

educate

Deerfield

again
about
each

Grammar

home sends

one

at school
$110.00 per

child

School.

child

at

the

When

to school,

(near

annual cost of $110.00, and pays) but
$100.00 in real estate taxes from which
the

school

receives

about

$35.00,

for

this

reason

that

in

such

commun-

ities the size of the classes runs from
35 to 60 pupils rather than 18 to 25
per class as it should be in order to
give personal attention to each child.
.Admittance
of manufacturing
to
Deerfield would preclude the type of
natural

growth

that

we

may

now

ex-

pect and will permanently change the
character of the entire community.
If we admit manufacturing to Deerfield -ve can expect:

Jimmy.

6—

party.

—

Danville)

and

attended

spring

by the
Co.

(1)

18

in

quality

of

7—
lunch-

first

May

school

night.

9—

8 p.m.
Deerfield
Gramar
spring concert, second night.

Metro-

SATURDAY,
the
fire

1:30

p.m.

May

Cub

school

10—

Scout

Circus

parade,

2 p.m. “Big Top” in school gymn.
8 p.m. Firemen-Amvets
dance at
Briergate clubhouse.
.
SATURDAY, May 17—
8 p.m. Eastern Star card party.

Reduction
in the value of all
residential real estate in Deerfield and adjacent areas;

(2) Reduction

concert,

FRIDAY,

schools

He has lived in Deerfield

May

THURSDAY, May 8—
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar

department.

Future

Events:

July
11-12-13—Firemen-Amvets
carnival.
August 15-16-17—Legion carnival.

muni-

cipal services through reduction
in average tax collected per
home;

(3)

our schools through lower stan-

Norhbrook Teacher Speaks
At Rotary Club Meeting

dards, more students
and increased costs;

social

Reduction

in

the

character
per

of

class

(4)

Reduction in_profitable*business
for the merchants.

On

the

other

hand,

if we

Miss

maintain

A_

rapid

4500
6500;

(3)

right

to

and

in

school’

standards

the views of other residents and of
importart residential land developers
—as
no doubt
you plan doing—the

majority

of

them will concur.
Robert S. Ramsay

Opinions expressed in these columns do not necessarily constitute
the opinions of the paper. Letters
should be brief and should contain
the name and address of the writer,
whose neme will be withheld if requested.

in

the

schools

dren.

of

High

home.

could

She

only

pointed

go

so

out

far,

but

There

was

an

open

forum

dis-

High School PTA to
Hold Final Session

services;

community.

teacher

Northbrook

cussion after Miss Barber had completed her talk, and many challenging
ideas were discussed.

in all real

Create much additional profitable and desirable business for
the merchants which will not
be as drastically affected by
general employment conditions
as that
of a manufacturing

Barber,

at

it was up to the parents to live Democracy in the home and talk the
ideals of Democracy with their chil-

certainly

These are my personal views. However, I believe that if you compare

great

the

and _ possible

Substantial increase
estate values;

(4) Increase
(5)

growth

population,

E.

sibility of educating the younger people in this
thing called Democracy

(1) A development
of the most
desirable residential community
west of the Shore-Line towns;

(2)

Mary:
studies

school spoke at the Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary
club
luncheon
on
Thursday, April 24. The subject was
“This Thing Called Democracy.”
The talk Miss Barber gave was
very challenging and laid the respon-

high
residential standards, without
permitting factory inroads, with our
favorable
location
and
iow
Lake
County taxes, we can reasonably expect:

question naturally is asked, “Who
makes up the deficiency of $75.00?”

that
factory
communities
have
a
larger ratio of children per home than
purely residential communities. It is

and

“Fash-

12:15 p.m.. Royal Neighbor
eon at Phil Johnson’s.

Kilcoyne

Mr. Pasley is a member
of
Deerfield-Bannockburn volunteer

the

Answer: “From taxes on vacant real
estate,
homes
without
children and
business property.” It is well known

Pasley,

James

years, and is employed
politan Life Insurance

a

at an

by

merly of Greenwood avenue. She has
lived in Deerfield for 20 years.
Mr. Pasley grew up in Alvin, IIL,

services.

High

Mr.

in Alvin.

modeled extensively.
Their family includes

Photo

party

Mothers’ club lunch-

WEDNESDAY,

consider-

ing the question of manufacturing,
the effect on,the entire community
must be considered.
Deerfield is the logical community
to draw choice residential building
now that all priorities are off building. Morton Grove will be a medium
to heavy manufacturing community
with resultant repercussions on Glenview and possibly on Northbrook.
Deerfield being in Lake County with
low county taxes and with ample
vacant residential property with all
right

eon

Left

the
Editor:
fully
To believe now is the time for all to
as to the desirability
xpress themselves
Once
ld.
Deerfie
to
s
factorie
og
aT gamitii
ble
the doors are opened it will be impossi
Z
undo the damage.
Views
my
” The following article expresses
Outside of two or three
on the matter.
represent a
I
houses,
estate
real
large
real mites
have _ the largest
who
group
We have paid con
holdings in Deerfield.
fu
in
taxes and all special assessments

post.

1 p.m. Wilmot

Deerfield I orum
Robert S. Ramsay Writes on
Timely Topic: Manufacturing

Amvets

SATURDAY, May 3—
8 p.m. Deerfield PTA
ion &amp; Fun”.

At School Today
Members
High

of

school

the

PTA

Highland
will

meet

for

Park
their

last session of the school year this
afternoon.
Harold E. Norman, president of the
board of education will speak to the
group and explain tentative plans for
expanding and improving the high
school building.
Tea. will be served in the school

lunch

room

at

3 p.m.

with

the

meet-

ing following immediately after in the
English clubroom.
Officers for the coming year will

be

elected

at this meeting,

in addition

to regular members, parents of the
gtammar school seventh and eighth
grades are invited. Mrs. Oliver Turner was president of the organization
during the past year.

ee
oot

re

ASI

eee

Rape,
oad
GN NO
eae.

Fs

&gt;

gee

a

ae

Tae
sad
AE

�Thursday,

May

Girls

1,

Page

1947

Part

Take

In

Photos

by

Sports At High

13

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

Physical Education Planned
For Personality Development
By

T.

Louise

If a few eyebrows
were
raised a
number of years ago when a new ad-

to the girl’s physical

education

department at Highland
Park High
school was completed, their owners
can dispel any doubts they might have
harbored about the new venture, for
at the present time the department is

overflowing with girls participating
in 13 different
games
from
early
morning until
late
afternoon,
five
days a week throughout the school
year.
The

desire

to

excel

in

any

sport

should come readily to a girl taking physical education at Highland
Park High school, for she is surrounded

and,

with

aided

color

by

and

three

cleanliness,

well-qualified

teachers, receives a thorough knowledge of the five steps necessary in the
make-up of the modern girl, fair play,
honesty, tolerance, loyalty and good
sportsmanship.

physical

girls’

The

times weekly
four

pro-

education

gram at H.P.H.S., as well as that of
the boys, is planned primarily for the
student,
of the whole
development

and blue. High ceilings and plenty of
floor space
allow the necessary
air

and light.
room

lockers

are arranged

to accommodate 95 girls at a time. 600
individual
lockers
provide
storage
space for gym shoes, bathing suits,
etc.

To

gym

or swimming

be

glamorous

after

taking

at H.P.H.S.

can be

easily accomplished, for mirrors
literally ‘all over.
the
place.’

are
Full

length ones, short ones and even tiny
ones are placed on the inside of each
locker door. Eight hair dryers are also part of locker room equipment.

Mrs.

Johanna

matron,

is

day

to

and

other

on

help

Sossdorf,
hand

sew

small

on

full

time

throughout

buttons,

feminine

the

straps,

needs.

Her

duties include wiping the locker room
floor with disinfectant, and dispensing towels at the opening and closing
of each class period.

in pltysical

weekly

education

if they

or

participate

swimming and gym.
Emphasize Swimming

During
the
sophomore
year,
phasis is placed upon swimming,

girls

Dressing

times

in both

Anneaux

(Part VI of a Series)

dition

weekly.
The sophomores participate
four times. weekly, twice in physical
education
and
twice
in swimming.
Juniors and seniors participate three

share

the

pool

with

emThe

the

boys.

They are required to jump or dive into the deep water
and
swim
one
length of the pool before graduation

from high school.

The girls are classi-

fied as beginners, intermediates
vanced
swimmers.
The girl's

or adswim-

ming team this year won the Illinois
state
telegraphic
meet,
competing
with 11 other high schools, the Highland

Park

team

winning

the

meet

The

girls

the

have

their

correction

own

room

to

girls at H.P.H.S.

participate

are

in physical

to

which

give

each

girl

are within her own

isfying

to her, and

which

program

is

re-

edu-

hockey,

swimming.

These

the

in

the

feminine

the

colors,

sport

skill

du-

members in
for
equipof

program
provides
opportunity to use

they

are

have

scheduled

practiced

in

from

September

Sponsors

Play

Days

The HGA sponsors four ‘play days’
a year, when girls from other schools
are

invited

games.

to

compete

Members

in _ various

of the

HGA

board

plan and set up their programs, send
out invitations and plan the refreshments served in the school lunchroom

during
made

the
by

day’s

the

play.

Awards

girls for winners

(swimming)

8, 9,
will

and

10

include

is

invited

The

to

are

in each

be run
include

club

off
the

program

at

the

local

the

demonstration

attend

pool

The pub-

this

demon-

final Play day of HGA

president

for

Miss Thompson
the girls’ physical

ment
for

are

beige

sports

to June.

the

at Highland
17

years.

She

the

coming

year.

has been head of
education depart-

Park
has

a

High

school

B.S.

degree

irom Skidmore college, New York,
and a M.S. degree from Columbia
university,

New

York

City.

She

is

assisted in the department by Miss
Ruth E. Nelson and Miss Nancy Starrett. Miss Nelson has a B.S. degree
from the University of California at

given and grades awarded.
The large locker room in the girl’s
physical education department is carout

of

Their

will be presented on Saturday, May
24, when
new members will be initiated
into
the
organization,
new
board
members
presented
and
also

played both after school and during
In addition
the regular class period.
the
in the games,
to participating
eitls study each sport thoroughly. As
tests are
the games are completed,

ried

The
afternoon
the girls with an

stration.

basket-

games

Heads
board.

of strokes, skills and diving.

car-

tennis,
table
tennis,
ball, baseball,
dancing, ,tumbling
group
badminton,

and

HGA

chairman,
and
Jean

ment, check the girls in and out
class and also attendance reports.

lic,

volleyball,

the

ties are ‘to assist faculty
class, being responsible

which

Beginning in the fall, at the start of
the school year, the girls participate
season.
the
to
in sports according

play

treasurer.
up

May

direction of Miss Mary H. Thompson,
is carried on throughout the year.

They

make

Penguin

Seasons

A

Troxel,

Outstanding events to
during the current year

ried over into adult life.
Affect Games
well-planned program, under

Schick
is. social
Stair,
secretary,

event.

ability, satbe

Janice
Holly

ments

experiences,
may

is

the

recognizing the individual differences,
physical, psychological and social. It
aims

which

carried on from 3:30 until 5 p.m., is
sponsored by the Girls’ Athletic association which is made up of all girls
in the school who have earned 15 or
more sports points. Theo Zaeske is
president
of the organization
this
year, Margaret Wolf is vice-president,

and

maintained for girls who need special
|help in posture education. Individual
cation activities three times weekly, ‘instruction
is given
during
these
and in health education
two
times
classes, carefully handled, and only
Freshmen

quired

ercises are registered.
The after school program,

gym

five. tables for
in the depart-

ment’s equipment.
An individual corrective

girls who can profit by supervised ex-

with

boys. Two baseball diamonds located
on
the west
grounds,
four asphalt
tennis courts north of the gym, four

archery targets and
tennis are included

School

the physical education class period.
Interclass and home
room _ tourna-

with 35 points.
share

5

Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

Los Angeles
and
Miss Starrett received a B.S. degree from Skidmore
college, New York.

�- With—

FRED

NEW a

ORS SANDED

FLO

ond RED

AND

_ United

Airlines’

Piloty Bob

Hansen

expects

to

be

at

Ex-Highland

mings
living

and

‘Miss

Smith

Lorraine

John

Hurd

now

of

Highwood

Weiland

of

How

Our

make

Hebron,

Children’s

home

vited to investigate

CHRISTIAN

...And

lve

don’t

forget

The

Redman
The Louis

Redmans

of

835 South

are

CHRISTIAN

OPEN

the

SCIENCE textbook and

who

SCIENCE

READING

DAILY++

YOU

ARE

with

for

for

the

laughter,

Thanks

the

ROOM

Mom.

memory

of a childhood

of hurts

you

soothed

For such

priceless
your

bubbling

with

for your deep understanding

rememberto send

is 2%

years

old.

Fae

:

Legion Asks Red Cross to Take
Part in Memorial Day Service

WELCOME

memories,

hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Peterson of
626 Glenview avenue are parents of a
son born at the local hospital Sunday,
April 27.

Mother’s Day May 11th
Thanks

Park

Peterson

“DONT FORGED MOTHER"
song.

‘

of me.

Members of the Highland Park Red
Cross have been invited to join in
the annual Memorial day service conducted by the American Legion on
May 30. The usual parade and memorial services at the monument at
and
Prospect
avenues
are
| Laurel
planned.
Red Cross members are asked to
contact Mrs. Frederick Boynton
to
signify their willingness to participate
in these services.

TOR

Gn

memories, |

Mother

a card

today.

Mothers Day Cards priced 5c to $1.00

GIFT SUGGESTIONS
High

Grade

Glassware—High Ball, Cocktail, Old Fashion
and Pilsner styles.
3 designs to choose from—Geese, Wheat and Palm.

California China — Cigarette Boxes — Ash Trays — digat
&amp; Creamers — Salt &amp; Pepper — Vases — Bon Bon Dishes
Jam

Jars,

etc.

Hand Forged Atuminsieell Ware — Trays — Bowls
Ice Buckets — Water Pitcher — Ash Tray Sets, etc.

open

nights seven to nine.

Bob Cooksey of Vine Ave. plays the
part
of a husband in a daily soap
opera over a Peoria radio station
... When not on the air Bob attends
classes at Bradley.

Science

BIBLE,

at Highland

Wertheimer

43 North Sheridan Road

stocking

golfer
Henry
is
Northmoor
professional.

we

a,

Campbell
Federal Judge William J. Campbell
and Mrs. Campbell of Highland Park
are announcitg the
birth
of their
fifth daughter at St. Anne’s hospital,
Chicago, Thursday, April 24.

* A son, Douglas, was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Irwin S. Wertheimer of
798 Princeton avenue April 25 at Wesley Memorial hospital, Chicago. The
Wertheimers have a little girl, Susan,

ing may be read, borrowed or purchased.at

on

We are offering a terrific T-shirt
special this week ... Three regular
dollar numbers
for $2.50... Incidentally, our cotton sweat sox deal—
three 45-centers for $1.15—is still on.

Monday

at

a

ot

periodicals containing testimonies of heal-

Miss Virginia Bruce, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bruce of Cavell,
will become the June 21st bride of
Earl Heverly Jr. of Wheeling.

_

23

’O=

Heals

this healing

at no cost to yourself. The

Thanks
is

Science

April

through Christian Science. You are in-

white
confirmation
dresses
for the
convenience of the local confirmants.

_ Nationally
known
Ransom
of Texas
Country Club’s new

Christian

parents of a son, born
Highland Park hospital.

Chicago

IIl.

Store

over 1000
the North

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dean of 414
Railway avenue, Highwood, are the

born

Saturday,
has_ been

their

5218
Stewart

at the Moraine hotel tomorrow for a
12:15 p.m. luncheon session. A plan
for rendering better service to local
customers will be presented in full detail. Members are asked to attend on
time, since the meeting will be adjourned at 1:30 p.m.

Dean

of the world are being refreshed and healed

grid squad of a few seasons ago, will
marry Miss Betty Cameron of Park
Ridge,
Saturday,
May
10... The
will

Highland

and

Pete Weber, crackerjack
quarterback of Dave Floyd’s championship

near

the

Countless thousands of people in all parts

Ted Pasquesi, guard on Highland
Park High’s 1932 football team, is an
orthapedic surgeon in Portland, Oregon... Ted_
visited
friends
and
family here last week.

newlyweds

of

Linden avenue became parents of a
son Friday, April 25.
The baby was

After twenty-five years of service
Miss Ethel Larson has left Highland
Park’s First National Bank... She
will work in the new Glencoe Bank.

a farm

merchants

*

The $525,000 building fund drive
gets under way today for the Highland
Park
Hospital ... Residents
should go all-out in supporting this
worthwhile project.
.

7120-M

Saal

From the desk of Woman’s Department Manager Liz Goss we read that
a “grand” collection of Joan Kenley
blouses have arrived.

iy,
;

Retail

Park Chamber of Commerce will meet

ILL.

Heights

sanded
and finished
finest
homes
along

City.

will make it a twosome,
May
17... Bob
Tondi
given the job of best man.
-

| have
of the
Shore.

Cum-

are

Arlington

CENTRAL
Ask
for Mrs.

wedding.

Parkers

Wallace

in Kansas

Ronald

the

Phone

Hall, Well!

Service Plan Friday

STEWART

101 8. PARKWAY
PROSPECT HEIGHTS,

Retailers .

To Learn of Better

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

SHELBY

of Chicago Ave. will marry
Miss
Mary Bush of Plainfield, Ill. next
month... Bob,
a Highland
Park
High and Drake University alumnus,
was a Navy flyer during the war. .
Brother Harry, who is in the aviation
insurance business in Mexico City,

Chamber

OLD

A “good rule” to follow whenever
Be

sure

to drop ‘in our store and

beautiful
Best

Sellers:

Agreement,

Mrs.

assortment
Mike,

House

of

of

Pavilion

Mist,

The

Chandler's
525 Central Ave.

.

see our

GIFTS
of

today.

Women,

Angelic

Gentleman’s

Avengers.

Inc.
Tel. H. P. 3100

you are buying an appliance—stop
at Columbia Household Appliances
before you buy.

Guaranteed

PPr

Washer

LETtC LETTE)

LTS
Kwa

a
PHONE

ks
°
HIGHLAND

HIGHWOOD,
PARK 1533

ILLINOIS

�Thursday,

May

1,

1947

Studies in Bicycle Safety

Hold Forum on Rules

Of Bicycle Safety

Your Money And

At Elm Place School

Your

Did
every
riders

you know that one out
of
10 accidents involving bicycle
results from attaching yourself

to a car. or truck?
Did you
know
that
there were
more
than
100,000
accidental deaths in the U.S. last year
and that 33,500 of these were the result of motor vehicle accidents, that

900 bicycle drivers
were killed in
accidents in 1942?
The Elm Place Safety patrol has
started a drive for safe bicycles and
careful bicycle drivers. Statistics such
as those listed above were obtained

from
the
following
organizations:
Chicago Motor club, American Auto(Continued on Page 41)

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION
$22 N. First St.

Health

The ability to earn money is
in a great measure dependent
on good health, and the wise
person
will
not hesitate
to
spend the money required to
keep :this greatest of all assets.
Having a physical checkup at
least once a year,
consulting
your physician at the first sign
of illness—these are the small
but necessary expenditures to
maintain good health. No other
investments pays
such
good
dividends.
When you invest your money
in medicine, make
sure that
the pharmacist
you~
entrust
with your prescription uses only
the finest and purest of drugs.

Tel. H. P. 77

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A SPECIALTY

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.
—Pharmacists—
Highland Park
Phone

2600

Ravinia
Phone

2300

Playmates

Together

Small daughter will feel grown
up, and you’ll look young and
gay in one of these 3-piece playsuits..
Shorts are made to look
like a skirt... may be worn with
or without the dirndl. A striped
print, in several smart color combinations. Misses sizes, 10 to 16,
$12.95
Children’s sizes, 3 to 6, .... $6.95
ERED BG ei adnate
ened cds: $8.95

Garnett ¢ Co.

�ny

PT A’s Big Event
_

The
mar

PTA

school

of

the

Deerfield

is in the

final

“Spring Fling’ Dance

Wilmot Mothers’ Club
Plans for Party, May 6

“Fashions &amp; Fun”
Saturday, May 3
Gram-

round

of its

plans for the novel “Fashions and
Fun”
entertainment
on
Saturday,
May
3, at 8 p.m. in the Deerfield
Grammar school.

The Wilmot Mothers’ club will give
a dessert-luncheon card
party
on
Tuesday, May 6, at the school. Mrs.
Harry L. Thomson, the president,
appointed the following chairmen

her committees:
Tickets,

Mrs.

re

has
for

Williams,

Mrs.

Of St W. Youart

Mr. and, Mrs. Howard
Orchard lane, became

Fred

field Grammar
school being given
Friday, May 2, at
7:30 p.m. with the

ander.

Kenneth Hall.
and decorations,
John Kinzie.

Door

prizes,

Mrs.

H.

The

party

will

L.

Mrs.

begin

at

1:30

Who

will

wear

the

crowns

of

robes

p.m.

the

and

crowns

and

arranged

the

exhibit in the Georgian shop window
of the miniature coronation scene.
Will

Model

Fashions

For the fashion show a partial list
of the models. will include Mrs. Gordon Segert, Miss Bertha
Croitchik,
«Mrs.
Locke Rogers, Mrs. J.
W. King, Miss Olivia
Clark,

Mrs.

Edward

Cazel, Mrs. C. J. Turner, Mrs. Cyril Duffy,
Mrs.

Mrs.
Ramon

Frank,

Evan _ Girton,

Thomas

Marita

Evans,

Frank,

Mar-

lene Easton, Karen Giss, and Gail
Jones.
Narrator for the fashion show will
be Mrs. Vernon Giss, with Mrs. Earl
Paul accompanying at the piano. Mrs.
Paul Jones and Mrs. Matthias Hoffmann are supervising the wardrobe of
fashions.
With James Tibbetts as master of
ceremonies and Willard Allen, Herman Frank, Donald Easton, Andrew
E. Savage and L. E. Seaver at the
“Coke Bar’, the fathers are proving
that PTA is not monopolized by the
ladies.
Games,

Prizes,

and

Good

Food

_

Mrs. George Jacobs, Mrs. V. W.
Spriggs, and Mrs. E. W. Girton have
the card games under control with
Mrs. Edward
Cazel, Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Hale, Robert Clark, James
Collins, Harold
Root
Jr.,
Edward
Reagan, Mrs. William Powell, Mrs.
Dan Hunt, and Mrs. W. F. Steed, all
assisting
with
the
other
various
games.
Mrs. N. C. Lane reports exciting
door prizes are still arriving and being arranged by her committee
of
Mrs. Henning Hermanson,
Mrs. J.
W. King,
Mrs.
Benjamin
Widoff,
Mrs. Clarence
Wilson,
Mrs|_
Cyril
Duffy, and Mrs. C. E. Lingenfelder.
Mrs. A. F. Sturm is in charge of
ticket sales and
all unsold
tickets
should be returned by tomorrow af-

ternoon.

Decorations are being done by Mrs.
Herman Frank, assisted by Mrs. A.
E.
Savage,
Henry
Kofsky,
Mrs.
Frank
Frable,
and
Mrs.
Thomas
Sloot.
Stork Shower
Mrs. Theodore Sticken of Waukegan road was honored at a stork
shower last Wednesday
evening in
the home of Mrs. George Stancliff
x in Half ieDay.

eighth
dents

and is a benefit for equipment for the
future new gymnasium. It is open to
the public and tickets may be obtained from any committee member.
There will be many unusual prizes.
king and queen and receive the honors and numerous gifts?
Mrs. Herman Frank has made the coronation

seventh

Lloyd

Thomson.

The

Pfart

Ale

On the occasion of her 11th birthday anniversary, Miss Emilie Hart
entertained a group of friends on
Thursday, April 24 in the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Hart of Greenwood avenue.
There were exclamations of delight
over the color scheme of the cake
table

setting,

planned

around

a

center-piece of fresh yellow jonquils.
Among
the
guests
were
Judith
Anderson,
Laura
Banfield,
Helene
Bernard, Donna Ludlow, Sally McChesney, Burian McLaughlin, Carol
Yous, and Rita Zahnle.

You

and sought
who
told

out Mrs. Herman
them
what.
their

French
correspondent
had _ written.
The unit had sent gift boxes to an
eight year old French girl and the
letter thanked them for their generosity and told of the need for such
gifts.
At their meeting Monday evening
in the home of Mrs. C. C. Kapschull,
the assisting hostesses were Mrs. Edna Stanger Orsborn and Mrs. Carl
Scheer. Mrs. Leslie Behrens is president.

Dates and meeting places of the
Presbyterian circle work groups have
been announced by Mrs. W. W. Lige,
president of the Woman’s association.

circles

are

meeting

May

1,

today, at 1:30 p.m. as follows:
Circle 1—Mrs. Charles Johns, chairman, at Johns’ home on Greenwood
avenue.
Circle 2—Mrs. Frank Glotfelty, chairman, at Mrs. Martin Olson’s home
on Central avenue.
Circle 3—Mrs. E. M. Davis, chairman,
at home of Mrs. E. H. Selig of
Waukegan road.
Circle

4—Mrs.

William

de

Freitas,

chairman, at home of Mrs. Harry
Thomson of Saunders road.
May
12 is the date selected for
Circle 5, of which Mrs. Winston Porter is chairman. They are meeting”
at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. W. D.
Baxter of Greenwood avenue.
ape

Ae

ok

le ge

Siyactaswoap.

i

cone

:

ge

Aes

a

Tay

‘

hosts.

five grade schools whose

grad-

of all schools are also invited.
Wilmot teachers are assisting with
the plans. Among the chaperones will
Mr.

and

Mrs.

B:

Barrette.
hindered

others
also.

The
the

F.

Reinking,

Mr.

who

telephoné strike has
earlier
contact
with

are to act as chaperones,

Mrs. Goodpasture Gives Tea

Honoring Artist-Author

Mrs. Wendell
tained at a tea
home

on

Goodpasture
on Thursday

Deerfield

road,

in

enterat her
honor

of

her house guest, Fritzi Brod (Mrs.
Oswald Brod), well known Chicago
artist. Mrs. Brod is sailing for Europe on May 3 on the USS America
from

New

York

to England.

She

will

*

DW Oe

Phen

ethan

and

go

on to Rome to visit a sister and then
to her native country of Czechoslovakia, and Prague.
An author and artist, she designs,
also. Her next book will be a text on
design in four colors and will be off
the press in several months.

Eastern Star Card Party
To Be Held on May 17
Deerfield Chapter,of the Eastern
Star, under the co-chairmanship of
Mrs. Edward Reagan and Mrs. Alice
Wing Putman, is planning a card
party on Saturday, May 17, at 8 p.m.
in the

Masonic

Temple.

Many

attrac-

tive prizes are being assembled. Tick-

Deerfield

from

members.

Martene

and

Activities

Mrs.

Mrs.

Olendorf’s

Carr

of

Harry

Decatur

dorf’s mother,
Deerfield road

Olendorf

mother,

visited

Mrs.

Mr.

and

W.

B.

Olen-

Mrs. Chester Wolf of
on Saturday and went

on to Great Lakes to visit their son,
wife, and baby, the William Carr
Olendorfs, in their apartment
Farnsworth
housing
project,

Oakes,

daughter

in the
where

they are comfortably settled.
Mrs. Paul M. Dietz and Mrs. Robert E. Pettis will be among those
from this vicinity attending the Wake
of the News banquet at the Morrison

of

Oakes of 710
the bride of

Technical Sergeant William W. Youart, son of Mrs. Maude Youart of
Baltimore, Md., on Saturday evening
in a candlelight-double ring service
in the First Presbyterian church of
Deerfield. The Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek officiated.
of

David
Stryker,
Evanston, son

talented
of Mr.

musician,
and
Mrs.

Fred Stryker of Orchard lane, in his
rich baritone voice sang “Because”
and
“The
Lord’s
Prayer”, accompanying himself at the organ. Mr.
Stryker also played for the ceremony.
The

bride,

who

was

given

in

mar-

riage by her father, wore a gown
of all over lace with full sleeves and
long train. Her veil was fingertip
length and she carried deep red roses.
Mrs. John Cissell of Joliet, sister
of the bride, in a frock of melon color
taffeta, carrying white roses, was the
of honor.

The candle lighters were
Betty
Jean and Phyllis Russell of Joliet,
nieces of the bride, wearing all over
lace dresses of dusty pink and midnight blue.
Robert Girten of Chicago, an overseas “buddy” of the groom served
as best man. Everette Oakes of Dundee, brother of the bride, and John
Cissell of Joliet ushered.
Mrs. Oakes, mother of the bride,
wore a dark print with a ‘white corsage.
A reception for 75 guests was held
in the church parlors after the ceremony.
The

bride

has

been

employed

at

Fort Sheridan
for the past three
years and at present is film librarian
at the post. T/Sgt. Youart is now
stationed at Fort Sheridan.
Mr. and Mrs. Youart will return
next week to Fort Sheridan where
they will have an apartment.

Monday, May 26, Is Poppy Day
Mrs. C. C. Kapschull, Chairman Mrs. C. C. Kapschull is chairman
of the Deerfield unit’s Poppy Day
tagging and poster contest for the
American Legion auxiliary. This year
taggers will sell poppies on Monday,
May 26.
hotel in Chicago on Wednesday
ing.

Mrs. George Engstrom has been in
Endicott, New York, this past week
to visit her son and wife, Mr. and
Mrs. John Engstrom and their: new
baby,
the first grandchild
of the
George Engstroms.
Mr.

Miss

matron

ets are available

Presbyterian Circles
Announce May Meetings

Four

stu-

as

has not seen for 20 years.
Mrs. Brod will stop in Paris

Letter

Deerfield unit of the American Legion auxiliary needed an interpreter
for the letter received this week from
France,
Frank,

school

be gone for about two months visiting friends and relatives whom she

Legion Auxiliary Receives
French Thank

Wilmot

and Mrs. LL. G. Hurlburt, Mr. and
Mrs. Duane Swift, Mr. and Mrs. R.
D. Newell, Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Sheehan, and Mr. and Mrs. C. E.

A birthday Party

and

the

and

grade

uates are
to be honored
are from
Bannockburn, Deerfield, Holy Cross,
Tripp, and Wilmot.
Seventh graders

be

Chak

of

Bride

local schools have
been
invited
to
the “Spring Fling”
“dance at the Deer-

Bearsch.
‘
:
Refreshments,
Mrs.
G.
E.
Holmquist,
Mrs. W. C. Darling, Mrs. Arthur Wolter,
and Mrs. John Silence.
Tables, Mrs. Baarsch, Mrs. Robert AlexCards, Mrs.
Table prizes
Rhdolph, Mrs.

hs

The 47 gradu-ates of the
five

:

Harry

Eedebies

3 ? .

hes

Warbone

Miss

To Honor 8th Graders
Of All Local Schools

even-

Mrs. Carl T. Anderson of Chestnut
street was the luncheon guest of
Mrs. Howard
Bell in Chicago on
Saturday.
Mrs.
Minn.,

Agnes

Clough

is visiting

at

of Minneapolis,
the

home

of

her

daughter, Mrs. Earl Paul of Deerfield
road. Mrs. Raymond Goodpasture
Deerfield road entertained at tea fo
Mrs. Clough on Friday.
Andrew
race went

business

G. Bradt of Margate te
to Philadelphia on a week’

trip, Saturday.

A

4
Miss Ann
Anslow of Woodland
Park enjoyed ‘a: visit recently at the
Walter Headrick home at Walden’s
Ridge, Soddy, Tenn. Mrs. Headrick
is a former
Bannockburn
teacher.
Miss Anslow
teaches in District. 108,
;
Ravinia.
:

:

�Thursday, May 1, 1947
Chosen

Happenings of

North
Sheridan road, a member of
the junior
class
at
Emma
Willard
school, Troy, N. Y., has been chosen

Guest

Miss Elaine Bohnert of Gillette,
Ark., is the house guest of Mrs. Elmer
lL. Clavey of 2000 Clavey road.

from the school’s swimming team to
swim in the water festival at the
homecoming
week-end
of
Colgate
university.
Ted

Miss

Lois

Mortar

Bolle

Board

Miss

Lois

Johns

Chosen
at

avenue

for

is

of

B.

626

South

among

20

St.

women

students at University of Illinois who
have been chosen for membership in
Mortar

Board,

organization
Mortar

honorary

for

Board

activity

seniors.

members,

The

new

selected

on

the basis of service, scholarship and
leadership, will be members of the
senior

class

next

year.

the national honorary
to promote the ideals
friendliness

Home

from

and

Purpose

of

organization is
of scholarship,

Park

Hospital

hospital

where

appendectomy.

proving

she

Miss

E.

of the
tennis

underwent

Free

is

at

Tennis

SAVE ON

Bensinger,

Bensinger of
been
named

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Phelps, Orchard
lane, entertained at a cocktail party
Sunday afternoon in honor of Mrs.
Lyle Sitterly, Mrs. Phelp’s sister, and
Mrs. Richard Fuller of Princeton, Il.
who are spending a few days at the
Moraine hotel.

Thomas Lederer, son of the Carl S.
Lederers of 268 Woodland drive, has
a role in the musical show, “Let’s
Call It a Day,” being presented as
the spring production at Ripon college, Ripon, Wis., May 1, 2 and 3.
A cast of 70 is appearing in 26 skits,
sketches and dances.

BOURBON 5

years

old 5th

son

LIQUOR SERVICE CO.

of

academy
its clay

337 Waukegan
PHONE

H. P. 1500
Open Until 8:00

Ave —

p.m. Daily

Highwood
(Closed

FREE DELIVERY
Sunday)

past

three

seasons.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Richard W. Marvin Elected
To Sigma Xi at Oberlin
Wood

Marvin,

son

of

Mr.

and Mrs. W. Ross Marvin, 381 Oakland drive, recently was elected to
associates membership in the Oberlin
college chapter of Sigma Xi, national
scientific honorary society.
Announcement of his election was made
at an honors assembly held at the
Ohio college April 29.
Lacy

Takes

Part

Centennial

| wish to announce
Shore that

college,

daughter
B. Lacy

Ill,

of
of

Fine Watch

JEWELER
and Jewelry Repairing

Telephone

2028

be held, with
scheduled for

Camera

Fans..

JOHN MORAN
- FURNITURE -. CARPETING
LIFE-TIME

717

Park

where

hundreds of distinguished guests will
gather
for the historic anniversary
conference.
Discussions of national

RUGS

Highland

JOHN RUTTKAY

in

Rockford,

Road,

and extend a cordial invitation to you to come in
and geet acquainted and 'see our complete stock of
Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry.

1645 Dato avenue, will serve as an
usher at several important meetings
and ceremonies this weekend at Rock-

ford

the

Polk’s Jewelry Store
2 N. Sheridan

Conference

Miss Elizabeth Lacy,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth

to the people of the North

| have purchased

Glencoe

$7950

CLEANED
MOTHPROOFING

Ave.

Tel.

H.

P.

1137

Case

The

35

Finest
WITH

Furniture

Cleaning
|

DUFFY

&amp;

PARK

RANGE

DUFFY
WINNETKA

$7.00
mm.

FINDER

24-Hour

ENTER NOW

Developing

PHOTO CONTEST
$400 IN PRIZES

Service

“Cleaners
HIGHLAND

$5.98

The young Highland Parker has been
a member of the cadet team for the

and world affairs will
centennial ceremonies
Saturday morning.

Thomas Lederer Has Role in
Ripon College Musical Show

KENTUCKY

OLD ROSE 4 year old Ky. Bourbon ...................- 5th $4.79
IMPORTED SCOTCH from. ...,.......--2...--22-----%¢ . 55th $5.85
CHAPIN
GORE oni
cbek. 7...
5th $4.95
CALIFORNIA SWEET WINES | Secaeahacsce Ae
5th 98e
BEER IN CANS Case of 24 2......0222...22-.eeeeeee- from $3.35
FRENCH BURGUNDY WINE 1937 Vintage .... 5th $2.85

1441 Dean
co-captain

court season meeting the Lake Forest
academy
team at Culver last week.

Miss

Party

BONDED

LIQUOR

Team

im-

satisfactorily.
Visitors

Co-captain

1947 Culver Military
team, which opened

Rockford
Honor

Is

(“TED”)

Mrs. B. E.
avenue, has

Richard

service.

Miss Marilyn Free, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Free of 1547
South St. Johns avenue, has been
removed to her home from Highland
an

Bensinger

Of Culver Academy

Illinois

Bolle

in Festival

Miss Joyce Leeming, daughter of
Mr. and
Mrs. Tom
Leeming, 315

Highland Parkers
House

to Swim

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE
6 NO. SHERIDAN RD.

H. P. 206

�7

oY
ny
DAY

(OTHERS
means

Daniel Greens!

Ernest Moldaner

Moldaner,

merchant

tailor

65,

; P ; o .

me a

Highland

for many

years,

died Saturday, April 26, at Highland
Park hospital after an illness of two

years.

3

p.m.

Tuesday

in

his

mothers young and old,
and we have it here

was

in these beautiful
OPEN
UNTIL

9

P.M.

Mr.

Moldaner

Germany,

MOLDANER
was

July

born

13,

in

Frank-

1881.

He

came to Highland Park in 1913 where
with Ferdinand Humer he established
the firm of Moldaner &amp; Humer, Tailors and Furriers, located on Sheridan

SHoes BoucuTt From

511

ERNEST
fort,

sail

MONDAY

Keep

Feer WeLL

CENTRAL
AVE.

H.

TEL.
P. 456

road. Ill health forced his retirement
from business two years ago.
He was past exalted ruler of Highland Park Elks Lodge No. 1362 and a
member

Men's Handicap

Singles

of

Surviving
and

de

home,

2467

North Deere Park drive.
Mr. Farrell had specialized in securities legislation and had acted in
an advisory capacity to many state
commissions in formulation and
amendment of state securities laws.
He was a trustee of the Chicago
Home for Incurables, Gads Hill cen-:
ter and the Chicago Osteopathic hospital.
He is survived by his widow, Esther and two daughters, Condra Betle
and Mary Elena.

TO ALL
PARKERS

All Highland Parkers are asked
to please be very careful in burning leaves and brush.
Your Fire
Department was unable to handle
all the calls that came in during
the past week.
We had two house fires Sunday
and very luckily our equipment

You want the best for

Daniel Greens.

ae

Funeral services for Robert Oral
Farrell, 54, Chicago lawyer who died
Saturday in Minneapolis, were held at

WARNING
HIGHLAND

m=)

ae

For Robert Farrell

Two Year Illness
Ernest

e

| Services Tuesday

Dies Saturday after
Park

ne
e

three

the

are

Royal

his

daughters,

not

out

on

carelessly

started

grass and brush fires.
:
Please be very careful as your
home may catch fire while we are
all out on these types of fires.
Due to the telephone strike the
fire

calls

cannot

come

fast

as

normally

but

through

through

are

very well during the emer-

gency.
The
to

Fire

use

Department

extreme

caution

asks
and

you
care.

William J. Hennig
Fire Marshal.

Arcanum.

widow,

Antonia,

Mrs.

Eleanore

Lund, Mrs. Dorothy Grady and Marguerite Moldaner.
Three grandchildren also survive.
;
Services were held in the Kelley

and Spalding chapel Monday at 2 p.m.
in charge of the Rey. Lester H. Laubenstein, pastor of Bethany church.
Interment

Garden

was

in

the

North

of Memories.

April 26-27
May 4-5

Dry Cleaning
for
All the Family

4 Games Across g Alleys
Your

highest 3 games to count plus
your handicap

MAKE YOUR

RESERVATIONS

Highland

Ten

"Pop’s’”’ Winter Clothes
Can Be Cleaned Now
for Summer’ Layaway.
CALL H.P. 177 or 178

EARLY.

Pin

139 N. Second St.

Tel. 319

EXCAVATING
AND

TRENCH

BLACK DIRT

-—

DAY

AND
“A

BUILT

&amp;

LOUIS

a

TAZIOLI
NIGHT

Veteran

of

And we'll be glad to hel,
“Mom” with the Spring
Cleaning Rush by getting Pop’s overcoats —
heavy suits and winter
sports
clothes
cleaned
and protected for next ®
Fall’s use.

FILLING DIRT

DRIVEWAYS

s

WORK

PHONE

H. P. 4662

Foreign

Wars”

as

coming

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618 N. Green Bay Road
Highland Park

Tel. H. P. 177

Shore

�Thursday,

May

1,

Page

1947

Packing Poppies at Downey

Legion Auxiliary
Works in Preparation
For Poppy Day
Pictured
the

FREE

at the left are members

Highland

Park

American

of

LIQUORS
THE.

ah

engaged in this activity are volunteers.
The remaining funds are then used
for rehabilitation purposes
by the
Legion and benefit the patients at
Downey
hospital as well as other
veterans’ hospitals. A juke box which
was recently contributed by the Highland Park American Legion auxiliary
was purchased from such funds. The
poppy which is sold is used as a
means
of
providing
rehabilitation
funds for the American Legion.

Shee

#

have

been

Downey

many

counting

poppies

veteran

working

hospital

weeks,

e

Rummage

and

packing

made

by These
the/

s

scenes

of

William

Penn

defense

Pick

iS

Calvert Reserve
Pele ce
$3.89
Fleischmann’s
Preferred
Mos
$3.78
LORD CALVERT
BUR cipiscues $4.52
Schenley Reserve
Bi
ot as $3.90

;

PRIVILEGE

Blend

Re

S0

St

le

365

Roger

tise . $4.09

Delivery

Williams

HILL

I

ei

ils

Ave.

IMMEDIATE

H. P. 609

of Straight
Whiskies
90 proof, 5th $4.46

features
efficiency.

Duraclean
Division of
HOME SERVICE

Highwood
9-9 p.m.

HOW

Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.,

ARE YOUR

CoO.

¢ RA
S

ee

DAR:

$425

OLD TAYLOR
Bonded,

&gt;

5th

$675

.........0..........

FLEI
‘ Ss
FLEISCHMANN

$635

TAYLO R’S
New

1455

York
Wine

State

PETRI

9-6 p.m.

California

California

SCREENS?

Sh ee
F.

Eagle-Picher.

All aluminum

combin-

1

ation screen and storm: sash.
&amp;

Or

&amp;

Dd

if you prefer we will rewire your present
screens with bronze or galvanized wire.
CALL

FOR

Wine

F.,

150

H.

A.

OF

GOLD

O60

Port,

24:

ase:

$1.75

Sherry,

Muscatel

3 Riemitise rt $2.39

$790

3 Ne

CROWN

$370

OF Dee a,

HIGH

OF 28

PABST
H.

Deerfield 416

GCae6

MILLER

Terms

S. First St.

I.

Wine

BEER
MEISTER BRAU
CERO

ESTIMATE

H. N. GAMLIN

839 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield

OLD
OLD

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with

3222

Co.

$4.09

CHRISTIAN BROS.

444

. AMBassador

as

OR sas ae $0.68

U. S. Government report:
“Moths are present in practically
EV ERY
household.”
. but you don’t worry after your
ome furnishings are Duraproofed.
@ Effectiveness guaranteed 4 yrs.
@ Duraproofing
protects against
moths ... carpet beetles...
mildew.
e A nation-wide service rendered
right in your home.
@ Upholstery and carpetings may
... at the same time...be
Duracleaned. America’s foremost furniture and department
stores recommend Duracleaning
for SAFE cleaning.

..

i

&amp; Sons

336 Railway Ave

$4.09

FINE ART

ABC Washers
Norge Washers
Norge Gas &amp; Electric Ranges
Universal Cleaners
Ironrite Ironers
Stewart Warner Radios
Bendix Radios
Don’t wait to register in our Blanket Club.
Come in for details.

Deerfield

oes

Blend

Frozen Food Chest Holds up to 45 lbs.

Somenzi

Sunnybrook

BLACK GOLD

DELIVERY

1947 9 cu. ft. Norge refrigerator
1947 7 cu. ft. Norge refrigerator
only refrigerator on the market that
AUTOMATIC DEFROSTING!
clock insures daily complete freezing

&amp; HILL

i cas $4.09

OO

Chicago

$4.42

GU

é

Up and

Ravinia, IIl.

Mon.-Thurs.-Sat.,

Straight

HUNTER’S 5th ............. $4.23
Seagram’s 7 Crown 5th $3.94

RADIO SERVICE

Mrs. Matthiesen, Mrs.

Time

of

Whiskies

FOUR ROSES Sth ....... $4.25

cre seen preparing
the || Musenetter &amp; Cronkhite
fl owers at the
left.

The

5th ........ $3.39

OLD UNDEROOF

S

chair-

the

Ave.

IMPERIAL 5th ............ $3.39
50 GRAND 5th ............ $3.39

association
of High-.
2

bric-a-brac
C-a

SERVICE

Highwood
Phone 4579

at

|!and Park Presbyterian church will
hold its annual spring rummage sale
today in the basement of the church,
300 Laurel avenue, from 9 a.m. until
$
$
4 p.m. Articles
for sale willc
include
clothing,
millinery,
furniture
and

Benson,
Mrs. _ Ellery
Harvey,
rehabilitation
chairman,
Mrs.
Oscar
Iverson, Mrs. Edward L.
Gilroy,
president,
and
Mrs.
Phillip Cole,
na-

tional

Sale Today

The Woman’s

Bi the se we
Fi
,
are
rs.
Matthiesen,
Sékneyr
chairman, Mrs. Grant|

=

*

OF FRIENDLY

sorting, | Presbyterian Church

patients.

are typical
the project.

at|

for

STORE

335 Waukegan

tration hospital. These poppies will be
sold here on Poppy day, May 26, and
from the proceeds the patients will
receive
payment.
All other persons

Highland
Park American
Legion
auxiliary

DELIVERY

Legion

auxiliary, of which Mrs. Edward L.
Gilroy
is president.
Members
are
shown sorting, counting, and packing
poppies which were made by the patients at Downey Veterans Adminis-

\ Madabaed

11

BLUE

of 2452.

P. 5102
FREE

LIFE

ye

$350

tee

RIBBON
4.6.

nk.

Phone 4579
DELIVERY

$360

�'

Mostly for Women Leeper: Weddings - Cli Nu
vars:

Vous
AL

Their Wedding Day

Molendy

eos
St

Powes-fohnston

WNalonacod

fames

he

€ Pitich

of

Peter

Molendy,

107

Prairie

The
satin

was

gown

attired

fashioned

in

a

snug,

a

train.

soms
which
veil,

She

wore

orange

blos-

arranged
in a _ circlet, from
fell a blusher and fingertip
and

carried

mother

of

a

pearl,

carnations

prayer

with

cascading

book

of

streamers

of

from

Mrs.

it.

skirt

draped

at

either

hip,

at 24

Rockford Alumnae
Plan Annual Evanston

by

Club

of

Evanston.

Leon

Because

is the

1947

centennial

year

for the college, members of the Chicago club are making especially elaborate preparations this year for the
the exhibit
from
Proceeds
show.
will

be

used

to

make

a

substantial

gift to the Catherine Waugh McCulloch fund, which will be employed in
establishing a chair of economics at
the

college.

King-Vail Betrothal
Is Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Ray R. King of Marion, Ohio, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Carolyn, to
Henry Bloss Vail, son of Mrs. Roger
S. Vail of 428 North Sheridan road.

Miss

King

is a graduate

of Duke

university and has been attending the
Katherine Gibbs school in Chicago. Mr.
Vail was graduated from Cornell university in 1940. He served four years
as a lieutenant in the naval reserve.

read

the

M.

Dering,

matron

of

organza.

of

the

bride,

Mrs.

Kent

Photo

MR.

AND

MRS.

S. PARKER

Kex &amp;. Rathbun to
Wed Miss Ann Bogert
The
Thomas
son

of

engagement
Bogert
Mr.

and

of 89 Lakeview
announced
Lyman

to

by

Bogerts

“of
Rex

Mrs.

terrace,
her
of

Miss

was

York

City.

More than $180 was realized at the
recent rummage sale sponsored by the
Helen Taylor Carr auxiliary of Chicago Commons.
Proceeds
will be
used to enable a number of children
in the Grand avenue neighborhood of

the

settlement’s

John

Del.,

to

Mercer.

of

home

Park

the

ceremony.

will make
Park.

in September

The

engagement

Jensby

of

to

Miss

Gottschalk, son of Mr. and

Proceeds from Carr Auxiliary
Sale to Send Children to Camp ©

attend

ride

Rathbun
John

Jr.

to hk

Rex

the

Prior,

Wilmington,

the

Bowes

Mr.

and

following

John-

Mrs,

ston will honeymoon in Bermuda, and

Ann

Mr. Rathbun, who attended Stanford
university, served four years with the
navy during the war.
He was placed
on inactive duty as a lieutenant commander.

to

pensby

Louise

recently

H.

from

A reception for the wedding party
and guests was held at the Highland

Rathbun,

The couple plans to be married this
spring.
Miss Bogert was graduated from
the Nightingale-Bamford ahd Katherine Gibbs schools in New York.

Chicago

Ws

Percy

JR.

B.

parents,
New

by

JOHNSTON,

plane

serve as best man.
Ushers included
the bridegroom’s brother, Robert, the
bride’s brother, James P. Bowes III,
John Quincy Adams Jr. of Lake Forest, a cousin of the bridegroom, Frederick Asher, Arthur Emerson Jr. and

Antiques Exhibit

Woman’s

rector,

Blatchford of Northbrook and Miss
Elizabeth Mahan of La Grange.
All
wore large horsehair hats of matching shades and carried bouquets of
violets clustered about rose centers.
John Dingle of Highland Park came

Burchell

Harris Inc. of Highland Park is included among the roster of selected
United
the
dealers from all over
States who will display and sell antiques in separate small shops during
the event.

pink

cousins

Upon
their

Alumnae of Rockford college in this
area are busy with plans for the
thirteenth annual Evanston Antiques
exhibit and sale, to be held this yea22 at the
May
19 through
May

of

Similar gowns of green organza
were worn by the bridesmaids, Miss
Margaret
Johnston,
sister
of the
bridegroom, Mrs. Jerome_P. Bowes
III of Glenview, sister-in-law of the
bride,
Miss
Elizabeth
Bard
Farrington of Winnetka and Miss BettyLeigh Nesbit of Lynchburgh,
Va.,

mony at the church, a reception was
held in the home of the bride’s parents for 100 guests. The couple left
afterward on a wedding trip to Lake

home in an apartment
avenue, Highwood.

Charles

dusty

with

matching half poke bonnet, and carrying shaded roses of pink hue. Mr.
Bernabei served as best man.
Immediately
following
the
cere-

Taneycomo
in the
Ozarks.
their return, they will make

satin,

daughter

honor, and _ nine-year-old
Courtney
Bowes, junior bridesmaid, both sisters
of the bride, wore bustled frocks of

She was attended by her sister,
Mrs. Guy J. Bernabei of Highwood,
in a pale blush pink net with bouffant

white

Bowes,

The bride, who was escorted down
the aisle on the arm of her father,
wore a gown fashioned with a yoke
of heirloom rosepoint lace, the long
veil and train fastened to a crown of
pearls.
She carried a bouquet of
white orchids and stephanotis.

round neckline of net fringed in an
applique design, long pointed sleeves
and

traditional

Barbara

Charles U. Harris,
marriage service.

a white

with

in

Sriday

Mr. and Mrs. Jerome P. Bowes Jr.
became the bride of S. Parker Johnston Jr., son of the senior Johnstons,
at 4:30 o’clock last Friday afternoon,
before the altar of Highland Park
Trinity Episcopal church.
The Rev.

ave-

vows.

bride

at

Chiow

Attired
Miss

nue, Highwood, April 26 at a wedding
ceremony
and mass in St. James
Catholic church, Highwood. The Rev.
James D. Gleeson, pastor, read the
marriage

Slehiined

Shinily

Miss Inez Tamarri, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Federico Tamarri, 46 North
avenue, Highwood, became the bride

Tis

Gottschalk

of

announced

was

Phoenix,

Arthur

Mrs:

Mack

Arizona,

by

her

re-

mother,

Mrs. Edith Jensby of 611 Central
avenue,
The marriage will take place at
the

First

Presbyterian

church

in

Phoenix September 7.
Following a
wedding journey to Yellowstone National park, Catalina island and New
Orleans, the couple will. reside in
Phoenix,

where

associated

with

Mr.

his

Gottschalk

father

in

the

is

oil

business.

auxiliary

visited

luncheon

guests

group

from

Commons

of the director,

the
as

Miss

Leah Taylor.
Members saw the nursery school in progress and visited the

Old People’s club meeting, making a
complete tour of the building where
many activities provide recreation and
creative

of

the

work

for

the. young

neighborhood.

Highland

Give Program for

Music Club Apri! 23
Two
talented
members
of
the
Highland Park Music club, Mrs. Don
Cuthbertson and Mrs. Virginia Schur,
presented
program
bers

home

and

old

an
at

especially

a gathering

Wednesday,

of

Mrs.

Lakewood

Miss
the

in

Talented Members

Mrs.

camp in Michigan.
Last
Friday
a

home

Paulette

Raymond

cently

their

April

the
23,

Kenneth

mem‘at

the

Kraft,

225

place.

Cuthbertson,

Olga

arias and

delightful
of

accompanied

Sandor,

a selection

sang

by

operatic

of favorite

songs.

Mrs. Schur presented a piano
gram of Chopin and Brahms.
Hostesses

for

the

afternoon

prowere

Mrs. Showers and Miss Steever under chairmanship
of Mrs.
George
Hinn of the hospitality committee.
Mrs.

Arthur

Marquette

and

Mrs.

C.

Longford Felske poured at an attractively decorated tea table.

|

�«¢

At Emblem Club Insta ligtion.

Are You Receiving
The Blessings of
Spiritual Law?
“Ask, and it shall be given you;
shall find;’”

. . . (Matthew

Opportunity
Unchanging

Seek, and ye

7:7)

Lecture

SHEAHEN,
RAYMOND
No.
a
=~ eRe

MRS.
coerce

is photographed
and Mrs. Joseph

y

Wednesday

hotel

Moraine

the

left, was cngtained president.
113 in formal ceremonies held

caeApril

preside
eat

new

The

23.

evening,

i
at

with Mrs. Charles Elwell, right, retiring president,
F. Parker of Chelsea, Mass., center, supreme presi-

dent of the national organization, who served as installing officer.

Ralph

ie

oe

Leadership

of

blem

Club

Mrs.

Raymond

Highland

No.

113

Park

was

Em-|

invested

Sheahen

at

in|

Schramm,

Joseph

formal

president

United

of

the

Emblem

of

official

suite

Parker’s

conducting

of

Scnitidlicies

the

unposed

in

ized

as the

Others

with

well,

?

and

making

Mrs.

as

was

Lady

the

formerly:

Elks

inducted

14)

Jr.

past

of

your

‘

Park,

Highland

Ill.
°

president;

to May Ath
April 26th
by the Quick Frozen Food Association

Sponsored
Visit

the

Show

Amphitheatre,

at

the

of Chicago

International

Chicago

We carry a variety of foods, including whole meals
at

along

Mrs.

Immediate

Typewriters,

EI-||

Caroectre:

Earl

Service

Adding

lowest

prices.

.

Dairy Products

P

Mother
sift

Ice

1% gal $1.20

All Kinds, 24

Ss

Day

that

treasure

‘’She”’

eee

Pork

Cream

gal. $4.75

Cooked

forever,

We

Foods

————

Deliver

in

Highland

FOR

an Alden Harris Portrait.

-

Chops

Made

Liver

Park

Pork

Tenders

- Lamb Legs

By Famous
Call

CALL

Chefs
Enterprise

1215

860

We Specialize in Processing Meats

~ ALDEN HARRIS, Photography

-

- Beef

- Also Whole Carcasses
Processed

Park

Home

Veal

Beef Tenderloins, - Steaks

DEERFIELD

Your

- Capons
miei

Chops

Fish &amp; Sea Food
Frozen Pastries

will

Highland

Calves

Pet Foods

ee

Duske &lt; Geese

’
aaak

Size

&amp; Small

Vegetables—Lge.

Pt. 32c

‘

Chickens

Fruit Juices

Pam

eliver
511 1 Waukerks, Highwood
Tel. H. P. 5505
q

Turkeys.-

eee

ae

Machines,

Bendfelt

Ave.

Food

club.

Mrs.

Givea

National

club’s

office

were:

7 S. St. Johns

D

G

a

Fr

iN

-

ate

is
she
ni
Abed
oh
a
&gt;
BerMrs. Sam
president;
vice
Blair
nardi, financial secretary; Mrs. Cyril
Mrs. Maynard
Duffy, treasurer;

This

ie

7

0

i

F

vad

ter

organ-

Social

into

Sheahen

:

sec-

first year a successful one. Highland
Park Emblem club was chartered last
September

|

Cordially Invites You to Attend

Mrs.

dinner,

by

preceded

assistance

First Church of Christ, Scientist

|

rites.

was opened by Mrs. Charles Elwell,
retiring president, who thanked her
board and committee chairman for
their

page

pictures

Tel. H. P. 3199

in|]

her

on

’

387 Hazel Avenue, Highland Park

in the churchedifice

party, wedding or reception

Mrs.

assisted

the impressive

meeting,

The

Club

America.

States

secretary;

PERCY H. PRIOR,
Photographer

supreme

Mass.,

Chelsea,

of

MONDAY, MAY 5, AT 8 P.M.

Highland Park, Illinois

corresponding

(Continued

installation ceremonies held April 23
in the ballroom of Hotel Moraine.
The new president and her board
installed by Mrs. Joseph F.
were
Parker

recording

Bernardi,

Illinois

C.S.B., of Chicago,

E. Wagers,

Club

As President of Emblem

RELIGION”

Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts

Invested

Sheahen

mond

Ra

Mrs

Science:

PROPHETICAL
by

,

entitled

“Christian
A

|

to Avail Yourself of the
Power of This Divine Law

will be Presented at a
Free

:

Ready for

Freezer.

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZS. EN-FOOD
CENTER
Wilson
Clarence

724 Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield, Ill.

fi

�MOTHER'S DAY |
MAY

11th

of

Mother’s

flowers

for

Day—Roses,

Car-

Luncheon Committee

Officers at Annual

Meeting Thursday -

Mrs. Walter Pagenkopf of Highland Park is a member of the committee in charge of the International
Reunion

day

luncheon

of

the

The North Shore chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will
hold its annual meeting at the home
of Mrs. Jerry C, Leaming, 311 Marshman
avenue,
Thursday
afternoon,
May 8, at 2 o’clock.
Annual reports will be given ‘By

Alpha

Gamma. Delta alumnae of Chicago,
suburbs and Northern Illinois together with the undergraduate chapter of

Of course, we'll have a fine
selection

\DAR Will Elect -

ee Bacenkope ne

university

which

will be held
Saturday, May
Marshall Field’s Wedgewood

3, in
room

at

1

Northwestern

the

The program is to follow the humorous
strain revolving around the
speaker, Fran Allison, Aunt Fanny
of Don

nations, Gardenias, Orchids,

McNeill’s

Breakfast

Rambler Roses, Hydrangeas,

appear on the program are
bert
Palmer
of Lombard,

of the

Plant Boxes, etc.—

Chicago

Heggie of
chairman.

club

and

Chicago,

Miss

Helen
rushing

Silence never shows itself to so great
an advantage as when it is made the
reply to calumny. and defamation.
P
—Addison

But be on the safe side by
ORDERING
EARLY!

RAVINIA
PAINTING STUDIO
1534 Judson
For Youngsters

All Mediums

Term Starting Saturday, May 10
from 1 - 3

10 lessons
For

H. P. 3420

535 LAUREL

GOLDEN

for $15.00:

information

HORTENSE
900 Wade

call

STEINER
H. P. 3723

MOTORS

COMPLETE AUTO
PAINTING
ee

$59.00

committee

chairmen

while attending the DAR Continental
Congress held
in the DAR’s
own
Constitution hall in Seater DC,
in April.
Assisting
hotesses
will be Mrs.
A. Lyle
Gourley,
Mrs.
Robert
F.
Patton and Mrs. Robert F. Timm.

the
will

Mrs. Ropresident

national

and

regent, and the chapter delegate will
give an account of their experiences

club, who

is an outstanding member of
sorority.
Other members who

officers

and new officers and directors for
the coming year will be elected and
installed. Mrs. George O. Strecker,

o’clock.

Mrs. Sheahen
i

(Continued

from

page

13)

retary; Mrs. Edward Dostalek, trustee for three years to serve with Mrs.
Burton
Berube
and
Mrs.
Frances
Schneider, whose terms have not expired; Mrs. Roy Wilcox and Mrs.
Ray
May,
guards;
Mrs.
Leonard
Steffan, marshal; Mrs. Edward Welch
and Mrs. Thomas Strenger, assistant
marshals; Mrs. Howard Moran, chaplain; Mrs. Norman Hansen, historian
and publicity * and Mrs. Marie McCarthy, pianist.
Mrs. Sheahen has asked the following to serve as her committee chairman
for the coming year:
Mrs.
Archibald

Abercromby,

ways

and

means;
Mrs. James Berube, social
chairman, assisted by Mrs. William
Dorick and Mrs. Irvin Garling; Mrs.
Arthur Bess, membership.
The more than 200 members and
guests

who

attended

the

meeting

included visitors from Waukegan, Des
Plaines, Milwaukee and Ohio clubs.
In addition to the supreme officers,
honor
guests
who
addressed
the
assembly were Mrs. Dewey Anderson
of Waukegan, district deputy for the
State of Illinois, and Sam Bernardi,
newly installed exalted ruler of the
Highland Park Elks lodge, with which
Emblem club No. 113 is affiliated. Mr.
Bernardi presented the club with a
set of purple and gold officers’ identification ribbons in behalf of the
Elks lodge.
Another highlight
of
the program was the presentation of
the past president’s pin to Mrs. Elwell.
The evening concluded with dancing and refreshments in the Elks club
rooms.

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE

Plus Metal Work If Needed
J

We
To

Do

Have All New
Equipment
Your Work Right

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood

HIGHLAND
106

PARK
S.

First

(2300

We

St.

Build Lawns and
Driveways
TRY US OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137 N. Second,
.

attic,
Wi

et A

:

All Phones 3785
eer

reps

�~ Deerfield eons

- Guests” ee past ‘coe rat - GooD
ACRES, the spacious home of the
Wendell Goodpastures,.
were Mr. and
Mrs. G. C. Bradley of Auburn, ‘Ill,
Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Williamson, Mrs.
F. N. Williamson and daughter, Miss
Fern Williamson, of Chicago.
Mayor
ander

and

were

Mrs.
hosts

Robert
at

a

S.

party

urday
evening
at
their
Crabtree lane to welcome

at
Mr.

at
at

home
on
some new

George

Jacobs

at

a

on
at

Moody

an’s

at

May

their

spring

15.

the baby

on

Central

Both

are back

avenue

and

and

Mrs.

George

Horenberger

Park hospital. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Horenberger of Wilmot road and Mrs. Iona Selig Slimm

of Deerfield

of

road.

\

and

for the

Oakes

Mr.

and

Phone

Deerfield

Phone,

708

Waukegan
J.

&amp;

Park

W.

MILDRED

~Mrs.

Forest

avenue

August

Siffert

of

and

of

Mr.

and

Hazel

Mrs.

avenue.

a former

neighbor

Miss

the

Miss

Mrs.

William

W.

Thornberg

from

Chicago,

Joliet,

Algonquin,
Carpentersville,
and
the
suburban
North

A.

sewing

C.

club

home

John

Sturm’

on

on

704

5869

Bowling

Waukegan

Tel.

Open
Saturdays

Deerfield,

Academy

Rd.—Deerfield

Deerfield

entertained

Friday

her

afternoon

Springfield

Mrs.

at

because

of

an

Chester

road

Wolf

attended

of West

Deer-

annual

lunch-

the

BEAUTY

SALON

Mr.

Mr.

Gillen,

Waukegan

Rd.

her home on |
were
formu- |

work

and

son,

family

Fun”

the

on

program

PTA”

May

3.

Dr.

Robert

of Deerfield

G.

Heupel

and

road.

POWDER BOX BEAUTY ©
SHOP
623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julie
Expert
Permanent
Wavers
Try
our Circlette Wave
that is sprayed into your hair.

DEERFIELD

Weve

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling and
Shaping
Free Consultation
762

their

entertained a

Grammar
school
dessert- luncheon

*

GILLWEVE
Dorothy,

for

Deerfield

884

NEWS

NEWSPAPERS
Home
Delivery

AGENCY
MAGAZINES
Service

POCKET
(PENGUIN-DELL)
BOOKS —
CIGARS CIGARETTES SOFT DRINKS
758

Waukegan

WALLDREN:

Rd.

Deerfield

VANT

&amp;

175

SELIG

Established 1925
REALTORS
Real Estate—Loans

Apparel

Grimes

Vieregg

Mrs.
G. W. Heupel ‘of Clinton,
Iowa, arrived today for a visit with

infection.

Miss

90

Bowling
and Sundays

John

lated

avenue.

635
Deerfield
Road
Tel. Deerfield 806
Open Monday Evenings
’ We invite Charge Accounts

Franklin

Mrs.

group of Deerfield
room mothers at a

Huhn: is in the Highland Park

hospital

field

Deerfield

weeks
bama.

Jose-

last Tues-

Mrs. Eugene Becker and
Bonnie, are spending two —
with relatives in Foley, Ala-—

avenue
will be hostess to ‘members |
of her sewing club at luncheon on
Thursday,
May
8 at her
heme. onGreenwood avenue.

Mar-

William

and

Mrs. W. T. Churchill of Greenwood

Highland

of

T/Set.

at

Mr.

her

her

day.

POKORNY

Women’s

Winnetka.

daughter,

“Fashions

the Highland Park hospital. Grandparents are Mrs. Henry Tuttle Sr. of

born

wedding

and‘

guests

Shore.

GARAGE

Road,

in

other
at

of

son

phine J. Jewett in Chicago

250

Highland

RELIABLE

Hearthstone

last Wednesday
at
Orchard
lane. Plans

23

a

in

t

Res.

the

(Barbara Hurt) of Watseka, Ill., Mrs.
Ara
Branham
of Milwaukee;
Wis.,
Robert
Clark of Mokena,
Iil., and

Hazel

Sifferts

have

guests

home

Youart last Saturday were Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Cernak of Detroit, Mich.,

April

Hrie

eral

tea

tene

were

Johnson

1010

The
avenue

this past week at the A. J.
home have been Mr. and
G. Peterson, Howard. Dow
daughter, Maxine, all from
Last Sunday the Petersons.

Johnsons

Robert
Park,

Dundee,
Palatine,

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nickelsen of
County Line road attended the fun-

Bible Tristtinte, Chicago,

association

and

home

hospital.

of 808 Deerfield road have a son who
was born April 23 at the Highland

April 24. Miss Vercoe will speak
the Deerfield Presbyterian Wom-

on Thursday,

Meintzer

their

Park

Guests
Johnson
Mrs. E.
and little
Chicago.

Here

Miss Winifred Vercoe of Highland
Park, sister of Mrs. E. M. Davis of
Fair
Oaks
avenue,
was
graduated

from

Meintzer

daughter,
April 19

Highland

Mr.

of

group

the

Vernon

their
little
She arrived

Joyce Ellen has been greeted by her
big sister, Martha Lynn, age 3. Mrs.
Meintzer is the former Reba Wilson.

Miss
Elaine Bohnert
of Gillette,
Ark., is a guest at the home of Mrs.
Elmer E.. Clavey of Clavey road. She
is the fiancee of Gordon Clavey, and
is being entertained
pre-nuptial parties.

Mrs.

named
Ellen.

Mrs.

Sadt-

In Morton Grove on Friday afternoon as guests of Mrs. Fred Fuhr
were Mrs. Raymond Goodman and
Mrs. Frank Jacobs, both of Central
Mrs.

and

have
Joyce

neighbors.

avenue, and
Elm street.

eon meeting of the Libertyville Woman’s club Past Presidents, yesterday,

AK?
\/
EXD ete widen
oOTeaTenTenTenen
ences esenensensesTensenren
sea censenseaces
sense sensencensenl en aI, rasgeeyeasescescenreserrenen
reas

Alex-

on

eo

164 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, I.
Edward

H.

&amp; Company

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Ill.
Telephone Deerfield 33

Selig
Haroid
Tel. Deerfield 155

LUCIUS

R.

|

Vant

ERSKINE

©

REALTOR
-

BUSINESS

806

DIRECTORY

Ph.

Waukegan

Road

Deerfield

74

—

4

\

THE GEORGIAN SHOP
DRY
816

GOODS

Waukegan
Tel.

and
Road,

GIFTS

4

FROST'S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES
Refrigerators

Deerfield

Washing
We

95

760

W. R. MITCHELL
REAL

Always

Tel.

Deerfield

Deerfield

Road

Tel.

VANT &amp; SELIG
EST. 1925
INSURANCE _
764

in

all

its

branches

Waukegan Road
Tel. Deerfield

|

- Deerfield
155

of

562—Eric

CAKES

appliances

- Tel.

Deerfield

Banfield,

122

Prop.

D-X

Eyes
419

Examined

STATION

813 Waukegan

—

Glasses

Rd.

Mercer
Lumber

Waukegan
Deerfield

DR. G. C. PARKNEN,

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Lumber

KNAAK’S

Companies

- Building Materials
612 Railroad
Ave
Deerfield, Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

-

Fitted

Deerfield 880

Telephone
Deerfield

and

Deerfield

Coal

THEO

J.

”

Phone

1

Established

DEERFIELD

Inc.

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

TAXI

- Courteous

Drivers

81

Drfld. &amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield

Ti,

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.
756

SERVICE

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD
Day and Night Service
Reasonable Rates

Ph.

Deerfield,

Waukegan

Road

Tools
Goods

Deerfield,

Telephone

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,

R.

1884

Glass
= Varnish
- Glassware
Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting

Roads

.

PHARMACY
KNAAK,

Est.

577

Waukegan

O.D.

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
Phone
674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Road

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND
SAUSAGE MARKET

DR. R. D. MOORE
OPTOMETRIST

Sanitary and
Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR
BETTER
HOMES
Deerfield

Road

SERVICE
29

- Vacuums

makes

808

Radios

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

M. A, FRANTZ

758

Machines
all

Waukegan

Ranges -

ERIC’S

ESTATE AND
INSURANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Tl.
Available

repair

-

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP

Ill,

295

ROYAL BLUE STORE
722

Deerfield Road—Tel. 767
“Best
Quality
Always”

GROCERIES
FRESH

FRUITS

—
:&amp;

MEATS
VEGETAPLES
ge

�Page

Thursday,

16

;

Trinity Church Is

ini

FLOOR

SANDINGS

WOOL
LINOLEUM

AND

—-

AND’

FINISHING

COTTON

ASPHALT

RUGS

AND

‘piscopal

ate,
World

RUBBER

TILE

W
Our

N

j NG

25th

r LOOR
;

Church

Year

in

373 Roger Williams Ave.

=
Gee,

Highland

=&lt;

Oo P

SH

Federation

Was

All

never

be

again!

or

lucky

the

—

make

spots

go

Slipcovers,

Drapes,

Blankets,

The
this

ALL

PHONES

LOVELY

F. FISHER,

—

‘it

is

be

pee

SORT

brought

than

to the church,

Clark,

Simpson,

Miss

Insurance

Tazioli
Ba

Foi

to

de-|

res

Excavating

Hat

Nee

they

may | W.

320.South

Shoe

lane:

Whitfield,

Mrs.

57

......

43

53

atc

aan

57

Sat

205

.....0...-....-. 571

F.

collection

will

be

day

will

Rebekah

Secrest,

=

204

eo

wiesnoeddeqatvacrasterdnas ees

216

.............

Bae

Carami.

606

ome

503

sci sctadeteagss

re

Ww.

in

Kahila

meeting

at

the

be

Calmetees

“

Soran
I

wish

be

Across
Same

from

5,

at

Location

Highland

Park

in

Ten

G.

American

Arnswald.

Pin Ladies

League

April 24, 1947

Bros.
Bros.

banquet,

the

p.m.

Garage
Garage

..
32

Engel’s

34
38
39

Tavern

39

Somenzi &amp; Son ..
Village fin ii...
My

Favorite’

Oak

Terrace

Santi’s

House

53

.....-....

40

56

Agency

..........

39

57

‘Store. . ...ic:..5.st0sivscioons

35

61

29

67

21

75

Insurance

Highland

Russel 8: Huddle

PROCES

...........-.-.-

33002255500...

Secretary i...2:.-...i.....-.:.
High Series

TRA | Sas hcasvousadgectvenibe

Linette
Mary

50
43

Park

Anchor

New

...

Beverage

of
Men

43
47

sa

Inn

Dog

Dealers

The:

Olson
Allen

PROC
BRIOT Gidaccccnceaccapece
-kedseas de osha loee cig
LOGUE
COON
cis sicdb oivass. Spooks
caens cpa

Highland

Parkers

may

not

in this locality at any time
come.
Disaster cards are

Years

a call may
located at

the Northwestern railway station, the
police department and the fire department, and in several other public
buildings in Highland Park so that

| Red

630

Cross

ately

in

may

any

be

notified

immedi-

emergency.

Turf Builder

Garden Minded?
10 Ibs.

(grassfood)—keeps shaded
and odorless.
2,500 sq. ft. (50x50 ft.)
5,000 sq. ft. (100x50 ft.)
10,000 sq. ft. (100x100 ft.)

grass

SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Easily destroys Dandelion,
tain, all broad leaved weeds without harm to the
$1.25 and $3.85.

Planlawn.

:

:

t

5

You'll

gardening

appreciate—

$12.95
16 lb. Wheelbarrow _...........
Midget Hand Tools ............. ‘
aw MING. cies e Uh, Su eivapnu tote crag uenbasesccdes $1.75
. Galvanized Watering Cans ... 3 ipl psa $1.35 to $2.65
INVENTORY

CLEARANCE

Cy Sek

SHERONY HARDWARE
314 RAILWAY AVE.
HIGHWOOD, ILL.
Tel. H. P. 2041
5

in every day to make

easier and more enjoyable.
Plastic Hose, 50 ft. ......:.....

- $12.35.

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER
alive and sparkling.
Clean
25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds
50 Ibs. - $3.75 feeds
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds

EXTERIOR
60 Green Bay Rd.
~

know

that the local Red Cross organization
is alerted to assist in any disaster

Bank

Items dre coming

201

Disaster Preparedness Here

IH. Nomeroff
Tel.

10

May

7:30

209
coming

Villa Moderne
.....
Scsriett's
-°.........
North Shore Gas .

Invited

35

on

hall,

Larson
Marchi

Mrs.

Lines

the

our

Highland

by

temple.

Accounts

announce

Cc.

International Sterling, Rogers
Silver; Elgin, Bulova, Gruen
Watches;
Sheaffer Pens; Kreisler
Watch Bands; Elgin American
Compacts; La Tusca Pearls;
Ronson Lighters; Genuine
Pa
Diamonds
Charge

to

801 at its

May

cht

226

accuracy a

held

Legion

observed

Monday,

Masonic

wig

Pi;

58
201

200

.......--.-..s00s0-0---+ 514

HE

appreciated.

Lodge

57

7 baa
ope ue 531

908 | Qt Givens onc

of all churches

Leading

SCOTTS FOR DENSE SHADE—Cool green grass right up to
the tree trunks. 1 Ib. - $1.25
3 Ibs. - $3.75
5 Ibs. - $6.25

4

ae

.......... 44

Service

587

Jahnigen

130 Roger Williams | J.

cooperation

3710

and

42
44
44

48

re '

Green | H. “Johnson

We Feature the Following

Seed

Ba
52
52

48

eae

ae

Fell’s:

with

41

.......... [.

PF. patrick’...

Ida Carlsen is chairman of the committee,
with.
refreshments
to
be
served in the social hour to follow
under direction of Mrs. Clara Denendorf.
Mrs.
Tom
Connally;
noble
grand, will preside.

LAWNS. IN DENSE SHADE

35

55

Sunday, | Onesti Bros. -...-...-.---.----:-eeeeeee 38

375 Orchard

Adele

avenue;

Mother’s

Pres.

Scotts

ene.

(whether | Glader

inconvenient

T.*idgren,

Sheridan

Curtains,

PARK

Station

Breny free Shop a

Sheridan Rebekah Lodge to
Observe Mother’s Day

etc.

HIGHLAND

61

0.020.002.

wt

to

ERMINE CLEANERS, INC.
OTTO

We

........ Reeteson ie

Coal

Manhattan

no

Mary

regular

Clothes,

of

avenue,

8 p.m.
Clean

If

Marion

away like magic.

We

League

1947

Washington
Duffy
&amp; DuffyGardens
Cleaners..................
............
A. G. MePhersont'..-.2.cissece-niet-ote

summer;

shoes

later

avenue;

CLEANGolly

and

church

Dorothy

that she remembered about ERERS.

and

should

A.

Vine

MINE

Casino

Bowling
26,

Bay road; Miss Sarah Jane Murfey, | F- Faoro «......-.-.---:---es aaa
645 South : St.
Johns
avenue:
Miss
Bas VRID UBTnoose os.je assoeensoregnsniaee
FORMU
5.02 bocath nn xadeatee 521

y

me

regardless

donations
4.

Miss

friends

for

Tower

not).
:

Mrs.

we’d

was

Chi-|

behomes:
taken to any one of the following |°Ws Crowley
Welds

lap,

It

:

Legion
April

following
SOW.
. items
aN,
Kurope
to
be
dis-|

winter

material,

liver articles

dropped

thought

oethe

the
*

:

bottles,

May

I

3

American

is headquar- | Siljestrom

needy

mended

to

brush

the

of

Greater

church

clothing,

The

When my paint

partici-

harsh

bedding, baby clothes, diapers, baby |Tator Temple Tavere an

Mad!

on Mommy’s

to

faith :

—|

local

of.

c ollecting.
people ot

tributed

Tel. H. P. 566

——

Mommy

The

ters
kEES f ass
tor the

Park

is

oe

:Service cocommittee
;

cago.
DO

church

a

News

Bowling

Service Collection

YOUR FRIENDS DO!

—

Ten Pin

Highland
’

d
Headquarters,
Wor Id

FLOORS

YOUR

AT

LOOK

May1, 1947

OF

A

NUMBER

Gard en

OF

ITEMS

&lt;a

DECORATORS

Winnetka 132
a

es ba

#

�“"Thisrsday, May 1, 1947

VFEW Launches Plans for 1947

Cas

Buddy Poppy Sale Here May 24:

SALE
Special

RED

Large Turnout for
VFW Games Party

Plans

for

the

1947

sale

of

Buddy

Poppies in Highland Park on May 24
were launched this week by appointment

of

Pat

chairman

Foreign
Mr.

for

Post

Wars

of

Bergman

3ergman,
thé

Bergman

4737,

the

campaign

Veterans

United

will be assisted

Buddy

woman’s

as

Poppy

of

States.
by

Mrs.

chairman

of

auxiliary.

‘Ray Mann, post commander, in announcing the appointment, forecast a
“bumper
sales
crop”
in Highland
Park, with proceeds to be used to
aid

the

VFW

rehabilitation

program

and to support the VFW
national
home for orphans at Eaton Rapids,
Mich.
Buddy Poppies are made by disabled veterans in hospitals throughout the country as part of the occupational

therapy

and

employment

program.

were

donated

by

Inman

and

for

ORRICO

III.
164]1R

1409

better

results.

GARDENS
PLEASANT
RAVINIA

AVE.

the

The
party was
sponsored
by the
ladies’
auxiliary
and
the Post,
the
new post commander, Ray Mann, and
new auxiliary president, Mrs.
Irwin
Wallis, taking active parts.
The next business meeting of/ the
post will be May 14, when all members are urged to.be present.
There
will be a discussion
regarding
the
changing of meeting nights.

Tei why Magic Chef
is the No. 1 cooking choice
of women all over America.
They know that Magic Chef's
48 advantages will make
their cooking easier, better
and more appreciated.

The
VFW
“Snafu.
Session,”
(a
spring dance) will be held in the Labor temple,
on
Saturday,
May
10,
when the
14-piece
dance
band
of

Olin

will

Jackie

furnish
Lou

music

Sebbes

will

for

or

at

the

Wn

do

the vocals.

At School May 9

ials.
early

Painters,

Town Shop, Henry Hanson
Classique Beauty Parlor.

Johnny

Present “‘Robin Hood”

Glenview

P
Plant

DESIGN

Glenview,

A capacity crowd was on hand at
Highland
Park’s VFW’s
first games
party held at the post headquarters
on Wednesday, April 23. Door awards

dancing.

Braeside Pupils to

of

EXQUISITE

on

PLANTS

Double Red Poppies, Very hardy
no winter protection, and Canadian Giant Pansies and other

~ MIRRORS AND GLASS
"Announce Appointment of
Pat Bergman as Chairman

Prices

ROSE

SHERONY
314

door

of

Braeside

on the evening

of

May

auditorium

9.

Waukegan

Ave.,

COLUMBIA
305 Waukegan

IMMEDIATE

DELIVERY

HARDWARE

Highwood

HOUSEHOLD

Tel.

H.

P.

2041

APPLIANCES

Ave., Highwood

Tel. H. P. 1533

“Robin Hood, or the Merry Outlaws
of Sherwood Forest,” a three-act play
by Owen Davis, will be presented by
pupils of the eighth grade of Braeside
school on Friday, May 9. Curtain time
is 8:15 p.m.
Cast and characters are: Robin Hood,
Bruce
Bulmer;
Little
John,
John
Rietz;
Alan-a-ale,
Bob
Friedman;
Friar Tuck, Ellen Rand; Will Scarlet,
Stanton

Kessler;

Diane

Forsythe;

Skippy

Wright;

David

of

Midge,
the

Doncaster,

the

High

Miller,

Sheriff

of

Nottingham, Bob Engle; Grug of Gisbaurne, Joan Graham; Sir Richard of
the Lea, Renny Kidd; Hough, Doris
Sherbano; a Wondering Friar, Susan
Tresch;

the

Bishop

of

Fairdale,

Ariel

Tilden.
Additional cast: a Pilgrim, Norman
Zimmerman;
the Lady Marion, Sue
Jacoby ; Lady Jane, Judy Cohen; Dorothy, Barbara Pritchard; Ruth, Barbara
Aronson; Nan, Meta Pohn; Strolling
Minstrel,

Barbara

Fischer;

Soldiers,

Jack Knowlton, Jon Anderson, Carol
Trongmar, Roslyn Stern and Bob Valiquet.
Tickets
purchased

for the performance may be
from eighth grade students

Shoreline

ROOF ING

Company

(repairs-renewals)
Asphalt Shingles—Roll Roofing
Wood
Shingles
repaired
and
preserved with HOT Asphalt or
Stain
—
Gutters

Cleaned

- Coated

Siding — Insulation
Tuck-Pointing

317

Grove

St.

Highwood
B. AMIDE
—
C. MORDINI
Highland Park 1203

l?’s here!
YES ... the Scott-Atwater,
tomorrow’s outboard motor, is

here on display today! Now you

For travel luxury!

can examine this sensational
new outboard motor... new

cradle in a twinkling ... no time-consuming,

in engineering, new in design,
new in performance. Four sleek
Scott-Atwater models
:
Standard and Deluxe single
(3.5 h.p. at 4,000 r. p.m., OBC
certified) and a Standard and
Deluxe Alternate Firing Twin.
See the new Scott-Atwater
Outboard Motor today!

Dresses and suits

tiresome folding and arranging are necessary

Brown

or Blue Coated

Canvas

Mademoiselle ...................2..0...2... $43.25
CVPR CLUS8
es
oe
$27.50
SPN OOM sic cused
ie $28.50

SCOTT-ATWATER

* Outheard *
MOTORS
Sherony Hdwe.
314

Railway

Ave.,

P.

Highwood

2041

134 N. Genesee

St.

Waukegan

�Page

18

Thursday,

PRESBYTERIAN “SUNDAY CIRCLE NUMBER ONE”

Highland

Legionnaires

Park

friends
County

in
are

the 10th
invited.

district

of

Lake

VEW Auxiliary to Plan Monday
For Buddy Poppy Sale May 24

The principal speaker will be Brigadier General
William
H. Wilbur
of

Highland

Park,

who

is and

has

The woman’s auxiliary of Highland
Park Memorial Post 4737, Veterans
of Foreign Wars, will meet at the
community center Monday evening,
May 5, at 8 o’clock.

been

for some years a member of the Highland Park post of the American Legion.

General Wilbur just returned from a
trip to Japan on an assignment for the
U. S. Army. He will also talk about
universal

second

row,

Darlene

Black,

rowg, Alice Arentz, Mary
Lucinda

Mrs.

R.

Dewey,

Sally Peet and Mary Ann
M.

Harvey,

Katherine

Donna

Marshall,

Meyer;

Ludlow;

Sydney

1947

Highland Park, who will be assisted at
the piano by Mrs. Virginia Schur. The
meeting will close with the singing of
America and «the retirement of colors.
The Civic Meeting committee of the
Voiture is composed of Charles S.
Prizer, Charles J. Schroeder, Joseph
Menanich, Howard Garnet and Edwin
L. Gilroy.

to Participate

The Lake County Voiture 604 announces through Charles S. Prizer,
Chef de Gare, a civic meeting -which
will be held_in Waukegan tomorrow
night at 8 o’clock. No admission will
be charged. All members of the American
Legion,
their
families
and

first row:

1,

Lake County Voiture to Hold
Civic Meeting Tomorrow Night
Prominent

Left to right they are:

May

third

Hunter,

Thomson.

military

strongly

backed

training,

as one

of

which

the

Arrangements

is

Legion

projects.

and prospective
to be present.

:

General Wilbur is not only a brilliant
speaker but is the only American ever
presented with a Congressional Medal
of Honor by an American president
outside of the continental limits of the
United

States.

He

received

the

for

the

1947

Buddy Poppies, to bé held
May 24, will be discussed.

sale

of

Saturday,
Members

members

are

urged

Kerrihard and Bruce
Pupils to Appear in
Joint Recital Friday

medal

for service over and beyond the call
of duty at Casablanca in 1943 by
President Roosevelt.
In addition to honoring General Wil-

The pupils of Miss Katherine Kerrihard and Miss Virginia Bruce will be
presented in joint recital tomorrow
night at 7 o’clock at the community
bur, Mr. Prizer also announces that a
center. The program is to be open to
number of distinguished guests will be
the public.
present, including Dean Howard
E.
Miss Bruce and Miss Kerrihard were
Ganster, Mr. F. H. Just, Major General Joseph H. Teece, the Honorable among the outstanding musicians of
their high school classes, and now are
Frank
Wallin, Judge
Minard. Hulse,
and Henry A. Hansen, 10th District completing study at the Northwestern
university school of music.
Chaplain.
Highlights of tomorrow’s program
Master of Ceremonies will be Edwin
include
the
development
and
L. Gilroy who is judge advocate of the will
Voiture and who was a naval officer in achievement of the youngest students,
including an original composition soon
two wars.
The. American Legion quartette
render some songs and ‘there will
be

songs

by

Miss

Maria

to

will
also

Santi

be

published,

and

more

advanced

work, The*program is as follows:
SOPORAE ES Fein
Was + 5ST EEE Pee
Schubert
Spinning Song...
0. Be eee. Ellerich

of

|(Solfeggtetto vi... ...eeees C.P.E. Bach

WALTER
The
Left to right, first row, Darlene
ond

row,

Donna

Ludlow,

Marlene

Black,

Easton,

Katharine

Marshall;

Marjorie Brown,

Sally

Alice Arentz.

SOF T/ONCe cote a tens Chaminade
Majesty of the Deep .i....... Hamer
SCOLCH FP OCW
akon oie MacDowell
FIUHOL SORE
Ua cee vp cca vs Hae Dvorak
March Militaire (duet)......Schubert

Tailor

secPeet,

INDIAN

ALTERATIONS

Men‘s gad

On

Delay
to Order

Christopher

Stone

.... $1.25

| Poinsettia

0.000.002.0000...

$1.25

Crimson Glory ............ $1.50 |
McGredy’s
Etoile
SR

de

RE

MRS.

Scarlet

... $1.25

Holland

.... $1.25

Re
Be ae
Sei ees

Traverse

Girls 8-16 yrs.

Resident Registered Nurse.
4 &amp; 8 week periods.
June 30 — Aug. 26
4 weeks $185.00, 8 weeks $350.00,
inclusive fee.
Will make personal

|

interview.
Morris and

Write for folder.
Dorothy Shaw, Directors

Northport,

Michigan

7

CLIMBERS
Aan

Qua

nei.
$1.25
Paul’s Scarlet $1.25

$1.25

| Blaze $1.50

$2.00

| Roses in two-tones, other colors

THORNDALE
614 Green Bay Rd.

e
Pick up Tuesday before
10:00 a.m. and Delivered
on Fridays
8 N. Second St.
H. P. 1712

CAMP

Offers girls a delightful program of
activities—Riding, Canoeing, Swimming, Archery, Tennis, Volleyball,
Basketball,
Dramatics
and
Crafts.

Also Cleaning and Pressing

ROSES ARE RED

Famous
Bay

Northport, Michigan

Wolweh’s

Clothes
‘Without
Suits Made

BEACH

Michigan’s

GARDENS
Kenilworth 2330

Northshore Garden of Memories
A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited
THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN
Very Reasonable
Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

CEMETERY

Prices
Phone Maj.

1067

�”

'

Lincoln Music Department

;

To Present “Let Freedom Ring”
Pupils of All Grades Take Part
In Music Drama Show May 9

Mrs.

Walter
biecke
nation;
Stanley
school,

Ann

Petranek,

the

modern

costumes;

composer,

Mary

will

act

as

The following first grade children
of the classes of Miss Jesse Hiatt
and Miss Gertrude Brown will participate in the rhythm band overture:
Mary Brace, Lois Brown, Laurence
Herman, Jo Anne Jefferson, Judith
Miller,

Walter

Roscher,

John

Scor-

navacco, Guy Simpler, Judith Ann
Trampish,
Stephen
Wesling,
Patsy
Witten, Michael Well, Jimmy Batt,
Barry Duggan, Mary Jo Edgren, John
Geib, Marlyn Lawrentz, Phyllis Levin,
Cathy Maxwell, Dennis Victor, Mary
Watkins, Linda Chaplin and Marcia
Ransom.
“The Indians Who Met Columbus”
will be portrayed by the students of
Miss Ellen Miller’s second-third
grade as follows:
Eugene Daggitt,
Robert Benson, Janet Cushman, Donald Inman, Barbara. Kahn, Michael
Magee, Melissa McClure, Teddy Murray, Nancy Philips, Ann Tighe, Shelby
Trampish, Wendy
Vellertson, Judy
Williamson, George Ball, Katherine
Biggert, Billy Flinn, Larry Johnson,
Prudence

Jeanne

Keogh,

Lance

Robinson

and

Sherry.

Third Grade Pupils
“The Puritans” will be portrayed
by students of Miss Winifred Nichel’s
third grade, including Robert Burton,
Sharon Dicus, Judith Donaldson, Gerald
Dostalek,
George
Ekdahl,
Goodman, John Guentz, David

den,

Robert

ber,

Jean

Leonard,

Meinhard,

Lewis

Mead

Ann
Hol-

McOm-

Mont-

A Care!

Without

SPRING AND SUMMER
Tours

s

CeARE
SMOKIES

CALIFORNIA

7-Day

GREAT

and

Helen

Hopp,

Mary

Leonard,

osesescscseeoees

Avoid

H. P. 181

sixth, and

Miss

Helen

mers,

David

Thomas

Cox,

Keogh,

John

Sandy

MV

ET

COD

|

Boyce’s

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.
CCHSCHCCOSCESEHBE
SEES FEES EES EEEEEEEEEEE

A Good Breakfast Means Better Work

_ The mother who knows the value of good nutri-

tion sees to it that everyone in her household hasa
good breakfast before he starts to school or work.
Plenty of time for eating, variety in the menus,
and comradeship while eating are her “secret
weapons” for accomplishing this.

Goodman,

Klee,

Donald

May,

Stanley

Pagenkopf,

Steven

Ross,
Heap

Ronnie
Salyards,
and Buddy Walters.

Lawrence

Fourth Graders
Students

of

Mrs.

Continued

on

Lawrence

page

Gilli-

20)

By Photographers...
For Photographers . ,.
We are proud to announce
that with the acquisition of
new equipment we are now
able to offer our customers a

Pan-fried
Mor
and
Fggs

24 HOUR
DEVELOPING

SERVICE
|

Serving the North Shore
thru Photography

Johns

a

Melt
%% tbsp. WILSON’S BAKE-RITE in a skillet, add sliced Mor
and brown on both sides. Remove to hot platter.
Add
2 tbsp. WILSON’S BAKE-RITE to skillet and heat until
moderately hot.
Break
5 CLEAR BROOK EGGS, one at a time, into a saucer and
slip into the hot fat. When all eggs are added, reduce heat, add1tbsp.
water, cover, and cook until whites are set sufficiently. Season with
salt and pepper. Serve around fried Mor. Serves 5.

{
i
1
1
;

Eating too little or no breakfast
usually results in irritability or fatigue
before lunch. In school; this causes
poorer school work; in factories, a
higher percentage of accidents occur
during the hour before lunch.
Mid-morning snacks have been
recommended...and used...to over-

Ave.

Disappointment

Rad

A.

ste

ne a

De

Dae ee eer Ge wos

1 can MOR into 10 slices

come this “‘let-down feeling.” However, latest research indicates that a
high protein breakfast tends to prevent this mid-morning slump. Yes,
Mother, this applies to you, too,
whether you’re house cleaning or writing a paper for Women’s Club.

Plan for Plenty of Protein
A serving of Mor

ae

ie

and eggs as pic-

tured above will furnish 18 grams of

Poor Breakfast... Poor Work

Park

Sy Smee ig USie a Sy amn aa
rence Scat

om

Vary Menus

This Offer Good for
One Week Only

St.

OE |

Orange juice, fried Mor and eggs,
toast, jelly, coffee or milk, is a breakfast to tempt any appetite. Vary the
fruit; alternate Certified Bacon, Certified or Tender Made Ham, and
Certified Corned Beef Hash with
the Mor; serve Clear Brook Eggs in
various ways
such as_ scrambled,
poached, baked, and in omelet; let
waffles, pancakes,
rolls, or hashed
brown potatoes take the place of the
toast ... and you have enough breakfast ideas to prevent monotony the
whole year through. How easy!

As a special offer we will
develop free, one roll of film
when this ad is presented!

Highland

‘

a”

SAVE THIS AD!

7 ‘Ss.

ee

Cut

All photofinishing is done in
our own
laboratory under
the most exacting conditions.

:

.

on

Avenue
Manager
Park 1211

uo

Ann

Michael

LAKES

370%
Central
George L. Lundberg,
Phone: Highland

Now

Richard

:MEXICO
GUATEMALA

From $98.50
H. and R. ANSPACH
TRAVEL BUREAU

GOODS

STORAGE

to:

Cruise

oe

LINES

374 Central Ave., Highland Park

seventh grades as follows:
Clifford Boose, Tom Brown, John
Cox, Geoffrey Finlay, Robert Guentz,
David Klingler, Robert Nelson, Harry
Oppenheimer, Larry Pagenkopf, Herbert Sangerman, Danny Seitz, Robert
Troy, Sterling Schmid, Judith Watkins, David Wendell, Gordon Chal-

George
narrator.

Holden,
Johnson,

house’s

|

Jardine

eit:

OF HOUSEHOLD

AGENT ALLIED VAN

Morris,
Peggy
Nathan,
Cynthia
Parks, Judy Schweiger, Hugh Seyfarth, Jim Shannon, Claire Silverstine, Marlene Sordyl, Carolyn Stunkel, Timmy Wanger, Elizabeth Washburn and Owen White.
“Cowboy of the West” will be played
by the boys of Mrs. Nema White-

Berg, printing; Vincent Viezand Walter Berg, stage coordiHarold Rudolph, Lights, and
McKee, principal. of Lincoln
film projector and floor lights.

Gershwin.

PACKING

Sree

Brown, Bobby Brown, Jocelyn Carey,
Judd Carlson, Walter Frank, Martha

stage

All Grades Participate
“Let Freedom Sing,” to be performed
by
pupils
of grades
one
through eight, traces in drama, dance
and song the historical development.
of song in this country from the first
Te Deum chant sung by the crew
of Christopher Columbus to the music
of

A

@

direction are in the hands of Mrs.
Alfred Apitz, art director. Miss Helen
Boyce is handling makeup; the grade
teachers of Braeside school assisted
by

Lat

Coeoeeeeeeeeesen

and

AND

@eeeeooceeeeesece

sets

MOVING

gomery,
Terrence.
Moore, Kenneth
Pantle, Gail Pohn, Robert Roscher,
Robin Smalley, Suzanne Spurtis,
Philip Struve, Duncan
White,
Michael Whitten and Karen Heap.
The
following
children
of Mrs.
Margaret Harvey’s second grade will
portray “The Maypole Scene :”
Pat Barker, Freddy Bishop, Martha

“Let
Freedom
Ring,” a _ musical
production, will be presented by the
music department of. Lincoln school
in the school’s
auditorium
Friday
evening,
May
9
Miss
Anne
C
Phelps, director of -music, and composer of the title song, is serving as
general director.
Art
work,
stage

Arh

,

protein, which is one-fourth of the
amount required by a man or woman
weighing 155 lbs. or a 10 to 12 year
old child. Boys and girls over 12 years
of age require considerably more protein; an extra egg or a glass of milk &gt;
will take care of this for one meal.
Want something special for Sunday
breakfast? Popovers always make a
hit. They’re easy to make, too, but do
require considerable time for baking.
Yours for good breakfasts,

_

�4

Thursday, May I, 1947
Fifty Girl Scout
Workers Attend
Training Course
Approximately
50 volunteer Girl
Scout workers are receiving training
under leadership of Mrs. Lillie Mae
Osborn and Miss Ruthmary Woolf
at

the

being

community

held

this

center

week

in

on

and May 2, 7 and 9, from
12 noon and from 1 p.m.

classes

April

Coffee is being served to those
bring their own lunches.
According to the instructors,
unteer

It’s a specialized world we’re living in. . . and to
keep well up in the race, individuals
must be in step with progress.

ay
|

and

proach

4080

396 Central

the

problem

(Continued

Ave.

willing-

PRICED

$6Q95
full-length

styles.

Cox, John Dean,
Sharon Howard,

sell

Terry

Johnson,

Lillie,

MarRus-

Elspeth

Sing Solo

Winona
Bell,
Jeanne
Donaldson,
Nancy Lewis, Barbara Norden, Mary
Joe Perreault, Meta Schwartz, Diane
Singer, Suzanne Stunkel, Judith Wat-

‘HE DRAKE SHOP + IN THE DRAKE HOTEL
THE 950 SHOP + 950 N. MICHIGAN AVE.
THE EVANSTON SHOP + 1636 ORRINGTON
OAK PARK SHOP

19)

Margaret Anthony will sing “Summertime”. by George Gershwin in the
“Our Modern Music” number.
In addition to the eighth grade
girls the chorus includes the sixth
and seventh grade girls as follows:

Noteworthy savings ‘am spring wraps. Novelty
wools in muted pastels, high colors, navy and
and

from page

Brownlee, Bill
tin Granholm,

To

black. Three-quarter

Ring”

Brandt
Ross,
Angela
Scornavacco,
Carol Summers, Michael Tighe, Dick
Varney,
Jean
Youngs
and
John
Kuehn.
“The Negro Spiritual” will be portrayed in song and tableau by the
students of Miss Winifred Nelson’s
fifth grade as follows: Buddy Bevins,
Mary
Belle Biggert, Shirley Beck,
Cynthia Brace, Douglas Duggan, Jane
Freeman, Roberta Froehlich,
Clark
Jones, Sherman Keller, Debby Keogh,
Charles Kimbrough, Marianne Klein,
Judy MacCorquodale, Sherry Mason,
Gordon Parks, Jack Perry, Robert
Smith, Beatrice Struve, Stanford Stukey, James Troy, Connie Wales and
Alan Wilkinson.
Pupils of Mrs. Clara Kuester Walton’s eighth grade will portray “The
Civil War.”
They include: slaves,
Margaret Anthony, Donald
Carr,
Ramon
Cimbale, Jimmy Donaldson,
George
Freeman,
David
Schwartz,
Dick Wales, John Washburn, with
solo by Tom Palmer; plantation owners’ daughters, June Anderson, Margaret Anthony, Jean Bevins, Mary
Louise Dalla Valle, Marjorie Ekelmann, Pat
Floyd,
Elsie
Hocking,
Catherine Lencioni, Elizabeth Lewis,
Anne
Morrissy, Fredrica Skidmore,
Janis Wessling, Rita Witte and Ellen
Chaplin, with solo by Jessie Hadley.

COLLECTION

SPECIALLY

NEW

and

Maxwell, Brian Molke,
Susan Murray, Marilyn Nathan, Patsy Oppenheimer,
Julia
Patton,
John
Pollak,

WRAPS

THE

vol-

demands

land’s fourth grade will appear in
“The Gold Rush:” Clarence Daggitt,
Robert Barrate, Betty Brace, Beth

Nartha Weathered
SPECIAL

to

“Let Freedom

FURRIER
Park

effective,

ness to accept the necessary training
and supervision.

M., Belmont
Highland

to be

who

not only a sincere interest in the job
to be done, but a businesslike ap-

firms

This is why we have made a sizeable investment, in a new refrigerated fur and garment storWith the confidence of knowing its
age vault.
advantages, we are proud to tell you of the protection it affords your furs.

Phone

work,

30,

10 a.m. to
to 3 p.m.

kins and Allice Witte, Barbara
Barnes, Jean Cederborg, Ann Curtis,
Nancy Dalla Valley, Jeanne Holden,
Susan
Lencioni, Mary
Lou Owen,
Deborah Ross, Nancy Smalley, Frances Tamblin and Geraldine Wilkinson.
The student crew assisting in the

«+ 730 LAKE STREET

production

are:

stage,

|man, Jack Zeigler;
Sturgis; floor spots,
Philip Seitz.
oie ioe: rai

elt

aa

David

Free-

curtain, Barry
Joe Alford and
ig

ey

�-

| Library Notes
New books for you! The Friends
of the Library
fund
has already
brought results which now add new
reading interests for all. This is a
partial list of the recent additions:
Spring in Washington. Louis
J.
Halle, Jr., the author, says of his
book: “To snatch the passing moment
and examine it for signs of eternity
is the noblest of occupations; therefore I undertook to be monitor of
the Washington
seasons when the
government wasn’t looking.”
A Free and Responsible Press is a
report of the Commission on Freedom

of

the

Press,

with

a

oe

ors

oe

oe

aes

.

Mes

ee

ee

by RobertM. Hutchins, Chairman of beyond the realm of entertainment,
the Commission and Chancellor of the in presenting these verbal and pictorUniversity of Chicago. This report ial sketches, it is to bring the reader

foreword

includes
thirteen
recommendations
which clarifies the role of government, the public, and the mass media,
cutlining a program to improve the
service of the press,
Hurrah for Arkansas! In her newest book, Marguerite Lyon gives a
gay, fascinating account of her travels
in her adopted state. Before you fin-

ish the first chapter you will begin
wondering how soon you can vacation
in

Arkansas.

Sonora Sketch Book. John Hilton
offers this comment on his book:
“This is not a book on Mexico or
even an exhaustive study of Sonora.
It is rather an experiment in sharing
these

memories.

There

to produce
timely
literature. If there

is

or
is

no

attempt

‘significant’
any purpose,

to a better understanding
ciation of a land and a
I have learned to love and
Four new bdoks about
War

Between

the

and apprepeople that
admire.”
men in the

States

period

are

interesting:
Horace Greeley by Henry Luther
Stoddard.
Touched with Fire, containing letters and
diary of Oliver Wendell
Holmes,

Jr.,

edited

Wolfe Howe.
Experiment

in

ford

the

Dowdey,

by

Mark

De-

by

Clif-

the

men

Rebellion
story

of

who guided the Confederacy.
Letters from Lee’s Army by Charles
Minor Blackford, edited by his grandson of the same name.
Here are other titles to attract your
interest:

The Doctor Has a Baby by Evelyn
Barkins.
:
From Galileo to the Nuclear Age
by Harvey Brace Lemon.
a
Religion and the Rise of Capitalism —
by R. H. Tawney.
The World’s Greatest Scriptures by —
Lewis Browne.
;
With

the greatest

speed

the day when

Packa

ra

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in its beauty, brilliant in performance—with quality guarded by over
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Cooling System check-up—lIt can save
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INC.PARK,

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ILL.

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ae
by —
fe

Story

nt

you’ll own

spring-conditioning ‘‘“package.”

MOTORS,

Bait

The Comrades of Highwood, Veterans of Foreign Wars, are sponsoring a dance to be held Saturday, May
3, at the Labor temple. Dancing will
begin at 9 p.m. to the music of Louis
Garino’s
orchestra.
Funds
derived
from the dance are allotted to Veter-

o

Come

and

Comrades of Highwood Dance

Ask the Man

Order today ...and

Fly,

Bergman.
The Art of the
Howard Haycraft.

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DAISY PATTERN COTTAGE SET
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24

Thursday, May 1, 1947
—

THE HOME

CLINIC

Let us
repair
your
Radios,
Phonographs and Electric Appliances. A qualified technician
will call at your home and give
you a free estimate.

CALL H. P. 4766
or

a penny postcard will bring us
to your

DONALD

door.

Write:

R. CHRISTMAN

Italian Club to Hold
Installation Banquet
The
perity

Junior Italian Women’s Prosclub of Highwood will hold
their annual installation of officers
banquet at the Highlander in Highwood
on Tuesday, April 29, at 7:30 p.m.
The newly elected officers to be
installed are: Mrs. Bert F. Sanders,
president;

637 Laurel Ave.
Highland Park, Ill.

Miss

president; Miss
ing secretary;

Calzia,

Betty

vice-

Delores Fini, recordMrs.
John
Lawler,

secretary

Miss Ann

er;

Roger

Mrs.

Zenzola,

Albert,

treasur-

social

chair-

man;

Mrs. Mike Camporeale, refresh-

ment

chairman;

Mrs.

Domenick

Tam-

arri, sick committee chairman; Mrs.
C. Arcangelo publicity chairman and
Mrs. Eldo Cassai, sergeant at arms.
All members interested in attending the banquet are asked to contact
Mrs. Roger Albert, Evolution avenue,
Highwood, or Mrs. Bert Sanders, 340
Bloom street, Highland
Park,
for
reservations.

Teen Age Members
Plans Annual Spring

Dance Here May 10
One of the anticipated events on
the social calendar of Highland Park
teen-agers

is the

annual

spring

dance

to be given by Teen Age club on
Saturday night, May 10, in the audiDress will
torium of Lincoln school.
be semi formal. The Shoreliners will
play for dancing.
Arrangements for the dance are in
the hands of Dick Eubanks, president
who is serving as_ ticket
Mary Lou Cameron, social
and Bob Peddle, publicity

chairman.
All high
are invited

school age boys and
to attend the party.

girls
Tic-

from

any

purchased

be

may

kets

vice

Gerhardt,

Dave

club;

the

of

president,
chairman;
chairman,

member of Teen Age club, which is
sponsored by Playground and Recreation board.

DID YOU SEE THAT !
I(T CHANGED ITS
OWN WATER |

WHY...
IT RINSED 3 TIMES
AUTOMATICALLY /

LOOK..THE CLOTHES ARE
BEING DAMP DRIED.. AND
NO ONE TOUCHED
THE BENDIX!
YES..AND BENDIX
EVEN TURNS ITSELF
OFF.,WITH NO ONE
AROUND!

Bethany Missionary
Society Will Hold
Birthday Luncheon
The Missionary society of Bethany
Evangelical church will hold its annual birthday luncheon at the church,
corner
streets,

of
Laurel
at 1 o’clock

and
McGovern
Thursday after-

noon, May 8. All members are urged
to be present, and may bring guests.
Mrs. Paul Willison, H.P. 115, should
be contacted
for reservations.

Since this branch of the Evangelical
church
and
the
United
-Brethren
church

merged

ary sOcieties
the Women’s
ice.

The

last

fall,

the

mission-

now are united under
Society of World Sery-

organization

at

Bethany

was

formed more than 50 years ago.
Mrs. Fred C. Noerenberg is president, assisted by Mrs. William Guyot,
vice

)A

president,

secretary,
treasurer,
librarian,

Mrs.

Mrs.
Mrs.
and

corresponding

Arthur

Vetter,

Walter
Meierhoff,
A. Judson
Wells,
Mrs.

John

Rhinehart,

‘secretary.

Seniors to Graduate
From Glencoe Temple

Religious School
The

largest

senior

class

in

the

his-

tory of the North Shore Congregation Israel Religious school will be
graduated next Friday evening, May
9, at

AND SAVES WATER... SAVES SOAP
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See it yourself—the wonderful, work-free Bendix washing
that has made hundreds of thousands of women ladies of
leisure on washdays—for nine years! There’s no question
about the Bendix. It’s been proved in use. See our demonstration—you’ll see Bendix washday miracles galore! Come
in now... see what washday freedom really is!

IMMEDIATE

DELIVERY

—

Ave. —

Glencoe

temple’s

graduation

15 MONTHS

MUU
Quick
TO

PAY

HIGHWOOD RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE CO.
917 Waukegan

the

exercises. All members of the class
will participate in the religious seryice, with Bruce Wertheimer, Aaron
Balkin and Lois Grauer delivering
addresses.
Rabbi Richard C. Hertz, who has
been teaching the senior class personally, will deliver the Baccalaureate sermon, “The Day You Live In”.

Highland

Park

1% Blocks North of Moraine Road, East of the Tracks

TEL. H. P. 4003

Service

NaH
397

ae

Central Avenue—Room
Highland Park
Telephone

H.

P. 1553

12

�=

PO-DO Special!

YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT

é“

Shaving Cream 37°
Lather or Brushless .

After Shave

Dy RU

501 Central

aus;

ON SALE

FRIDAY and
SATURDAY

ent

ra

A

|AY | sc2ckeee:

Total Value .. 76°

ve.

|

ct,
toumir

Cc

Both for SU
.

;
Walgreen shaving saving!

QUANTITIES

{= *;;

Remember MOTHER

\

By

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Lotion, 514-ounces .

DAY—May

*MOTHER’S

ene

UP

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favorite.

65
.

8

Dusting
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a

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|

HER HAIR

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IN PARIS

the SWEET
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iy

eur

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RICHARD

EVENING

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PACK OF 15
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6%-in.; white.
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MATCHES

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A
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SHAVING
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MOTH
—

BAGS

BUTCHER

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PURCHASE
—
KNIVES

2 DISH
—

CLOTHS

STATIONERY

�me.

Poe

304 Railway Ave., Highwood
Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

at length they may emerge, full-formed
and majestic, into the delights of life,
which

they

are

thenceforth

to rule.
—Carlyle

See

Misunderstandings —
\of Social Security
Can Delay Benefits

Presbyterian Women
Plan Group Meetings

y

ELVIRA
- HEALTH
SALON

Silence is the element in which great
things fashion themselves together; that

In Homes Monday

Qualified
wage
earners
over
65
years of age in some instances have

Bernard

Barnett,

manager

of the Waukegan,

Illinois, Social’ Se-

curity

said

field

office,

in her

today.

receive

benefits,”

most

Wage

Mr.

frequent

earner’s

Barnett

reason

impression

said.

was

the

meet

that

the

Murphey,

payments were in some way based on
need. This is wholly untrue. No mat-

ter

Hats

what

Suits

Dresses

rights

We are no different than anybody else.
Our stock rooms are crowded —
sale of

property,

income,

Spring

SO this

Model,

under

of

and

each

month.

The

is

survivors

to

attend

sponsored

a
by

the Woman’s
Society of Christian
Service of Wesley Methodist church,
on Friday, May 2, at the church on
North
avenue and
Lauretta
place,
beginning at 8 p.m. There will be
entertainment and refreshments will
| be

served.

“You'll love this milk of

Detter taste..

Richer Quality’

lane.

the

home

250

A. E. Lundin’s

home,

of

Mrs.

Bronson

James

street.

group

937 Lincoln

will meet

avenue.

;

The Chicago Presbyterial
‘society
will meet May 9 at 10:30 am. at
River Forest
Presbyterian
church.
For reservations, call or write Mrs.
Gordon Holland, 648 Delta road, H.P.
2274, before May 6.
Bible classes will be conducted during the month of May by Mrs. Arthur Tylee at the public library each
Thursday morning at 10 o'clock,
The regular ‘monthly meeting of
the board of the Woman's association will be held at 10 a.m. May 12
in the parish house.

representative

invited

demonstration

at

place.

Wesley Church to Sponsor
Stanley Demonstration
public

Park

Mrs. Eric Molke’s group will meet:
in her home at 723 Forest avenue,
Mrs. Jackson
Smart’s group will
meet in her home at 99 Sycamore

will be found in the city council room
at the city hall, from 1:30 p.m. to
3:30 p.m. these days.
:

The

No trekking to town

old-age

at 220

Mrs.
Paul
Mathew’s
group
will
meet at the home of Mrs, Carl Wolf,
1819 Krenn.
E

insurance are invited to get in touch
with the Social Security representative on his regular visit to Highland
Park the first and third Tuesdays

Stanley

:

man’s

Mrs.

in her

or other resources may be, he is
entitled to his Social Security benefits if he is 65, has worked long
enough
under
Social
Security
to
qualify, and is no longer working at
a job that comes under Social Security. He must file a claim, however,
to receive the benefits.”
Wage earners over 65 and others
who have any questions about their

Coats

ew

a

home

Mrs. Robert S. Froehlich’s group
will meet in’ her home at 380 Ravine
drive.
Mrs. F. B. Carpenter’s’ group will

“Every case of failure to file claim
when eligible, was due to some misunderstanding about their right to
“The

|

Group meetings of the Woman’s
association of Highland Park Presbyterian church will be held Monday
afternoon, May 5, at 1:15 o’clock in
the following locations:
Mrs. Rex Andrews’ group will meet

waited four or five years before filing their claims for benefits under
the old-age and survivors insurance
program,

ih

Start Intensive Drive for Scrap
Iron and Steel at Ft. Sheridan
An intensive drive for the collection of scrap iron and steel has
been
instituted
at Fort
Sheridan,
according to an announcement made
today by Col. Newton G. Bush,. commanding officer of the post.
Scrap
which is collected at Fort Sheridan
will be sold to civilian concerns in an
.effort to alleviate the present critical
shortage of ferrous scrap that exists
in the commercial field.
All the scrap which is collected by
the various units on the post will be
turned’

in

the

to

post

salvage

yard

and accumulations of worn and obsolete materials will be inspected to
determine whether or not they should
be

declared

scrap.

as

The drive at Fort Sheridan is a
campaign
part of the nation-wide
instituted by the war department at
all military installations throughout
the

country.

\

i"

BYE TBI

1\ Prepared Spaghetti

r

_

j

�wo Her
Highland Park |

Frosh-Soph Tracksters

Gets 26 Points
In Relays Here

Meet 57-46 Thursday

Little Giants Take Fifth Place
In Class B of Wheaton Relays

Despite unfavorable weather conditions Highland. Park High school’s
Frosh-Soph track team, coached by

CLASS
A
meee
ta
14
Oak Park ........ 6612
Waukegan
...... 13
New
Trier
ag i
eens
11
Neate
&lt;&lt;...
6
Hyde
Park
5
AMOR
cede
ead ck
4
East Aurora .... 3
Evanston
20
Thornton ........
2
Proviso ............ 18
West. Rockford
11/2

Mark

B
Downers Grove
Wheaton
........
Riverside ........
Glenbard
........
Highland Park

491
47
43
39
26

Traveling to Wheaton last Saturday, Highland Park High school competed in the annual Wheaton Relays.
The Little Giants, who are in the
Class B division because of an enrollment

of

less

than

1200

students,

McKenna

their

of :44.6.
the pole

One new record was set in
vault by Don Laz of West

Aurora with a vault of 11 feet 11 inches, the old mark was 11 feet 8%
inches.
Oak

Park

good

winds

prevailed

meet.

that

Demichelis

CLASS

B

cher,
Highland
Park,
fourth,
and
Peters,

third:
Mack,
Argo,
Glenbard,
fifth,
Dis-

tance 47 feet, % inch. —
DISCUS
THROW —wWon
by Derr, Downers Grove; Miller, Riverside, second; Peters,
Glenbard,
third;
Bierman,
Glenbard,
fourth, and Bostrom, Wheaton, fifth. Distance, 134 feet, 44 inch.
BROAD JUMP—wWon
by Laz, West Aurora;
Bartlett,
Riverside,
second;
Tyler,
Glenbard,
third;
Stinson,
Calumet
City,
fourth,
and
Earnstmeyer, Calumet
City,
fifth. Distance, 22 feet, 2 3/8 inches.
Shuttle
Relay—Won
by
High
Hurdles
Highland
Park
(Miller,
Haupt,
Hesler,
Behr);
Hinsdale,
second;
Calumet
City,
third; Downers
Grove, fourth, and Riverside, fifth. Time,
:44.6.
2 Mile Relay—-Won by Wheaton
(Cross,
Balog, Scott, Gilbert); Argo, second; Riverside, third; Downers Grove, fourth, and
Glenbard, fifth. Time, 8 :41.5.
100
Yard
Dash—Won
by Tyler,
Glenbard; Linciconi, University
High, second;
Stinson,
Calumet
City,
third;
Smith,
Downers Grove, fourth, and Wheaton, fifth.
Time,
:10.5.
Relay—Won
by
Freshman
Wheaton
(Zak,
Gary,
Balzhiser,
Fett);
Glenbard;
second; Calumet
City,
third;
Highland
Park, fourth, and
Riverside,
fifth. Time,
~ 121,31,

Low Hurdes Shuttle
Relay — Won
by
Hinsdale (Schneider, Woods, Corydon, McClelland); Downers
Grove,
second; Highland
Park,
third;
Riverside,
fourth;
and
Calumet

City,

fifth.

Time,

:40.3.

4 Lap Relay—Won
by Riverside (Wolk,
Michaels,
Hagen,
Symon);
Hinsdale,
second; Glenbard,
third;
University
High,
fourth, and Wheaton,
fifth. Time, 2 :43.7.
Sprint Medley—-Won
by Riverside
(Sy-

mon,

Tucek,

Michaels,

Frazier) ; Downers

Calumet

City,

- Grove, second;
fourth,

and

foal

Wheaton, third;
a

ew
al

*

2

McCall

Glenbard,

fifth. Time,

Ds ntheate
j
See

etre
am

a

throughout

low
(A),

hurdles—Behr

Schlossman

the

State Meet
Tuesday, May

na

(H.P.), Moore (A).
200-yd. dash—Dever

Sparsino

:58.2.
(HP):

(A).

(A),

(A),

Lambert

(A),

Goldsmith (H.P.). 97’ 4”.
Broad Jump — Knowlton (H.P.),
Houzy (A), Lecuff (H.P.). 17’ 234”.
(A)-tie
Pole

jump—Behr

(H.P.),

Discus—Mack

Houzy

Olsen (H.P.).

for 2nd. 5’ 234”.
Vault—Pinkerton

bela (A)-tie for Ist. 8’ 3”.
440-yd. Relay—(Argo),
Park).

(H.P.),

(A),

varout-

April 24 —

Varsity

Grove; Holmes, Downers Grove, and Hesler, Highland
Park,
tied for second
and
third; Siedelman, Calumet City, Wood, Caaumet
City,
Carlson,
Wheaton,
and
Gratteau, Wheaton,
tied for fourth and fifth.
Height, 5 feet 7 inches.
Fole Vault—Won by Don Laz, West Aurora; Calish,
University
High,
second;
Beuerman,
Glenbard,
third;
Thompson,
Wheaton,
fourth,
and
Drlden,
Wheaton,
and Haupt, Highland Park, tied for fifth.
Height, 11 feet 11 inches (new record; old
mark, 11 feet 8% inches, made by Free-

man, Sterling High, in 1944).

ies

13—New

Tues.,

May

at

Evanston.

17—District

Evanston.
Fri, May 23—State

series

at

the

two

schools.

In

*

Proviso Defeats
HPHS Baseball Team
Twice; 3-2, 8-3

By Bill Kelly

sae

Playing three Suburban league game

Cham-

paign. |
Sat., May 24—State Meet at Champaign.
Tues., May 27—Lake County Meet at
Lake Forest.
Sat., May 31—Suburban League Meet
at Evanston.

between

their previous
meeting,
the
Little
Giants won a one hit 4-0 victory from —
the Evanston nine.
.
The game is scheduled for 4:00 p.m. .
at the Evanston High diamond.
i

Track Meet at
Meet

ae

the Wildkits in the final game of the

gan, Proviso Frosh-Soph (Here).
Sat., May 16—Frosh-Soph Invitational
Sat., May

Strong

High school, whose teams

On
Tuesday
afternoon Highland
Park will travel to Evanston to battle

Wauke-

Trier,

team, they

Face Evanston

Varsity

Morton

(Here).

rated

7%»

(There).

12 —

a highly

be in Highland Park on Saturday,
May 17, for a double header with the 8
a
local team.
In other Suburban League games —
last week, Oak
Park
split with ~
Waukegan, taking the opener, 7-2, —
and losing the second game 5-3.

Frosh-Soph

Thurs, May 1 — Waukegan FroshSoph (Here).
fe)
Sat., May 3—Mooseheart Relays.
Tues., May 6—Maine Varsity (Here).
Wed., May 7 — Maine Frosh-Soph
(There).
May
Mon.,

team

The Flying Clouds from Harvey have —
won five straight games, and will

(There).

Park Avenue last Wednesday afternoon, April 23.
The individual times were good in
a

too impressive

ence since joining last year, have.
come up with a great baseball team, —
and are now on top in the league.

(Here).

Sat., April 26—Wheaton Relays.
Wed., April 30 — Waukegan Varsity

slow track. High point man for the
Parkers was Pete Haupt who scored
15 points by winning the 120-yd. high
hurdles, 220-yd. low hurdles, and the
pole vault. Bill Miller and Bill Hesler also made an impressive showing
in the local high school’s first victory
of the current track season.

.

:

not

have not gone very far in the Confer- _

Hunter

door meet of the season by defeating
Argo of the South Suburban League
6844-444 at the athletic field on West

and

Thornton

(FL.

Hunter

Argo

School —
Avenue

have become one of the dark horses
:
of the Suburban League race.

(A),

(H.P.),
(H.P.),

23—Argo

April

Wed.,

Thurs.,

High
Park

do not have

(H-P.), KieBroad jump—Hesler
balla (A), Ryan (H.P.), and Callahan
(A) tied. 18’ 1”.
880-yd. Relay—Won by Argo, Highland Park disqualified.
1947 Outdoor Track Schedule

Defeat Argo 6812-441,

the

(Here)

Tourna-

122’ 1”.

jump—Hesler

on

surprised everyone last Saturday by —
dealing Evanston a double setback
12-11, and 6-4. Although the Mustangs -

(H.P.),

(H.P.), Irons (H-P.). 5’ 8”.

winds

Field

23-24—

Archer

(Highland

First Outdoor Meet;

swing of

West

at

header

Morton’s

Close

(H.P.), Ziebell (A). 10° 6”.
High

after abrupt- |

of first place by |

at 1:00 p.m.

Jarrett

(A),

vault—Haupt

Pole

H. P. Thinlyclads Win

spite of the fact of heavy

double

Thornton

Zie-

Highland Park High school’s
sity tracksters won their first

Kahn.

:25.9,
220-yd. dash—Miller (H.P.), Callahan (A), Hutchison (H:P.). :25.1.
880-yd. dash—Lemmon (A), Bright
(H.P.), Farrell (H.P.). 2:17.3.
Olsen
Shot put — Archer (H.P.),
(H.P.), Lambert (A). 42’ 7%”.

(H.P.), Allan (A). 2:14.0.
(H.P.),: LamShot-put—Knowlton
bert (A), Jecha (A). 48’ 0”.

out

loss to Proviso, will attempt _

a double

Athletic

Park

Natkin,

(H.P.),

Hesler

Demiche-

‘

to get back in the victory

Halton (H.P.). 4:55.8.
(A), Be440-yd. dash—Finnegan
zak (A), Smith (H.P.). :58.2.
200-yd. low hurdles—Haupt (H.P.),

Behr

Geraci

High,

Park

dropped

ly being

:108.

(A).

run—Mack

Mile

Ray

Schedule

27—Oak

han (A), Mack

rs

Sports Editor

120-yd. high hurdles—Haupt (H.P.),
Hesler (H.P.), Seward (A). :17.0. |
100-yd. dash—Miller (H.P.), Calla-

lis

Discus—Jecha

By

Summaries

:26.3.

run—Jarrett

Ken

Saturday, May 31—League
ment (Evanston)

:14.1.

ne

t

Highland

Thursday—Waukegan (Here)
Friday and
Saturday,
May

(H.P.),

(H.P.).

and

peep
mo,
t

Highland Park Faces Evanston
Nine There on Tuesday, May 6

Saturday, May 10—District
Thursday,—Proviso (There)
Tuesday—Evanston (There)

mem-

Mt

Giants To Seek
Fourth And Fifth
Conference Wins

team.

King,

Tennis

high

sophomore

Dave

toe
tae
VEE

S

Friday, May 2—Morton (There)
Tuesday, May 6—New Trier (Here)

from

the

|

inexperienced

Rosenthal,

50-yd. dash—Knowlton (H.P.), Dever (H.P.), Sparsino (A). :6.0.
100-yd. dash—Dever (H.P.) Knowlton (H.P.), Sparsino (A). :11.4.
440-yd. dash—I,emmon (A), McKen-

High

DISTANCE
MEDLEY—wWon | by
Argo
(Jack
Lemmon,
James
Finnegan,
James
Callahan, Allan Mack); Wheaton,
second;
Downers
Grove;
third;
University
High,
fourth, and Glenbard,
fifth. Time, 6:54.5.
SHOT
FPUT—Won
by
Bostron, Wheaton; Smith,
Downers
Grove,
second;
Ar-

despite

an

ON

.

A few of the boys who will be expected to carry a heavy load for the
team are
Carky
Rubens,
Warner

Summaries
110-yd.

880-yd.

Oak Park won the Class A title for
the third straight year by scoring
66% points.
The nearest rival was
New Trier which scored 36 points.
This also was the fifth time in which
Oak Park has won the crown.

with

ber of the track squad looked good
also and although he was defeated in
the half-mile his time of 2:18.0 is considered good in
keeping
with
the
weather.

(H.P.),

Tops

freshman

considered

division.

Highland Park’s high hurdles shuttle relay with Miller, Haupt, Hesler,
and Behr took first place with a time

outdoor

“

7

local net men travel to Morton to
face the Mustangs .in
the
opening:
match of the 1947 season. Prospects
for Highland
Park
are none
too
bright as they open the league season

Highland
Park showed good form in
the 440-yd. dash. His time of :58.3 is

scored 26 points to capture fifth place
in

a

,

The tennis season gets under way
tomorrow for Highland Park as the

track season by defeating Argo of the
South Suburban League 57-46 in a
dual meet at Argo
last Thursday,
April 24.
High point man for the meet was
Jim Knowlton who garnered 18 points
for the Parkers by winning the 50-yd.
dash, shot put, and the broad jump.
John

.

,

CLASS
Hinsdale
........ 26
Calumet City ....23%
ease
tae 20
University High1'6
West Aurora ..10

its

*

Men Travel to
Morton Tomorrow

By Steve Herz

opened

-

Highland Park Net

Defeat Argo in Dual

Panther

e
¥

during the week, the best the Highland
Park High school nine could do was
to win one and drop two, thus dropping to third place in the league standing. The victory came at Waukegan
a week ago last Tuesday by a 5 to 3
score, while the losses came against
Proviso here last Saturday by’ the —
scores of 3 to 2 and 8 to 3,
:
In the Waukegan game, the Bulldogs started their scoring in the first
inning on a walk and two singles good
for one run. The “Little Giants” tied’,
it up in the third inning but the Waukeganites came back with two more | ao)
runs in the fourth. The Parkers gar- |

nered another in the fifth and then all
was quiet until the top of the seventh
and then the Giants really turned loose.
Eddie
Peasentini
singled,
Plummer

(Continued on page 33)
¥

—

et
=

_

�pte

Page

Thursday, May 1, 1947

28

VILLAGE PANTRY
644

Bank

Home
Juke

Lane

Owners

Boxes

Illinois. Simplex

A GOOD PLACE
TO EAT

AIR

Attention

Now
Available
Rumpus
Room

for

Your

Distributing

Co.

Phone Winnetka 4166

Exclusive Wurlitzer Distributor
S. Wabash Ave.
Wabash 4090
Chicago 5, Illinois

831

Everett Millard
To Head Olympic
Ski Fund Drive

FILTERS

1” and 2’’—All Sizes
Murphy and Miller, Inc.
932

Linden

Ave.,

Winnetka

Every Skier Asked to Invest
In American Team’s Chances
Everett L. Millard of Highland Park,
secretary of the Snow Chase club of
Chicago,

of

has

the

1948

been

for the central
today

by

appointed

Olympic
area,

National

Ski

chairman

Fund

it was

drive

announced

Chairman

Albert

Sigal of California.
Contributions of fellow skiers are the
sole source of
U. S. Olympic

a

AND

YOU’LL

NEVER

BE

SATISFIED

WITH

LESS!

RE-VERSO-ROL
More thorough washing
and rinsing.

+ H H

issued

by

Millard.

The

American team, selected after trials last
March at Sun Valley and Seattle, includes
jumpers
and_
slalom-downhill
racers. Four of six leapers selected for

next year’s team are from the central
West, historic home of the soaring
sport: Ralph Bietila and Joseph Perrault of Ishpeming, Walter Bietila of
Iron Mountain, Michigan, and Sverre
Fredheim

of St. Paul,

Minnesota.

Win-

Damp dries, dripless,
ready for the line.

ner of the men’s downhill tryouts was
Jack Reddish, a former Snow Chaser
of Chicago. Among other downhillslalom stars are Bob Blatt, Barney

TOP-FIL-DOR

team

No bending or stooping
—it’s waist high.

Brynhild

ROTO-DRIER

McLean

hands.

DRIVE

“The
French

GREATER

while a girls’

Gretchen
Paula

Andrea

Fraser,

Kann

and

Mead.

events.

Canadian,
skiers are

competition

CAPACITY

Swiss,
terrific.

promises

to

be

Norse and
The skiing
the

hottest

in history. I hope every American
skier will invest a dollar and a prayer
in the success of our team.”

10 full pounds dry weight.
Saves

Grasmoen,

old

summer

Scientifically times washing and rinsing cycles.

LARGER

Movitz,

“We've lined up a crack American
ski team,” Millard said. “Now we've
got to finance their invasion of St.
Moritz, Switzerland, for the winter
Olympic games, which are held separately and financed separtely from the

Protects careless fingers

HYDRO-PEL

and Dick

includes blonde

14-year

SAFTI-LATCH
and

++ +

statement

expense money for the
ski team, according to

ECONOMY

According to Millard’s

use of hot water,

statement

the

committee raising the fund in this area
will include one member from each of

soap, electricity.

the 60 active clubs of the Central U.S.
BETTER

BUILT

TO

DO

A

BETTER

JOB

Ski

Association.

(Continued

Just put clothes in Launderall ...
add soap ... flip the switch ... and
your washday work

takes

over

from

matically. Then

is done. Launderall

there—washes,

Come

double

Once

rinses and spin dries clothes dewy fresh,
ready for the line—and does it all auto-

A i

,

THE

F

COMPLETELY

CONLON

AUTOMATIC

SHERONY
314 RAILWAY

305 WAUKEGAN

a demonstration

seen

today.

Launderall

page

will

feature

30)

for those who want

clean—dewy
fresh—
satisfied
with
less.

Ay

faceb

Blue Moon
GOLD-N-RICH:

THOR MANGLE $79.95

HARDWARE

drive

wash

DELIVERY

HOUSEHOLD

AVE., HIGHWOOD

for

LAUNDRY

AVE., HIGHWOOD

COLUMBIA
'

in

you’ve

on

even cleans

i

clothes
sparkling
you'll never
be

HOME

IMMEDIATE
MANGLE $164.95

Launderall

and shuts itself off !

The

a

TEL. H. P. 2041

APPLIANCES

'

TEL. H. P. 1533

®@ Distinctive
flavor and tex~ ture in a natural semi-soft
cheese.

�Please

Notice!

Your Highland Park A&amp;P
Super Market Is Temporarily
Closed For Remodeling
Re-Opening Friday, May 9.
@

We will look forward to serving you in a bright,
and completely remodeled store.
Just a few of the new features will be

Dept., a refrigerated Fruit and Vegetable
sen Dept., and a new
a

for your A&amp;P

Forest, Winnetka

and Wilmette.

Grocery

Muscatel,

Lake

Only!

Tokay,

Sherry

F. 1. SWEET WINES
%

gal. $1.89

Blended

LORD

Whiskey

........ 5th

CALVERT
Whiskey

Blended

SEAGRAM’S 7 CROWN

5th

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$ 452

Blended,

$ 3 94

4.....::.....-..-..

B &amp; L SCOTCH

S Veare

(iG,

6.00.6 5k-- 5th

(Scotch)

A Real Value

OLD SMUGGLER

........ 5th

HAVE

CANNED

WE

NOW

Fox

DeLuxe
Drewry’s
2

Cans

Shop and Save
at Your

Friendly
A.
PP.
Super-Market

$6 °°
$5 85

per

Values.

27¢

Case

a new

ORO.

Bag

ae id os

te

Sweet

PETER PAN

20-072.

PEAS

“

Fresh

Orchard

A&amp;P

APPLESAUCE

Flaver

Bake an Apple Pie

Sliced

85c

3 5c

45¢

23¢

BREAD... -2uoaves ZO
2 16-0z.

loaves

19¢

Am.

94 -Ib.

For

Sandwiches!

For

Sandwiches;

5c

ee

Food

Cheese

American

oh.

MEL-O-BIT

CHEESE 552k 2 vic toe
CH

21 c
ee

FOOD

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SO
c

2 Cans 2°

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Processed Ched-O-Bit

PABST-ETT

No. 2 1} 5 Cc

a
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Enriched,

aap

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Brand

Products...
Good At All Stores

Cans

eee
en and Salads
MAZOLA OIL
Boys
caine ics acs Blas. ecupegdadescteas

APPLES.

Delicates-

Dairy

.

-lb. $] 24

COFFEE

Broadcast

BEER!

Meister Brau
Tavern Pale

$3.09

BOKAR

85¢

OLD RARITY SCOTCH = $775

312 -years 06

Dept.,

favorites, visit our stores at Lake

Vigorous and Winey
or Port

5th

a new Jane Parker Bakery

Good At All Stores

Forest

Store

decorated

Food Dept.

In the meantime

Liquor Values...
At Our

Frozen

newly

AEM See

AMEMB

aie

pkg.

Brand
‘

3

pkgs.

3

3¢

Borden’s

LEIDERKRANZ
Is

cleans Aitdtn dae apne 2&gt; e 29¢
ois

Sunnybrook

Large,

Fresh

Ctn.

................

GRADE “A” EGGS
Doz.

in Visual

Sunnybrook

H

Hig

Medium

Grade

EGGS

Rep ee ea

57¢
“A”
5 4c

May Issue of
Woman’s Day
Magazine

Now on Sale
5c per Copy

�_ BUY NOW at REDUCED
Your Mother’s Day and
Graduation Gifts
Discount

Merchandise

on All

members

_ The

Not Fair Trades

Book

as volunteer

Mesdames

IL,

workers.

sons

in their

locality

Lincoln School Tonight
Parents

and

children

of

Lincoln

school are cordially invited to a movie
entitled “World Series of 1946,” to
be shown tonight at 7:30 o’clock in
the school auditorium.

A. MORDINI
W.

Central
FINE

Ave

Highland

WATCH-JEWELRY
1 TO

2 WEEK

lead

Park

REPAIRING

SERVICE
— New Address —
62 E. VAN
BUREN ST.
HARRISON 3747-3748

will

wind

up

in the

fall

of

area.
in

a

recognized

“Central

this

drive,’

club

within

are

out

skiers
declared

to

Chairman

Millard, “as they did when founding
the National Ski association here in
1904.”
Millard began skiing in Italy and
Austria and was a founder of the Snow
Chase club, instrumental in bringing
the downhillers’ phase of the sport to
the midwest hills. During wartime
navy service Millard reported skiing adventures from Persia. During the past
winter he initiated the formation of.
the Chicago Ski Clubs, an informal
league now embracing 11 winter sports
groups of the metropolitan area. Some
years ago he designed a safety ski
binding made by removing toestraps
from

JEWELER
550

campaign

the

World Series Movie at

Ends

The

member

for donations.

page 28)

with showings of a one-hour film now
being taken by Dick Durrance, famous
ski ace, portraying the 1948 winter
Olympians in high-speed action.
The quota set for the Central Ski
association, a division of the National
Ski assogiation and affiliated with the
U.S. Olympic association, is $6,250 or
approximately one dollar for every

Seyl,

John

from

a mail appeal to all skiers as well as
solicitation of special gifts from clubs,
stores and individuals. Buttons and
certificates will acknowledge the gifts.

have volun-

Dompke,
Dominic
Pasquesi,
John
‘Santi, Joseph Tomei, Frank McLaughlin, James Connelly, Marshall Williams, M. Wiesfuss and Tom Clark.
Each worker is to cohtact 10 per-

- Cutlery
-

to act

following members

teered:

- Compacts

Glassware

In Cancer Drive

Council of Catholic Women of the
Archdiocese of Chicago, to enlist the
help of its organization by selecting 10

Costume Jewelry

Flat Silver

(Continued

cer drive through the recommendation and cooperation of the Rev. James
C. Curry,
executive
director of the

-

Rings

Catholic Mothers
The Mother’s guild of Immaculate
Conception school recently received
an appeal from the chairman of the
Illinois division of the National Can-

- PRICES

A 20%

i Pnlist Helpof

a

conventional

binding,

with

the

irons bent in slightly so that the foot
can escape in case of a spill. This
“safetyized” binding, first advocated by
Millard’s club to lessen the toll of
breaks and sprains, is now in increasing use by skiers nationalle
Chicago offices of the Olympic Ski
Fund have been opened at 111 West
Washington Street, Chicago.

— Scarlett’s
P.O.

Glencoe,

Illinois

BOX

104

Glencoe

1808
‘

Spring Opening Tonigh
Thursday May 1
|

Dinner - Dancing - Prizes
Carl Miller’s Orchestra
lone O’Donnell &amp; Her

Violin And Many

Others

:

�a

7.

Wheaton Students to
Give Sacred Concert

Rites

|

concert

of

sacred

classics

will

be

presented by music students of Wheaton college at the Winnetka Bible
church,

886

Elm

St.,

Winnetka,

_

,

Se

a

C

MEADOW GOLDS
THE ONLY BUTTER.
FOR My FAMILY

At Winnetka Church
A

.

Sun-

day evening at 7:30 o’clock. Mignon
Bollman Mackenzie,
associate
professor of music in the Wheaton college conservatory of music, will direct

34

Bach,

vocalists

in

Schubert

MIGNON
The

and

B.

orchestral

a

program

of

Verdi.

MACKENZIE
prelude

which

Q

opens

Ne

the concert will be directed by Frances
Whitlock

of

the

Kramer,

Wheaton

former

conductor

college

symphony

that

wonderful

orchestra, while student Ruth Deitsch
will act as accompanist for the chorus.

ae

enrolla
ment, originating from 14 states, the
District of Columbia and Hawaii.
one

admission

is

asked,

and

wrapper

:

}

-

concert.

NACI

Red

Cross

A el

RNa

TRE

TOR

Staff

Assistance Class May 6 and 8

corps class will

as a dewy buttercup...That’s the
Rich, golden, fresh

Meadow

Gold

is now

twice as popular

among

be held at Chicago Chapter Red Cross

way delicious Meadow Gold Butter comes to your

Chicago

families—with

its wholesome,

buttery

headquarters;:02?, South ‘Wabash eve-

— doubly protected now by a new exclusive
table

goodness protected by the greatest flavor-saver idea

ae A ocssca hes - Bae eden
fot this work will give much needed

aluminum foil wrapper which keeps fine Meadow
Gold flavor twice as long! Meadow Gold, in its new

ever developed in butter packaging!
Treat your family to a new delight today. Stop at

typing and clerical service at Hines

metal wrapper, says “No Visitors” to other food

_your grocer’s and pick up a pound of butter in the

And because each quaryour refrigerator.
8
y

It’s better to eat butnew a/uminum wrapper.
bright
PP
&amp;

A Staff Assistance

Vaughan.
and.
District Home
chapter

Squth
and at

heepitels, the
Service office,

in
flavors
;
ter pound

:

headquarters.

is individually wrapped,

the last tastes

Cross Motor corps, also
ee ae ie oar

just as fine and creamery-fresh as the first!
No wonder more food-wise women every day

two Mondays, May 19 and 26, at the

are asking for Meadow Gold Butter. No wonder

The Red
es Ce

above address from 1 to 3 p.m.
A
special class for teachers and college
students is planned for June.

ter that stays fresh twice as Jong. And only Meadow

Gold has the aluminum wrapper! Don’t throw the
wrapper away till you've finished the quarter pound.

§Rewrap the unused portion, keep it flavor-fresh,

Meadow Gold Butter
é

f

SOLD

;

Cue get
Pick

;

those pants cleaned

DeLuxe
Up

Phone

one
and

way

Highland

DeLuxe

Service

Park

455

Cleaners

454 Waukegan Ave.
SCR

at

MEU

AT THESE

STORES:

WILMETTE

WINNETKA

HUBBARD

Holbrook Royal Blue Store

Pauloplos Foods

ee

R. W. Rapp Co.
North Town Fruit Market
Van Deusen Grocery and Market

Redke’s Grocery and Market
Hill’s Market
Voltz Grocery and Market

rocery and
bee
AM...
reer
KENILWORTH

George 8. Winters

R. W. Ropp Co.

Kenilworth Grocery and Market

HIGHLAND

NORTHBROOK

Highwood

HIER

OEMS

GLENVIEW

Country Side Store
Charles Levernier

:

PARK

Rapp Brothers
Sunset Grocery and Market

Rugen’s Store

Blue Goose Food Mart

Midwest

Suburban Grocery and Market

Store

WOODS

at

5

pat

ntar

Market

==

R. J. Croak

or another!”

Delivery

aes

7

”

every-

is cordially invited to attend this

Announce

;

keeps the delicious Meadow Gold flavor

pee ofee
cecross-section
the college
No

new

meses ee
and ae
Delicatessen
Highway
ystlund’s

'

GLENCOE
Glencoe

Grocery

and

Market

i

—

�Many “Play Bal

|

Store Hours, 9:15 to 5:45
.

Masibell Fell ¢ Conpeny

\Con
Continue

| For Neild’s Opening _

4

Practice Session
Neild’s Sport.
which

this

shop

summer

softball
will

team,

compete

a-

gainst top-flight major league softball
teams under the lights
at
Sunset
park, successfully
opened
its first
practice session of the season last
Sunday afternoon on the Sunset park
diamond.

Market Square

Despite

chilly

weather,

a_

large

squad of players was on hand to greet
Manager Robert “Bocker” Petersen
for the initial workout. According to
plans

announced

Sunday,

the

Neild’s

team will hold practice every Wednesday night and Sunday afternoon until the

season

opens

May

16.

All players still wishing to seek positions

on

eee

be present
Oe
OE

THURSDAY,

TOS

10

Save Now!

OREO
CC

team

spring coats and suits

May

Creative

eae

$37

te
Se
OLAS

$47

EO

$67

ASO

See!

See!

See!

See!

M.A.,
M.A.,

S.T.L.
S.T.D.

MASSES:
:
Sundays—6
:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:0u
and 12 noon.
Weekdays—6 :80 - 8:15.
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays
eves. of First Fridays ane
Holy Days
4:00 and 7:80 p.m

$52

Se

J. Skoner,
O’Connell,

See!

An appropriate

adopt them for
The banquet

p.m.

and

chicken

will
dinner

the evening.
is scheduled

include
to be

’

10

for

6:30

sumptuous

prepared

bythe

Ruth

girl’s

cotton

skirts

and

10

diapers.

Twenty workers, averaging six or
seven at a gathering, worked a total
of 420 hours to produce these 145
garments and the layette.
During the same period the knitting
group produced 23 sweaters.
Thirteen workers
plete them.

put in 610 hours

Linden

ROOFING

Ave.

—

to com-

CO.

Hubbard

Woods

742

Years

HAVE ALL THE SOFT WATER YOU NEED
AT THE TURN OF A FAUCET WITH—

reefer sits

os

jacketed dresses
box coats

long torso suits
tailored flannels
Guaranteed by ©)”

Apparel—Second Floor

Cyaan

o

366 Central Avenue—Highland
2207

Park

Highland
=

ath,

being

The Red Cross sewing group meets
every Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Public Service building on Central
avenue.
Since there is much work
to be accomplished, volunteers for
this important job of the Red Cross
are badly needed.
Following is a summary of what
has been
accomplished
during the
winter season,
from
November
25
through April 22, by the Highland
| Park group:
Twenty boy’s wool shirts, 80 girl’s
cotton
dresses,
1 layette, 5 boy’s
pants, 5 girl’s wool skirts, 10 boy’s
wool coats, 5 women’s bed jackets,

Serving the North Shore for 40

Kenilworth

ee

a

kitchen committee headed
by
Kightly and Evelyn Kalseim.

BECKER

970

short, swingy coats
:

is

Wessling
and
Norman
Christman.
Each mother is urged
to invite
a
“son” to be present. “Sons” will be
shared with mothers who desire to

Ph. Winnetka

;

program

planned by the committee, composed
of: Mrs. L,. Laubenstein, Miss Audrey

Anything From a Little Leak
To A New Roof Over Your Old One
Estimates Cheerfully Given
Without Cost or Obligation
CALL US NOW

See!

is

church.

ROOF REPAIRS

bolero costumes
fine tweeds

Trail,”

For Assistance

1:
Writers

Deerfield and Green Bay Roaas
Highland Park 2u0z
Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison,
Pastor
Edmund
John P.

Mother-Son

Sewing Group Appeals

Rev.

Rev.
Rev.

the

the theme of the banquet to be held
Friday evening, May 16, at Bethany

Local Red Cross

6:30 p.m. Friendship Club dinner
and election of officers.
MONDAY, May 5:
8 p.m. G.S.O.
TUESDAY, May 6:
8:15 p.m. Paul Lawrence Dunbar
club.
THURSDAY, May 8:
12 Noon, Council luncheon.

Rt.

“Along

_

to

Calendar

TPA

See!

c@eeeeeeeeeoceaeeeeeeeseene

See!

requested

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

Ce

ere

drastically reduced

a.m.

are

for these sessions.

Y.W.C.A.

tO

C8O0

the

Plans for

other-Son Banquet
At Bethany Church ©

Park

342 |
oi

Reo

�Store Hours, 9:15 to 5:45

| Morton Here on Wednesday
Highland
ban

Park

League

High’ school

Champion

Subur-

Golf

team,

coached by Harry
Bolle,
will face
Morton High school tomorrow (Friday) afternoon at Sunset Valley Golf
Course in Highland Park. The Giants
will be defending the league crown
which

they

captured

last

year.

(Be-

cause of deadline last night’s results
against Thornton are unavailable).
Although it is a little early to say,
many Highland Park golf enthusiasts
re conceding the State Championship to the Parkers. All the boys on
the

team

are

veteran

golfers

with

“Mouse” Ori, Amedio Minorini, Rich
Sheridan (who last year shot a hole
in one), leading this year’s well experienced

Next

team.
Face

New

Trier

Wednesday

afternoon

High-

land Park will travel to New Trier to
face
the Green
Wave
in the third
league match of the year.

Last week the Little Giants won
two practice meets, defeating Taft of
Chicago, who for four years have
been

City

League

Champions,

and

also defeating one of the West Suburban
League’s
powerhouses,
LaGrange.
Golf Schedule
Friday, May 2—Morton (Here)
Wednesday, May 7 — New Trier
(There)
Tuesday, May 13—Waukegan (There)
Saturday, May 17—DISTRICT
Monday,
Tuesday,

May

May
May

game

it

was

of

the

run,

a

triple,

three

doubles

and

Market Square

three

should have at least tied the game up
in their half of the seventh, but with
the bases loaded and one out, Meggorini

you’ve got to hand it

and Ott could not get the ball out of
the infield.
In the second game it was the Pro-

to Mother on her day,

viso six

run

the

Giants.

two

hits,

second

This
two

inning

inning

walks,

included

only

error,

two

one

stolen bases, and a hit batter good
six runs

and

a margin

\

that downed

which

RN

Sunday,

May

ll!

for

Highland

Park could -never overcome. H.P. got
their three runs in the sixth on a
pretty good hitting spree, including two
doubles

and

three

singles.

in the first game
8-3.

Final

score—

5-3 and in the second

' ]. indispensable
. .
stunning black
calf bag, $13.50*
*plus federal excise tax

MEET

Defeats

struck

out,

and

after

Piacentini and Plummer.

TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED
BY EXPERT REPAIRMEN
All

Rayunas

After

third

straight

league

Highland Park.
“.. The Little Giants

Harder,

ON

Bedspreads
win or Full
he
ri

525

Central

BEDROOM

Ave.

H.P.

sizes up to 4 x 6

3377

acme
—
|

[E M/ombskin gloves)
from’ England,*$5

3100
Pee a
eer

Marshall Field &amp; Company

che

(made in our own kitchens)

ft.

3. mouth watering .. .
White Ribbon Candy
Box—I pound, $1.60,

AVENUE

Winnetka

white doeskin—tanned.

Vamty-Skirts
2 Piece
1050

BATH SETS, CURTAINS, SHOWER SETS
LINDEN

Tel.

ENSEMBLES

Draperies
Lined or Unlined
1250 - 1450

RUGS—AIl

2. imports... soft)

Guaranteed

CHANDLER'S

for

string of victories

SALE

SHAG

victory

Work

NOW AVAILABLE
Office Typewriters
Adding Machines
Filing Equipment
Order Today

the H.P. pitcher, grounded. out, Malizia
singled scoring Murphy. This ended
the scoring for both teams and meant

944

hitting

singles. Don Blasius, of basketball fame
hit the triple in the first inning but
didn’t score and Pete Cislack blasted
his home run to deep center in the third.
Incidentally Cislack also contributed
one of the doubles. Highland Park

dropped his pop foul “Junior” Murphy
hit a long double to left center scoring

the

powerful

tae ls Ge

“Pirates” that spelled defeat for the
“Parkers.” These hits included a home

(Continued from page 27)
bunted and when the Waukegan pitcher, Johnson’s throw to second was too
slow both runners were safe. McDermott

broken by losing a double header
Proviso last Saturday. In the first

19—Evanston
(Here)
20—Proviso (There)

23-24—STATE

Proviso

was
to

2 pounds, $3.20

Q Ye

LAKE GENEVA NAVAL CAMP ~~
CONDUCTED
NORTHWESTERN

MILITARY

AND

BY
NAVAL

ACADEMY

e@ Boys 14 to 17 learn seamanship, boating. 75 miles from
‘ Chicago. Cutters, sailboats, motorboats. Junior Camp
(boys 11 to 13) — sailing, swimming, sports.
WRITE

104 SOUTH

SHORE DRIVE

FOR

CATALOG

LAKE GENEVA, WISCONSIN

Gifts —First Floor

|

—

�_ Page 34
ory

Town

shape

Talk.

.

. only $2.00.

Davis.

MUSIC
THE

MERRY

MONTH

OF

MAY!!

The sun is shining, birds are singing, bees are buzzing, and the grass
is green!
So help yourself to happiness and drive out to Villa Moderne
for a gay Lunch or a gala Dinner.
Frank
Hutchins’ provides
the best
the

world

affords

in

Food,

Atmos-

phere, and Hospitality.
Henri Genplays during the
dron’s Orchestra
Dinner Hour and for Dancing after
Nine.
Skokie at County Line.

Room

Sun

and

Porch

planning

is

in

which will. give beauty and comfort
Grace Herbst
to family and friends.
—

Interior

stunning

her

for

noted

Furnishings — has a wonderful collection of Summer Furniture—Chairs,

Divans, Tables, Umbrellas, etc. Upholstery is in gayest colors and rain

and sun proof. Miss Herbst will plan
your arrangements for you to the
smallest detail. Buy now in order to
avoid disappointment in delivery. 563
Lincoln Ave., Winnetka.
EMILY JACOBI
INTIMATE APPAREL SHOP
for ImREDUCTIONS
DRASTIC
Girdles
Pantie
of
ance
Clear
te
media
and Briefs of Lace Lastex and Satin

Reduced from $8.50 to $5.00,

Lastex.
Nylon,

Satin, and

Lace

Girdles

Lastex

Satin
$8.50 and $10 values for $5.00.
Bandettes reduced from $1.75 to $1.00.
and
Bed Jackets — dainty Organdy
to
$10.95
from
de,
Broca
Silk
Rayon
$5.00. House Coats from $17.95 to $10.
Chiffon and Satin Negligees, values to
Brunch
$42.50 at $29.50 and $18.50.
Coats—Silk Brocade $17.95 reduced to
$11.50. Winnetka, 578 Lincoln Ave.
SPRING COSTUME SUITS
REDUCED
DRASTICALLY
for her fashknown
Elsie Thal, well
ionable women’s apparel, is having a
at

Sale

remarkable

this

oOp-

most

Giving as much as
portune time.
Beautiful Town Suits
50% Discount.
at thrilling Savings to early buyers.
Two piece Suits—some with Matchvalues.
wonderful
Blouses—all
ing
Sheer Wool with up-to-this-minute
Drop in
fashion details and styling.
while the selection is still quite complete. 565 Lincoln Ave., Winnetka.
SKIES ARE TWICE AS BLUE
TREES ARE TENDER GREEN
Spring is in the air. It’s delightful to
gather up a few friends and drive
out to the famous Moraine Hotel for
Every one will enjoy it, no
Lunch.
Dining Room overlooking the
end.
Lake, done up in new Spring colors.
Full course Lunch from 80c to $1.00.
in the
Dinners
service.
Excellent
beautiful

New

start at $1.85.
H.P. 4444,

Room

Amsterdam

801

Road.

Sheridan

GIVE MOTHER
GLITTER AND GLAMOUR

Mother will adore a handsome piece
of Costume Jewelry for her Mother’s
Chandler’s have all that’s
Day Gift.
new and lovely in their Evanston
One
Chatelaines.
Glorious
Store.
Gold Antique design. Others in Aqua,
Multi-color
and
Pearl,
Amythest,
Yellow snake chain Choker
stones.
with exquisite light Amythest fastening.

Also

Bracelet

Gold

and

finish

Earrings

Pill

boxes

to

match.

in heart

YOUR

MEALS

Cocktail Lounge open till the wee
small hours.
Waukegan Rd. at Lake

her
ways

the

WITH

and Lobster Tails.
Complete Dinners
served.
Open 4 p.m. daily, Noon on
Sat.,
Sun.,
Holidays.
Old
English

Glenview.

IT’S SUMMER

hostess

smart

The

and

Dinner is twice enjoyable when there
is Music. ‘The
Glenview
Country
House was fortunate in procuring the
services of the famous Hildegarde
Sills whose playing of the Hamménd
Organ is well known.
Noted for
wonderful
Steaks,
Chops,
Chicken

St.,

SUDDENLY

Sher man

®

OF

THE VERY HEART
YOUR COLOR SCHEME

through

repeated

Hotel
Newly

Sovereign
Decorated

Ballroom

and

Private Rooms for Weddings, Banquets and Business Meetings.

You'll find in the new patterns in
Glosheen being shown by Old Colony
Home
Fashions.
These *charming
color bright prints are most attractive
and are your safe guide to perfect
color schemes.
“African Daisies” is
the new
bow-tied
print—a_
fabric
drama
for living rooms, bedrooms,
dining
rooms.
Glosheen
keeps
its
shimmering finish and fresh flower
colors

GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50
SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

washings

and

sunlight exposure. $1.15 a yard.
Green Bay Rd.
Wil. 6006.

119

Swimming

Pool

NOW
OPEN
Available to

the

Public

Kenmore at Granville
Phone: BRiargate
8000

knit

layette

needs;

Wolf
Edward
Wolf

bibs,

binders,
shirts, nighties,
training
pants. 35c
- $2.
B—Blankets, hand appliqued summer
weight.
Also washable comforter
spreads of chenille, silk, batiste or
dotted swiss.
$3.95 - $16.95.
C—Conchita baby dresses, hand made
white imports of great delicacy.
For Christening and, other occasions. $4.95
- $14.95.
Carlson Bldg.,
Evanston. 630 Church. Uni. 7709.
BERNIE
AT “THE

CUMMINS
SKY CLUB”

For the very
first time
a great
“Name” Band is playing in the suburban area. The famous Bernie Cummins and his Orchestra have opened
for a long engagement at this attractive

Dine

and

Dance

Spot

on

Harlem

and North Aves. (just before entering
Oak Park).
I can give my personal
signature as to the excellent Food,
and the Dance Floor is unusually fine.
So drive out\ for Dinner and the

On April 21 Pack No. 85 of the Cub
Scouts participated in one of their
regular meetings at the parish house
of Trinity Episcopal church. In addition to two skits presented by Dens No.
2 and No. 4, a colored motion picture
showing Scout activities provided the
evening’s entertainment.
The
movie,
shown through the courtesy of the Boy
Scouts of America, portrayed the many
activities in which Scouts are interested.
At the court of honor which followed, the following awards were presented:
Livingston,
Andy
Bobeat:
Frank
Lunding, John Stevens.
Wolf: Edward Oppenheimer, John
Nixon,

BABY WEEK GIFT IDEAS
SIMPLE AS A-B-C
A—Arnold

Cub Scout Pack No. 85 Meeting

INC.

“Well, whoever he is—he
keeps
following me and recommending
Zagalia’s!!—Says it’s still vital to
give automobiles
the
best
care
possible.”
:

Zagalia’s Service Station
401 Waukegan

Ave., Highwood

ee

Dukie

Winters.

Gold Arrow:
Oppenheimer.
Silver

Arrow:

PHILCO
eA8) ar

When

you

ae Kcr
FIRST
MORTGAGE
HOUSE

COMMADORE”
NOW OPEN

have

a yen

for

good

food,

remember the newly opened Commadore on Skokie.
This is a newly
decorated

and

remodeled

restaurant

which has no end of fresh charm.
Specializing in both American and
Chinese dishes.
Complete
Meals
served

or

wide

variety

of

a

la

carte

for late snacks.
Cozy Cocktail
Lounge in connection.
Just 600 ft.
south
of County
Line
and
Villa
Moderne.

LOVE YOUR DOG?
Then send him to the Butterworth
Kennels while you are out of town.
You will have such peace of mind
knowing that he is safe and happy
there.
Every known equipment for
Dog’s health and comfort in the large
buildings.
Big, shady yard for Dog’s
outdoor

hours.

reservations.

Ruth

Call

2810

W.

H.P.

Park

2967

Ave.

Wakefield

for

It’s the amazing new way to
play records invented by
Philco. No more fussing with
lids, tone arms

or needles.

A

powerful radio, too. Immediate
delivery, while our stock lasts.
HIGHWOOD
RADIO &amp;

APPLIANCE

CO.

917 Waukegan
Ave. —
H.
1%
Blocks North of Moraine
east of the tracks
JOHN BOSSELLI, Prop.
TEL.
H. P. 4003

P.
Rd.,

Joel

Botker,
Botker,

Peter Onderdonk, Michael Wurth.
Kurz,
Bobby
Weed,
Neal
Bear:
Tommy Diehl. _
Bear Gold Arrow: Neal Weed, Larry Rubel.
Bear Silver Arrow:
Robby Diehl,
Andre Duchateau.
Lion: Bud Brown.
The following Cubs received their
WEBELOS badges; this is the highest award obtainable by a Cub and is
the only Cub award that may be worn
on the Boy Scout uniform:
Jimmy Jacobson, Bobby Irons, Kenneth Pierce, David Front and John
Crowell.
The next pack meeting will be held
at Camp Dan Beard at 11 am. on
June 7. Kite flying will be the order
of the day; Cubs are to make their
own kites; prizes will be awarded for
the best homemade kites that will fly.

Dance.

“THE
IS

Joel

135 $. LA SALLE ST.
ANDOVER

2200

�— on

——-—

. a

:

SCOUTING WITH TROOP 52
By

Boy! oh boy! was I ever fooled!
Last week I encouraged the fellows
to try for a few awards by the next
pack meeting, but look what happened

...report

after

report

of

honors galore that will be passed out
on May 10th. It seems that almost
every cub in Pack 50 is about three
jumps

ahead

of

me...

Golly!

Star

Scout

Gregory

at.

Work

on

the

Indian

wigwams,

lore

series,

a

given

earlier in the school

This
series.

is

part

the

sixth

Fifth
By

See

Mrs.

how

about

those

fancy

signs?

Timothy Silence’s dad is in charge
of publicity so make certain that each
one gets over to his house quickly.
We don’t want a single boy or girl
in Deerfield to forget the date of
cur circus and those signs will be
their reminder. Mr. Silence will decide where they should be placed, so
don’t worry about that angle.
This affair will be a humdinger!
With a swell crowd of parents backing

their

sons

in

we can’t help
our hands. |

such

but have
Den

an

enterprise

a success

on

News

DEN 1—.,
This gang was
“all ears” when
Tim Silence told every detail of his
recent trip. With that darned phone
strike I couldn’t find out if Bob
Hinchsliff met the president in Washington a couple of weeks ago, but I
did hear that this boy has four more
achievements to his credit . . . I wonder when he has a chance to sleep!
I’d swear he works 24 hours a day.
Johnny

Wolter

said

the

boys

fin-

ished their last session by telling
jokes and nibbling popcorn ... Not
bad!
DEN 2—
;
What
would I do without Paul
Dasso? He reported the news to me
by
phone
immediately
after
last
week’s meeting. When I asked how
he managed this with the strike he
said, “Well, it’s an emergency!” . .
Frankly, it was as far as I was concerned. I needed news!
Paul reported that this crowd went
over to Timson’s field to watch the
Air scouts fly their model planes .
and was that ever sumpin’! Latest
reports have it that these cubs will
all be aviators some day.
Incidentally, Russell Zartler’s mom
Passes

out

some

the
meetings
report on the
boy !”

pretty

nifty

because
the
refreshments

food

at

regular
is “Oh,

DEN 3—
Did you hear about the trip this
tribe took to the movies a couple of
weeks

ago?

...

Yessir,

“The

Plains-

man” was on the bill so Mel Steed’s
mom and dad brought them all to
see it... Golly! what excitement!
It looks as though Richard Loarie,
John Robertson, and Louis George
are set for some nice silver arrows
...and possibly, by the time this
goes to print every single fellow in
the den will also be on the list for
this award ... How’s that for progress?
DEN 4—
Golly Moses! Another prospective
member! ... Yep, Rene Marshall is

the boy. He’s
_ school

as

the

in the
other

same
tellows

room

at

so

he

tothe

troop

and

hope

they

will

of

the

;
first

the

Jankowski,

line
Leverick,
Miller, Joseph

Vera

Salyards,

Killian,

Scanlon,

Anna

Sternig, Jeanette Wachholder,
Worth, and Jeanne Yous.

Back

from Trailer

and

Mae

ly

and

Peter.

the

circus.

After

refreshments

from

any

John

literature,

Reader”.
Reading, with

and

skill and

the ‘“Week-

interest,

DeKalb

Alumni

is

Reunion

Swen Parsons chapter of Northern
Illinois State Teachers’ college, DeKalb, alumni held its annual dinner
meeting last night in Evanston. Miss
Agnete Larsen of Fair Oaks avenue
and Mrs. Carl T. Anderson of Chestnut street were among those from
this vicinity who attended.

the

den. .

Darnit! Why can’t I be a Cub Scout?
DEN 5—
Since Eddie Patton has a birthday
coming up next Wednesday, he’s a
bit leery about coming to the meeting on that day. When this gang
celebrates they celebrate hard. Well,
. don’t worry, Eddie, I’ll act as
referee!
John Wachholder is bound to be
the best behaved boy in the den from
here on. Not that he hasn’t had this
record in the past, but Johnny loves
to eat and den chief Dickie Johnson
has a new rule: “Any guy who gets
out of line loses out on refreshments!”
. Wow!
Special Notice
Don’t forget the Cub circus on
Saturday, May 10, at 2 p.m. in the
Deerfield Grammar school.

Miss Dolores Strong, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Strong of Rockford,

formerly

of

Deerfield,

is

a

senior at East High school. She is
a member of the debating team which
won the state debating team tournament recently at Springfield, sponsored by the Illinois High School
Association of Speech and Debate.
The subject was “Federal Medical
Care”.

Marriage

Licenses

A marriage license was issued in
Waukegan last week to William W.
Youart, 30, Baltimore, Md., and Miss
Martene S. Oakes, 19, 710 Orchard
lane, Deerfield.
In Chicago, last week, to Harry C.
Joye, Deerfield, and ee
Mueller,
Glenview.
#

Meyer

In his freshman year at the Uni-—
versity of Illinois, John Allen Meyer,

the

Reserve Officers

Over

his

left

Training

shoulder

he

©

Corps.

wears

the

~

dFourragere
for the oer On hire.
Fourragere for the “Pershing Rifles,”
an honorary military fraternity.
4

Karen Reinking’s Essay
Wins First Prize in
District Contest
The annual essay contest sponsored
by the American Legion
auxiliary
brought first honors in the 10th District to Karen Reinking of the Bannockburn
Grade
school
and _ this
essay has now been sent to Springfield

to

compete

“America’s
anent Peace”

Dolores Strong Gets Honors
On Rockford Debating Team
!

Allen

second son of the Raymond T. Meyers of Waukegan road, is enrolled in

Spelling, in which
the
children
evaluate
their
own
progress
and
grade themselves with the guidance
of the regular text-work book.

meeting the bunch
played
softball
and had a swell time ... Come to
think of it, I’ve never had a report
of anything but fun, excitement, and
swell

speech

_

doesn’t want to miss all the fun. Welcome to the fold, Rene!
Kenneth
George’s
home
was
a
regular “big top” when the fellows
for

of

extended and encouraged by the use
of text ,books,
newspapers,
library
periods, and teacher guidance.

While in Arkansas, they went to
Eureka Springs to visit “Marge of
Sunrise Farm”, whose articles appear
weekly in the Sunday Tribune. Mr.
Silence is on the editorial staff of
the Tribune and it was his first meeting in person with the author, whose
latest
book
about her
interesting
iaeiterd will be off the press shorty.

rehearsed

parts

refined.

specialized

Trip

Susan,

the

Science and health, which are presented with the help of text books,

Back from their trailer trip to the
Ozarks are the Silence family, John
and Maree, and the three little Silences—Timothy,

of

and creative writing. Story telling and
letter writing are further developed

Marie

Donna

of Wauke-_

newspapers,
the
“Weekly Reader’’,
and
oral
reports

Frick

introduction

Caro-

Thomas
Leverick,
Richard
Ori, David Rudolph,
Philip

Shirley

T. Meyer

road.

are used and the course is correlated
with that of the preceding and succeeding grades.
Arithmetic, which involves learning
to use fractions and long division,
starting where fourth grade stopped
in the use of other fundamental steps.
Language arts, which present the

May 4

Charles

gan

what
might
be
‘ermed elementary
civics. Text books,

Nineteen
children will make their first
communion at Holy Cross Catholic church
on Sunday, May 4, at the 8:30 Mass.
The
class
ineludes
Cathie
Antognoli,
Henry
Bernard,
Robert
Busscher,
John
Driscoll, Marcia
Kay Early, Regina Hart,
Frances

Mrs. Raymond

the

pand
into’
the
study
of history,
geography, and

Class of 19 Children to Take

First Holy Communion

Day,

Honors

ing subjects:
Social
studies,
which actually ex-

Two new boys
have
joined
the
troop. They are Courtland Ross and
Jean Pierre Bailleu.
We
welcome
enjoy scouting.
“Trustworthy” is
twelve Scout laws.

on

fifth grade,
very
briefly
outlined,
cover the follow-

last

worked.

them

in

achievement

May 2, are John Boone, son of the ‘
Fred Boones of Waukegan road and
John Allen Meyer, son of Mr. and

Grade

Well, gang, you're certainly the
Monday.
A large tarpaulin was borhardest bunch of workers I’ve ever
rowed
from the
Stagers to protect
met; and if this keeps up we'll have
ithe recently laid tile flooring in the
the most decorated pack in the counPresbyterian
church, where we
try. What teamwork... !
Now,

astic

year.

article

the Deerfield young somal .

Carl Frick
The activities of

of

began

Among

at.the University of Illinois who will
receive special recognition for schol-—

the Deerfield
Review
for the next
several months. These
articles have
been condensed from their talks before the Deerfield board of education

the

rouncil meet.
article for details.

other
the

made

Aur At Wehool

A series of informative talks by
the teachers of the Deerfield Grammar school, District 109, very briefly
summarized, are being presented in

Armstrong

Two days ago the district first aid
meet was held. Sadly, none of the patrols qualified for
the council meet,
but they all received
at
least
“B” ratings. Well
informed
sources
tell me
that no
higher than a “B”
awas

KNOW
YOUR SCHOOL

for

state

honors.

Contribution
to Permwas the subject for this

year’s essay. Local school children
competed and the winners and awards
were, George Geiger, Wilmot school,
first place, prize $3.50; Karen Reinking,
Bannockburn
school,
second
place, $2.50;
Charles Wirth,
Holy
Cross

school,

third

place, $2.00.

Each local unit submits its prize
winning essay for district competition, but this year Deerfield’s first
and second winners were so nearly
tied, that the two were submitted
for

the

district,

Karen

Reinking’s

district

and

her

with

the

essay
award

result

topped
was

an

that

the
addi-

tional $7.50.
George, Karen, and Charles were
guests of the Deerfield unit last Mon-

day evening in the home of Mrs. C.
C. Kapschull and read their essays
for the Auxiliary members and guests.

Karen

Reinking will read her essay

for the district meeting in Grayslake |
on Wednesday, May 14.

|

�Page

36
The

Deerfield |
Bowling Academy

By
ee

Monday

Evening

Tuesday

VICTORY

ROLLERS

Team standings:
Team
Bee
2 is eee
Oe Wench
Bank
.......
aii
8. NL ee clay Gey
Cuter a
oh es
ee
ONG
ts
ae

Velma

Vander

Bloomen

Individual

Game—Ruth

Individual

Series—Betty

30|.Team

Schmidt
Rich—

40’S

vo

L.

Clavey’s,

847.

Wednesday
Team

Bs

RN

Uo

a

SR OI

WE

secs Sorae

Te

8

REN

PRIS

vay

i 0h sets sup ios ak anaes
nt its

SS eee
ae

aa

a

eee ee

gl deep ce Mapas ontied tebe

ee

a

er

Ske

TD 367 sivscdiesohss

eam
Team

Evening

oe

ad

vacadiyxacenawelioell

Ww.

L.

53

OT

52

38

49

41

47
44

42

Klemp

2—E.

Hurt

6—
L.
37
44
44
45

45

45

Thursday

BETHLEHEM

Evening

BOWLING

ee

tate

cre noc satetieta
ae Or
3 Games:

WER

LEAGUE

eer

Owls

oy

tao

ee

|...

ae

kn.

36

;

41

43
4

Eagles

$81

Ovinles
Crows

a

HOLY CROSS CHURCH

for

a

BOWLING
Yous

FURTH &amp; COMPANY

put

for
a
Ernest

work,

area

about

936

Ox

E. 47th

the
two

g .

All

May

Phones

Kenwood

0700

ANNOUNCEMENT

We
offer complete
and
highly
adequate
facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known
Furth staff of directors.

In Alabama
the

law

PROFESSIONAL
RECORD
OF
AN OUTSTANDING
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

Clarence
series.

79 pin
games.

mates

by

spot

rolling

Your
scribe
publication

for

The

given

the

a

Harts

led

455

series,

high

is to have ‘his picture taken
in the Review, soon. Watch

the

horrible

results

in

L.
36
36

RTEPPURR
TTA Ce SMI
oF ee
DURA
©
Ee
ee
ok
PROTO COR
cack
cde eas

47
45:
43

43
45
47

PB

OTEOM

Be

ean

42

ea cease
ng
ee

Eo

41

49

34

56

Wathhalier?

tes is, he

3ii3

ste

kid

48

evening

PAUL’S

LEAGUE

Team
7 still in first place
Jack Coleman had High 38
Swanson

had

High

PRESBYTERIAN
Team

by 8 games.
Games—571.

Single

Game—

LEAGUE

standings:

Team
Ww.
Redstine &gt; 8 Kaen
See ee
55
Bi gelera. Bo 38 nee
ee
es 55
ANOGS 6 Bo
eodapentiet 51
POT
a TE
galerie clea vane 9 a) Cul Sci yeat od
51

L.
44
44
48
48

FPRCROTE

Be

es

cd

CRIES
side hics atistees debe
Dodgers
DONS
6
At
Co

coe

48

51

sts

48
46
42

51
53
57

ie

Team
lLeaders—3
Games:
Redskins—
2586;
Giants—2531;
Dodgers—2509.
Team
High
Single
Games:
Redskins—
912;
Packers—901;
Dodgers—900.

The
close

Presbyteridn
their

bowling

Bowling
season

by

League

will

staging

their

Annual
Sweepstakes
Night, May
2, $1.00
per person.
These are the rules:
Handicap Bowling
—200
scratch—All bowling to be done in
will

be

low
will

deducted

man,
ete.
be
used

from

your

MIRACLE

CLEANER

“MEL BRANDT and his "505 FIFERS," foris
your dancing enjoyment—starting at 4:30 p.m.

BETTY BOLT and her FASHION PARADES,
| FREE

~

Rhumba

every Wednesday and Saturday, 2:30 p.m.
DEL

RENE'S

Daily

ORCHESTRA

nightly.

Featuring

Have you invested in the
Highland Park Hospital
drive?

MARIANNE

FEDELE

Lyric Soprano

SELDON
Irish

REED
Tenor

For Woodwork, Furniture,
Bathroom, Kitchen
Help yourself to the speedand-sparkle of this rich
cleaner, to keep your house
shining! Cleans with light
work,

and

leaves

a good-

looking sheen.

CO.

Buy a bottle, and see!

“The Friendly People”

Div. Mgr.
" OTESETE NEE LE LEET

AER

the

WwW.
54
54

Sani
Wax

to

T. P. “Tom” CLARK

for

If
and

prize

money—Mr.
Spars,
Secretary
add, ‘‘Let us
all be
present
the
last night.”
lst—$15;
2nd—$10;
Prizes
will
be:
5th—$2.50.
4th—$5;
38rd—$7.50;

. Lessons

Gas

who

her = help-

standings:

THE

NORTH SHORE

155-

Team
Doleman:*
sho ised
oe
ee
PR MAAS oe
oo ha a a eat
ee

$1.00

beat his wife with a stick
that is
thicker
than
his
thumb.

Some wives are taking a
beating daily working over a
“jalopy” stove. Why not release our wives from this
daily
punishment—see
the
new
1947
automatic gas
ranges. |

the

with
Nice

clash, Willard
a 502
series
Anderson’s

Cunningham

partnership,
high
and
absent,
your
average

it is said to be
for a man

on

the ladies winning two games
from
Dunhams, who it seems have trouble keeping
their collective minds on bowling.

vont

BD

Directors

IMPORTANT

against

guest

By Florence Jacobs

Advisers

“I turned the way I signalled,” she said indignantly,
after cracking uv the new
car. “Yes, I know,” answered
the man, “that’s what fooled
me.”

a

Earl Stevens clicked off a 506 series for
Marsicek’s men, who were unable to overcome
won

Funeral

15th.

of

.
as

Coleman-Anderson
had
164-188-155,

Friday

Libertyville

games

series;
his
136-172-192

team, had a gala evening
for a brilliant 612 series.

ST.

Now we can say the Natural Gas Very Soon Will Be
Here.
Barring
further
“floods,” thechangeover
from manufactured to Natural Gas will begin in the

572
had

Eddie.

In the
Meintzer

closely
for
near future.

NOTES

together

fine
Ori,

500
series.
Frost,
rolling

Ed

Wachholder
217-203-192

44

48

Charles

Killian

4

56

By,

Charlie

211-178-183
anchor man,

Catherine

-5

Gieetewe
.
Robins

Charles
Killian
took advantage
of the
35 pin pot donated by: Joe Wachholder’s
boys
and
took
them
for three
straight.
All this
happened
while
Fred
Coleman’s .
gang
were
busy
losing
two
games
to
Anderson’s
aggregation.
This
the
Colemans and Killians all knotted up for first
Place with 54 wins apiece.

fafling
short
of
173-188,
a 516

By Arhur Merner
The
season
is drawing
to a close and
everyone
is trying
to get a good
series

46

48

WS ifucian sents imonnesn ple aba hod it
mana
High

6—925.

ooo

AMVETS

eer

4—J.

Team

63

Games:
atic
Bank—2361.
Games:
Seul’s, 873;|

852; Bank,

Team

52

- Ligietnene

‘Seam
banion
2422; Seul’s—2407:
Team High Single

Team

Team 1—O.
Trute
47
L. | Team 7—M.
Olson
7
53
82
Team
High
3 Games:
Team
8—2411;
32| Team 1—2373; Team 8—2844,
40
Team High Single Game: Team 8—887;
40 | Team
1—879; Team 38—860.
46

Johnson’s

Team
Series—D.B.A.—2230.
standings:
Ww.

1—931;

30
Team
High
Single
Game:
Team
34 | 2623; Team 2—2609; Team 1—2576.
49
AMERICAN
LEGION
57
Team
57| Team 8—F.
Coleman
69 | Team 6—R. Dunham
71| Team 5—F. Riley
Team 8—W. Johnston

Evening

ROLLING

High Team Game—D.B.A.—744.
High
Team
Team

Haven

D.B.A. prsenetheneesecens scenes
Scarlett’s :
Mac’s
s sasveee ruil peag ie tiers 3
Lorette’s Girls .....0....0:.0.
John Gourley &amp; Raye cass
Eric’s D-X Station .......:..
Reliable: Garage. -.i:i6604:)..0001825.
4.
cE

Deerfield

. 505 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE | @

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Deerfield 295

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�Wrputadas May I 19ar =

Deerfield

REGULAR|
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JEWEL LOW
PRICES SAVE

Church News
CHURCH
CATHOLIC
CROSS
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
Rev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.

Sunday
Masses:
7, 8:30,
10, 11:30.
Daily Masses:
6:30 and 8:15 a.m.
Saturday,
7:30 p.m.
Confessions.
First

May

4—

Communion

SUNDAY,
May
Holy
Name _

Food Stores

class.

11—
breakfast

served

by

the

TU

mothers.

THE

BETHLEHEM

(Evangelical

Rev,
FRIDAY,

May

Mission

9:45

a.m.

Brethren)

7:30

will

The

in

meet’

direction

the
under
will sing.

the

of

rooms

social

church.

TUESDAY, May 6—
2 p.m. The Woman’s

WEDNESDAY,
p.m.

7:30

May:

World
Mrs.
Wess-

GOLDER

lI—

Bowling

SALERNO

league

MONDAY,
May 5—
Girl
and
Boy
Scout

children

for

Noodle Soup Mix

,

‘9
meet

as

EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH
638 Waukegan Road
Phone
Deerfield
858
Rev. Hugo
Leinberger, Pastor

9

will

lecture

on

have

holds
school.
a

special

its

Sunday

¢

NO. 2
CANS

FaRG

School

IN A JIFFY

The

PKC.

Junior

YOUR

9

CHOICE

Rev. W. E. Bradburn, district superintendent of the Rock River conference, will conduct.the Fourth Quarterly conference and give a preliminary
report from the board of church location on Sunday, May 4, at 2 p.m. at
the Wesley Methodist church, North
avenue and Lauretta place.
The Rev. Mr. Bradburn will aso discuss the impending change of ministers
during the afternoon session. The conference is open to all who wish to
attend.

FRESH

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"257 33¢
es CORNED BEEF |
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MAYER

ay

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FROZEN

Mrs. Richard M. Harvey is meeting this afternoon with her class
“Sunday Circle Number One” at the
Presbyterian church for their annual
meeting and election of officers.

Rey. W. E. Bradburn to Be Guest
At Wesley Methodist Sunday

FANCY

Apple

meeting

Cc

SPICED LUNCHEON MEAT

Cys

12-OZ.

OSCAR

LONG ISLAND DUCKS

i

Pineapple-Perfection

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Roger Green former army air corps
lieutenant is living with his uncle
and aunt Mr. and Mrs. George Burnett of Osterman avenue.

|

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BACON

SLICED

GRATED CARROTS, CHOPPED CELERY
AND CRUSHED PINEAPPLE IN
ORANGE GELATIN

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NO. 2
CANS

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LB.

Fruit Cocktail

monthly

“Honduras.”

May 7—
WEDNESDAY,
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
of Mrs. Floyd
at the home
p.m.

iy
BUTT
HALF

DICED MIXED FRUITS IN
RASPBERRY GELATIN

First of a
worship.
a.m. Morning
10:45
enBeatitudes
the
on
sermons
of
series
In Spirit.”
“‘Blessed Are the Foor
titled
meets
Fellowship
Youth
Senior
7:30 p.m.
at the church for discussion and recreation,

8

CHICKENY
FLAVOR

ca

meeting.

department

SHORT
SHANK

DESSERTS &amp; SALADS

THURSDAY,
May
1—
the
in
meets
Guild
Woman’s
p.m.
1:30
Frances
Mrs.
of Mrs. Fred LaBahn.
home
will be in charge of the program.
Antes

SUNDAY, May 4—
Sunday
a.m.
9:30

ARMOUR

Jiffy Pie Grust

PAUL’S

FRIDAY,
May 2—
Sodality:'
p.m.
1:30

q

PIE CRUST

THURSDAY,
May 8—
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

|

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scheduled.

Slide

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CHURCH
PRESBYTERIAN
FIRST
ev,
E. Vanderbeek, Minister
Road
Waukegan
1024
Manse:
Phone
Deerfield
775

ST.

c

CANS

CHERRY
VALLEY

Roll Cookies

meet.

SUNDAY,
May
4—
9:45
a.m.
Church
school.
kindergarten
11 a.m. Sunday
from
8 to 5 years
of age.
11
a.m.
Morning
worship.
7 p.m.
Tuxis society.

CREAM
STYLE

practice.

will

choir

Bethlehem

THURSDAY,
May
8—
6:45 p.m. The Bethlehem
will

of

church.
Chester

Society

the
at
meet
will
Mrs.
and
Boelter
hostesses.

Service
Francis
ling are

NO. 2

CHERRY
VALLEY

Administration

of

Council

the

service.

worship

Morning

choir
Bethlehem
The
of Mrs. Ambrose Cox
p.m.

meets.

school

Church

The

¢

BRAND

of
rooms
Mrs.
and

social
in the
school
after
ately
Pagel
Arthur
Mrs.
church.
the
Francis
Boelter
are
in charge.
SUNDAY,
May
4—

Ps

16-OZ.
JAR

CODDINGTON

immedi-

meet

will

Band

a.m.

ee

COLUMBUS OR

2—

The

10:55

SALAD DRESSING
RED KIDNEY BEANS
Whole Elberta PEACHES
TOMATO JUICE

Lael

SALAD BOWL
FINE QUALITY

CHURCH

United

Francis Boelter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace

ee

SUNDAY,

Sa

HOLY

assole

Tala Leal

SLL

3

i

©
1.33
.

21¢

�i

Want Ad
REAL

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(Highland Park)

BRICK

(Improved)

PAUL

PHELPS,
Highland

NEW

LISTING

has

nice

’38—this
size

Living

Room

and

powder

room

on

home

fireplace,

floor.

Three

lovely bedrooms with bath are on second
floor.
Heat is automatic;
full basement;
house =
perfect
condition.
Offered
at
$26,50

R.

“4 “-HAMBLY

1551

S.

St.

Johns

H.-P.

&amp;

or

1491,

COMPANY

Clavey
4866

&amp;

or

Ridge

Rd

1484

FOR SALE
Houses,
5 to
12
rooms
priced
right.
Good homesites
&amp; investments.
If I do
not
find

have
what
you
it for
you.

Come

in

and

JOHN

talk

A.

want,

it

I

over

will

~ ALL

A-1

try

and

St.

Johns

MODERN

Ave.

Tel.

$47,500
37,500
26,500
20,500
$11,000
12,000
12,000
12,500
15,000
20,000

H.P.

577

TWO VETERANS
buying together need
no
money
down
with
loan.
Brick
building in Deerfield containing 1—6 room,
1—-3 room, 1—2 room apt. each with pribate
bath,
also large
store.
Hot
water
heat with stoker.
Large lot and garage.
Early
possession
of 1 apt.
Present
income $145 per month
with possibility of
obtaining much
more.
Suitable for many
types of Business.

JOHN.

F. LEONARDI

51
Highwood
Ave.,
Highwood
30 Hickory St., Highland Park
HIGHLAND

PARK’S
E. BRAESIDE
SEC.
683. CAROL
COURT
Most convenient to school &amp; trans. unusually
well
constructed
Col.
home,
in
excell. o
6 rms., sun porch, 1% baths,
auto. ht., 2-car gar.
Owner leaving town.
Poss. May
AMD aint: extlh'ss Sho cphc unk acca osi t $23,500.
THE HOME
YOU ARE LOOKING
FOR
EAST
HIGHLAND
PARK
868
LINCOLN
AVE.
In excell. loc. on beaut. landscaped lot
95x190,
with enc. ply yd. and
barbecue.
This.
flexible
house
offers
grac. living,
complete from panelled libr., sun rm., powd.
rm., scr. pch. on Ist in add. to LDK, to
4 fam. bedrms., slp. pch., 2 baths, md’s.
rm. &amp; bath &amp; 2-car gar.
Hse. completely
insulated,
auto,
oil ht., lg. attic
fan
&amp;
incl. venetian blinds, hall &amp; stair carpet.
For imme.
poss.
at the attractive
price
$37,500.
IN NEWEST
WOODRIDGE
SEC.
1403
WESTVIEW
ROAD
For
charm,
livability,
superlative
construction, you MUST see this Eng. brk. &amp;
timber hse. on perfectly landscaped grounds
105x155.
Complete in every detail.
Full
base.
includes
recrea.
rm.
with
built-in
bar, util. rm., containing finest H.W.
oil
burn. system.
lst Fl.: Rec. hall, powd. rm.,
lg. liv. rm., din. rm., bkfst. nook &amp; kit.
2nd Fl.: 8 bedrms., incl. master suite of
bedrm.,
dress.
rm
&amp; tile bath,
2 other
good sized rooms &amp; tile bath.
3rd Fl: lg.
timbered studio rm.
Entire hse. newly &amp;
most tastefully dec.
2-car gar.
4 blks. to
school;
3 to trans.
Worth
waiting
for
Sept.

Ist

poss.

39,500.

2238 MORAINE RD., HIGHLAND
PARK
Fine red brk. col. on ravine lot with 300
ft. frontage.
Offered first time with early
occupancy.
Built for comfortable and grac.
liv. by W. D. Mann, architect.
Containing
4 fam. bedrms., 8 baths, 2 md’s rms. &amp;
bath, studio, lovely porches, att. gar.
H.W.
stoker ht.
Conven. to schools, aan
&amp;
lake.
A real value
9,500.

H. AND R. ANSPAGH, Inc.

870

Central

Exclusive Agents
Ave.
Highland

room

R.

on

Park

1212

DUTCH
Colonial 7 room house in H. P.
Brick veneer.
4 bedrooms, tile bath, &amp;
garage.
Cement
basement.
3820 North
Ave.
H.-P.

Ist

floor.

Mas-

AMBLY &amp; COMPANY

details

TAN

S.

_

Mrs.

Johns

H.P.

or

43401,

Clavey

2855

&amp;

or

Ridge

Rd.

1484

BRICK

Located in a heavily wooded section with a generous lot, this 6-year
old home is offered for the first time.
The Ist floor contains an entrance
hall, good sized living room, attractive
dining room with southeast exposure,
library, powder room and utility room

containing heating plant and laundry.
The second
and bath.
As

the

floor has three

owner

is leaving

bedrooms
town

perm-

anently, this property can be
ered for immediate occupancy.

deliv-

PHELPS,

387 Central Ave:

P.

E. T. SKIDMORE &amp; SON
N.

powder

PAUL

HOFFMAN

Fine 8 rm brk 2 acre, nr lake........
Large 9 rm Braeside real opt. ........
Wond 6 rm brk, like new, So H Pk
6rm So H Pk. Available at once....
LOWER
FRICED
HOMES
6 rm cement located Central, H. P.
6rm
frame on. west side 1% bath....
6 rm
stucco
large
grds,
Deerfield
8rm older home with fine poss.......
Ex. 5 rm brk home in So.:H. Pk. ....
Large 7 rm, 4 bedrm in country....
832

and

Inc.

Highland

Park 4580

BUNGALOW,
5 rooms and bath on Homewood
Ave.,
H. P.
Easy
to heat;
well
built,
full
basement,
one
car
garage.
Price $11,500.
For information
call or
write
82 S. Green
Bay
Rd., H. P. or
Tel. H.P. 868.
FOR
SALE:
By owner—small
four bedroom house.
Excellent condition.
Automatic

oil

$17,000.
News.

heat.

Near’

Write

Box

transportation.

G-95,'

c/o

H.

P.

FULLY
furnished
six
room _ bungalow.
Stoker furnace,
two
car garage.
Near
transportation
and
school.
Reply
Box
P-67, c/o Lake Forester.

ENGLISH

COTTAGE

This attractive seven room
house in excellent Ravinia location is well designed and
convenient.
On
the first floor is a good
sized
living
room,
dining
room,
kitchen,
maid’s room
and
bath with an unusually
lovely screened porch opening off both the
living room
and dining room. The second
floor contains
three nice bedrooms
and a
tile bath.
The house is attractively priced
for quick sale.

PAUL

PHELPS,

887 Central Avenue
a
REAL
ESTATE
FOR

Inc.

Highland

Park 4580
______!
(Vacant)

SALE

FOR SALE

So Linden nr Sheridan 100x277 ........ $6,500
So Linden nr Beech St., 75x192 ........ 5,625
If you
want
to
live
in the
country,
let us show you some beautiful property.

E. T. SKIDMORE

&amp; SON

882 N. St. Johns. Ave.
Tel. H.P.
ee
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
SEVERAL LOTS AND
in
Ravinia,
Braeside
and
visions
in
Highland
Park
prices.
ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
16 N. Sheridan Rd.,
Tels: HP.
988
Res.

577

TO

HOUSES
Sunset
Subdiat reasonable
ee
eee
H.
HP. "37

RENT

CHICAGO doctor will rent remodeled guest
house on his beautiful country property
in California.
No fogs.
Car courtesy.
Write
Box
G-125,
c/o
Highland
Fark
News.
EE

APARTMENTS

TO

RENT

(Unfurn.)

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION—5 room apartment.
Widower breaking up home and
leaving
city.
Furniture
must
be sold
to

‘prospective

tenant.

One

year

APARTMENTS

RESPONSIBLE
party
will pay
maximum
rent, year in advance for 8 or 4 bedroom house.
Will consider buying suitable home on terms.
Write c/o H. P.
News, Box D-75.
WANTED:
Summer
rental.
Responsible
adult couple.
Will care for your dog if
desired.
Small house near lake.
References gladly furnished.
Apt. One, 5527
Cornell, Chicago.
Tel. Butterfield 4155.
YEAR’S
rent in advance,
plus
bonus.
Reliable family
needs
5-7
room
house
or apartment.
Tel. Briargate
1823
or
address Box E-15, c/o H. P. News.

FAMILY with two children, ages 1 month
and 27 months
desire rental of home
for
summer
months.
References
furnished.
Reply
Box
G-185,
c/o
H.
P.
News.
GI

WITH
wife and four yr. old son desires
small apartment
in Highwood
or
North H. P.
Can furnish excellent references,

Box

business

G-105,

c/o

and

character.

Highland

Park

lease.

Near school.
If possible Tel. H.P. 5701
fér appointment
or see Mr. Cash,
650
Bob O Link Rd., Highland Park.
——————————————EE—EEEE
EEE

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)

Write

News.

FAMILY of 2 adults desire 2 bedroom apt.
or
house.
Furnished
or
unfurnished.
Tel. H.P.
1839 evenings
or Write Box
D-85,
c/o H. P. News.
WANTED:
3 or 4 bedroom house for the
summer,
Responsible
family
of
four.
Tel. Ardmore
7332
or write
C. Reich,
820 Agatite St., Chicago.
WANTED:
House or apartment.
Family
with two children.
Rent to $150.
Box
Ave.,
Lake Bluff or Lake Bluff 260.
Park 787- J.
IF

YOUR house is for sale, but isn’t selling, I'll] make you a good proposition—
for renting it to me.
Need three bedrooms or will consider two.
Best local
references.
Write
or telephone,
R. B.
McCurry,
Advertising
Department,
Abbott
Laboratories,
North
Chicago,
or
Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest.

PROFESSIONAL
sire furnished
summer rental,
10th.
Excellent
P-37, c/o Lake

Highland
HELP

REFINED
young
couple,
both
employed,
desire four or five room apartment, unfurnished.
Excellent
references.
Reply
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.

A

To Place Your Ads

WANTED

woman
and
mother
deapartment
or room
for
June 10th to September
references.
Reply Box
Forester.

ROOM
for
semeols &amp;
ONE

large

wood

rent.
town.
room

only.

Dr.,

HELP

WANTED:
manent

tional

TO

Near
transportation,
825
East Vine Ave.,

H.

WANTED

Glencoe

Stenographer.
Bank,

Per-

First

Highland

Na-

Park.

STENOGRAPHERS,
TYPISTS,
OFFICE
personnel.
Permanent
position
with
a
future
proportionate
to
your
ability.
Growing
nationalconcern.
State
age,
desalary
and
references
experience,
Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.
sired.
STENOGRAPHERS, | typist,
bookkeeper,
permanent
employment,
pleasant
working

conditions,

good

wages.

Apply

801

N.

WANTED:
Girl or woman
for dry: cleaning store.
Experienced or inexperienced.
Interesting,
well-paying
work.
A.
W.
Zengeler Co., 899 Linden Ave., Hubbard
Woods, Enterprise 1444
(no toll).
HELP

WANTED

(Domestic)

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white.
6 weeks or permanent, starting April
References
required.
Mrs.
W.
P.
Bride. Lake Forest 36.
COOK, general housework.
No
heavy cleaning.
Own
room,
Current wages.
Tel. Glencoe
lect).
WANTED:
Upstairs
p.m.
No Sundays.
Laurel Ave., H. F.

2431

WANTED:
days
a
5657 or

(collect).

Cleaning woman,
2 or 8 half
week,
Any
time.
Tel.
H.P.
1829 Rice St., H. P.

MAID
WANTED:
Light housework, plain
cooking.
Electric
dishwasher.
Other
help.
Own room, bath and radio.
$30
per week.
\L. A. Nathan, 883 S. Green
Bay Rd.
Tel. H.P.. 8757.
COUPLE

tto

grounds.

help

with

Your

housework

private

and

accommodations.

Eagle River, Wisconsin.
perience
&amp; references.
75, c/o Highland
Park

State
Write
News.

age,
Box

exG-

WANTED: A
couple or cook, second maid
&amp; general man, white, for place in Lake
Forest; 2 in family.
Unusually pleasant
rooms &amp; bath, current wages.
Tel. H.P.
212, or write c/o H. P. News, Box G-55.
white.

COUPLE,
gardener

nent
Belle
EXP.

or

position.
Ave., H.
Second

ences
wood
COOK:

Experienced

maid,

required.
Pl.
Tel.

highest

Call
H.P.

Experienced

Filipino

butler.

wages;

or write
106.

to work
Best

lect.
Mrs. Frank
Ave., Lake Bluff or
COOK:

cook

and

Ideal
permahouseman.
181
Excellent
salary.
Pet Fe
Tes
P.

230

with

wages.

refer-

Lake-

excellent
Wire

col-

Wilhelm,
735 Ravine
Lake Bluff 260.

Experienced,

white.

and bath.
References required.
Earle Muzzy,
644
E.
Deerpath,
Forest 1517.

Lake

COUPLE or two girls.
Experienced, white
or colored.
Own
quarters.
References
required.
Current wages.
Reply Box P27, c/o Lake Forester or Lake Forest 125
GENERAL
MAID:
Care
of child
No cooking.
P. K. Smith, Jr., 151
Lane.
Lake
Forest
135.

three.
Ridge

GENERAL
MAID:
No laundry.
Limited
second floor work, or, couple with employed husband.
Husband expected to do
some yard work in exchange for board.
home.

Current

1365

Elm

wages.

Tree

Write

or

Road—Lake

753.

Experienced,
SECOND
MAID:
serving and upstairs work.
required.
Reply
Box
P-47,
Forester.

white
for
References
c/o
Lake

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white.
Upstairs work and serving.
References required.
Mrs.
Gardner
Brown,
611°:E
Woodland Road, Lake Forest 512.

(Clerical)

position.

(Domestic)

COUPLE with employed husband who will
give
1 day
week
for board
&amp; room,
Woman
to cook
&amp; general
housework.
Current wages.
Own room, bath.
Tel.

Forest

for rent.
Employed couoo
8690 or 714 Ridge-

Tel.

WANTED

Telephone,

RENT

Park 4500-01-02

CLEANING woman &amp; laundress, 2 days a
week.
$7 and carfare.
Tel. H.P. 7 or
461 N. Ridge Rd., H. F.

Small

ROOMS

Manager’s Office, Moraine Hotel,
Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.

EEE

HOUSE

&amp;

WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by responsible family.
Will
furnish
finest
references.
Tel.
Central 5309.

ple

TWO
LOTS in Woodland Park, Deerfield:
75x200 ft on Woodbine @ North Ave.;
90x132 ft on Linden Ave., east of a.
ford Rd.
Tel. Sheldrake 9323.
W.
Dee, 6430 N. Bell Ave., Chicago 45, a

VACANT

HOUSES

(Improved)

ter suite (with view of the lake) has bath
and dressing room; there are 8 additional
family
bedrooms,
3 baths
.on 2nd
floor;
Servants’ quarters consist of 2 bedrooms
and bath.
House perfectly insulated,®
one
of finest construction and is being offered
at below
replacement
cost.
For
further

with

Real
Estate.
Broker
No. Sheridan Rd., H.
Tel. H.P. 2290

15

SALE
Park)

ENGLISH
brick

with

first

nook

Park 4580

charming

Highland Park News
Deerfield Review
@ Lake Co. News
Phone:
Highwood News

This magnificent Stone home has a gorgeous
living
room,
sun
room,
terrace,
library, dining rm., kitchen, butlery, bkfst.

1551

dining
room
with
bay
window,
screened
porch overlooking garden, streamlined kitchen

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

@
@
@

ON THE LAKE

Inc.

387 Central Ave.
in

REAL

COLONIAL

We offer for the first time this
modern six room house in an attractive section of new houses. On the
first floor is a beautiful living room,
dining room with bay window, kitchen,
powder
room
and_ screened
porch overlooking the garden. Three
nice bedrooms and a bath complete
the second floor. Priced at ..$26,500.

Built

© Find It!
@ Buy It!
@ Sell It!

For
1st.
ce

laundry or
own bath.
2481
(col-

maid,
9 a.m.
to 8
Liberal salary.
162
Tel. H.P. 2002.

EXP. COOK, white, also downstairs work.
Small
home,
highest
wages;
ref. req.
Call or write
230 _Lakewood
Pl.
Tel.
H.P. 106.
COOK, general houseworkvr exp. for family of 2 adults, 2 school children.
No
laundry.
Own room &amp; bath,
Will consider
woman
with
employed
husband.
References required.
Tel. H.P. 1283 or
3868
Moraine
Rd., H.

WANTED:
House to rent., June to Sept.
or longer.
Top
rent.
Best
references.
Tel. H.P. 390 or Randolph 7350.
COUPLE,
exp. for cooking &amp; housework.
GARAGE APT. or otherwise, low rental apt. '
Adult family. Two private rooms &amp; bath,
unfurnished.
Tel. Joliet 21849 (collect) |
Current wages.
Write c/o H. P. News
or Write Box G-5, c/o H. P. News.
Box G-45.

SECOND
MAID:
White.
Family of three
adults.
Apply Mrs. Alfred T. Carton, 6
E. Laurel Ave., Lake Forest 176.
SS
HELP
WANTED
(Miscellaneous)
WANTED
Men, part or full time at
Highland Ten Pins
139 N. Second St., H. P.
WANTED:
Lathe operators
&amp; other machine
shop
employees.
Modern
Engineering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.P.
1057.
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Young woman, between the age of 21 and
85 years to train for Soda Fountain and
lunch counter management.
WE TEACH
YOU
fundamentals
of cooking,
baking,
buying and menu
planning.
Learn a staple, growing business. Previous experience preferred, but not a requirement.
Uniforms
and
meals
furnished.
Good salary while learning.
No
Sunday or holiday work.
Write, c/o H.
P. News, Box A-55.
ASSISTANT cook &amp; dietary maid.
Straight
hours.
Tel. H.P. 2550.
Ask for Cook,
Highland Park Hospital.

NURSE

TO

TAKE

CHARGE

OF

2 CHIL-

DREN,
2 YRS.
&amp;
6%
YRS.
PERM.
POSITION.
OWN
ROOM.
HIGHEST
WAGES.
REF.
MORE
IMPORTANT
THAN
EXPERIENCE.
TEL. H.P. 3964
OR
1622
S. GREEN
BAY
RD.
MAN
with car for service or production
work.
Must have good personality and
be capable of selling or making
estimates.
Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired. Address
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.
NATIONAL ADV. MANAGER
who understands copy, production, merchandising.
Unusual
future
for right
man.
State
age,
education,
experience,
salary
expected.
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield,
Ill.

�‘weir. WANTED
Nurse:
For rea 5 maonitha, ‘ia two
little girls, ages 6 &amp; 9, starting April
23.

Other

help. employed,

top

wages.

Mrs. Fred W. Fairman, Lake Forest 2798

Wanted

DEEPFREEZE

HIGHLAND PARK’S
MOST MODERN FOOD STORE

:
Produce

F.

Bakery

HELP WANTED
Nursery Labor
See Otto Trute, Supt.
Clavey Ravinia Nurseries,
Deerfield, Illinois

Inc.

Vacation with pay.
Manager

;

Hand Truckers

Jerome Robert Cerny, Architect
E. Market Square, Lake Forest
Lake Forest 350

Fountain Help Needed
Good Wages
TRACY'S
Tel. H.P.

not

required.

rate while learning.

Hours

8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Mon-

CAR
Good

~

WOMAN
WANTED
To
make
telephone
survey
from
her
home.
No
selling.
Must
have
one
party
line.
50c an» hour.
Write Box
G-85, c/o H. P. News,
giving address
and phone
number.

Clean,

well

how

a
plant,

help

‘‘The Pioneer Home

HELP

GARAGE

Deerpath
Avenue
Forest, Illinois

Good
starting
salary
Full Maintenance
Apply
in Person

lighted

can

E.
Lake

HOTEL ROOM CLERK

DEERPATH
Lake

INN HOTEL

Forest,

Illinois

MEN:
Part or full time for landscape and
garden work.
Practical experience helpful,
but
not
necessary.
Good
wages.
For
appointment,
Clauson
Landscape
Service, 440 E. Wisconsin Avenue, Lake
Forest 2258.

build

DEEPFREEZE

WANTED

Freezer’’

DEEPFREEZE

NURSE:
To care for year old baby and
assume responsibility of two other children.
Immediately, temporary or permanent position.
Ability to drive car useful.
Other
help employed.
Reply
Box
0-47, c/o Lake Forester or Lake Bluff

@ Experienced press girls.
with

laundry

SITUATION

Motor
2301

Products Corp.

Davis St.

North Chicago

experience.

@ Trainees — we will teach you.

—

Fleasant

Working

Conditions.

Frée

Hospitalization
Rest

Leave

Vacation

—If
phone

With

interested,
service,

Drop

us

a card.

at Linden

~ HUBBARD WOODS

CLEANING
woman
and carefare per
ences.
Write Box

will do day work.
$7
day, 8 hours.
ReferG-35, c/o H. P. News.

EXPERIENCED
cook will exchange services for small salary and board and room
for self, employed husband &amp; 4 yr. old
son.
Write Box G-15, c/o H. P. News.

SITUATIONS

WANTED

(Miscel.)

CATERING
Weddings, teas, dinner parties, large or
ee
Tel. Glencoe 1594.
P. C. McCullough.
:

WANTED:
Man
to take off storm
windows and put in sereens.
Also garden
work.
Tel.
H.P.
1873
or
2225
Dell
Lane, H. P.
;

VETERAN
28, Captain Agd.
Just getting
out of Army.
Has personnel &amp; administration
exp.
Some
coll.
Prefer North
Shore,
but
will
consider
any
location.
Write c/o H. P. News Box G-65.

Rd.

Teli:

Hi

1512.

and
Co.,

MAN WANTED:
One or two days a week
for cleaning &amp; gardening:~ Ref. required.
Tel, H.P. 390 or Randolph 7350.

and

(Domestic)

MAN
WANTED
to help gardener on private estate.
Work until latter part of
November.
See Gardener, 725 Waverly:

WANTED:
Experienced
cars washer
polisher.
Apply —
pemee Buick
110 S. First St., H: P

Pay

A. W. ZENGELER |
CLIEANERS
Tower

GARDENER:
Experienced, 8 days weekly.
May and June. Lawn care &amp; flower beds.
Tel. H.P.
2163
or 809
§S. Green
Bay
Rd.,
Hy:
5

MEN for landscape work on North Shore.
Must be reliable.
Herbert J. Frost, 944
Woodward
Ave., Deerfield, Illinois.
Tel.
Deerfield 197.

Periods

Sick

No

Insurance

WANTED

RELIABLE woman, good references wants
to take care of small child, 1 to 5 years
old.
Hours
8 to
5.
Stay
nights
if
needed.
Tel. H.P. 8686.
Wirite Box G25, c/o H. P. News.

DIVISION

‘

Weta:

&amp;

Green

P. 2364.

MALE COUNSELOR, 17-21 years for boys
camp during July and August.
Must be
dependable
and
have
driver’s
license.
Please write giving details to Box G-115
c/o Highland Park News.

HELP

WANTED

—

MALE

Gardener
for
spare
time
work.
high school boy to mow lawn.
Tel.
or 549 Kimball Rd.

Also
4614

MARRIED man, employed, with some spare
time would like to take of grounds
in
exchange for living quarters.
622 Homewood Ave., H. P.
Tel. H.P. 5795.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

gas

ranges. ‘Terms

mattress;

Bay

Rd.,

folding

H.

P.

fede,
ef,

Pan

sore

BEING
EVICTED,
must
sell 8 piece ar.
size Duncan Phyffe mah. dining room
twin lamp tables &amp; lamps, 9x11%

Wilton

rug,

USED
“ing

9x12

Axminster

rug,

Totn.

washing machines, Singer elec. saan’
machine, typewriter desk, porcela

table,

odd

chairs,

SALE

book

shelves,

end

tables,
gas
stove,
dining
room
ta
metal cabinets, double beds, refrigerat
&amp; bin boxes.
29 S. Second St.
Tel.
P.
891.
'

FOUR CU. FT. Crosley refrigerator, in Acondition,
Elm

$60,

St.,

VACUUM

Sunday

Deerfield,

cleaner
boiler
H.

2 to 4 pm.

Ill.

44

$25; low chest $5; 8 1
exe.

$1;

P

BEAUTIFUL
conditions

COMPANION:
For elderly woman.
Living
in Lake
Forest.
Seven
days
a_ week,
2-6 p.m. daily, beginning May 1st. Reply
Box
P-57,
c/o
Lake
Forester,
stating
age, experience and salary expected.

Come in and learn

you

working

2094.

Good

spring

S.

Ave.,

WASHER
and

_DEERPATH

work here is interesting and
varied.

wages

191

day through Friday.

Has
326

WANTED:
CHAUFFEUR
AND
HOUSEMAN.
CURRENT
WAGES.
Write Box
G-145, ¢/o Highland Park News.

@ Girls or women

box

2346

wash

Experienced

DEEPFREEZE

HELP!

FEMALE

ONE

op

Familiar with Fine Residential
Design and Country Houses
Excellent Opportunity for Capable Man
273

Marlboro

Free installation . . . Winnetka
Home Appliance, 956 Linden, Sores
Woods.
Tel. Winnetka 2000.
pe
eae. Cle

with
pads;
small kitchen
set.
Several
other items.
Furniture is just two yrs.
old, like new.
1438 §S. Green Bay
R
Tel. H.P.
5318.

Cleaners

Experience

Clerks.

Free insurance, Apply Store

-

Ww.
Vewles

HOUSEHOLD ‘coops. FOR as
UNIVERSAL

ft. refrigerator,

Attractive starting pay

DICK

week.
Co.,
on

on all
work,
equipGuaServPark.

ARCHITECTURAL
DRAFTSMAN

We train and pay you full

HELP!
HELP!

in
High
Apply at

Men.

Clerks,

5 day week.

D.

Spot Welders

Dairy Clerks,

Stock

BRICKLAYERS—6°
day
Handler
Construction
Ave., Glencoe, Ill.

Assemblers

Atlantic and Pacific
56 N. First St.

/

(Miscel.)

for work
day week.

EXPERIENCED
mechanic to work
makes
of cars.
Tune-up,
brake
ete.
No heavy work.
Sun test
ment—Barrett
brake
equipment.
rantee $70 per week. Ravinia Auto
ice, 1600 Burton Ave., Highland

NEEDS
30 More Men

Male and Female
HELP TO WORK IN

Want Checkers,

WANTED:
Women
school cafeteria; 5
High School.

tray

mah.

cond.;

$1.

dining

end table $1;

3836

Prospect —

P

eG

room

set; porch

rug.
Very reasonable.
Tel.
or 1013 Wade St., H. P.

H.P.

ae

EIGHT CU. FT. “Cold Spot” ice box $125:
“Electroday”
electric stove $85; “
ileo”
616 radio with remote control $85; Burroughs
adding machine,
large, old, but
correct $35.
Show
at 2455
Edgewood
Raye
F.

FOUR

twin beds,

$25

each;

couch,

2 7.

tables, coffee
table,
$125;
2 chests
of |
drawers,
$25 each.
1415 County
ten,
Rd., H.-P.
-Tel.. H.P. : 1809,
:f
TWIN
bedroom set, 8 pieces finest work.
manship and design, paintings, furniture, z
bric-a-brac, priced to sell.
807 Wi iam
St., River Forest.
MISCELLANEOUS:
General
electric
refriverator; modern gas stove; mahogany
dining room table with sideboard and ais
chairs.
Displayed
at
Davis
Storage

oc

Warehouse, 579 N. Oakland, Lake Forest

MISCELLANEOUS: Provincial dining room
set, table, buffet and 8 chairs; 2 large
end tables : 8 bedroom sets, beds cornaplete with mattresses and springs: Ma
tag washing machine; mahogany kidne:
shaded desk and miscellaneous househol
effects.
455 King Muir Road, Lake Forest—Saturday and Sunday.

MICELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
lawn roller for hire.
Borehardt Fuel Co.,
Tel. H.P. 67.
*
MARTIN
' of all

our

“60”
times.

allotment

Salesman,

FIVE

greatest Out Board Motor
Get your order in while

lasts.

666

DOORS,

P.

Waukegan

2 with

J.

Rd.,

Juhrend,

Deerfield.

full mirrors;

8 haha

painted cornices, matching fireplace, 500
used bricks, hanging radiators, laundry
stove.
211 Vine Ave., H. P.
7
DESK

1

POWER
$45;
sist

P

&amp;

foun

file

mower,

recently
ot L.

cabinet.

A.

800

excellent

overhauled.
Nathan,

883

N.

First

contitGae
Tel.

S.

Green

age

SHAVING:
In a class by itself—for shave:
ing is brutal without hot water!
Rem
“him” that hot water is always on es
when you have an automatic gas: water
heater in your home.
See your plumber
gas appliance dealer, or visit North Shere
Gas Company.
'
oe
HOLMES
Electric
Exerciser
$25;
right
hand
drainboard,
Chicago
swi
faucet
$15;
gas
side arm
heater

work

bench $4.

162.Beverly

Pl., H.

WOOD
LATHE,
complete
with
motor, —
metal bench, buzz saw; jig gd
prac- —
tically new.
Very reasonable.
EP.
2807 or 955 Ridgewood
Dr., n °°.

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post.
We sell furniture, bric-a‘brac e | enge se
47 S. St. Johns.
Tel.
FP.
84-B120-In-tf

SILVERWARE — SPECIAL SALE.
Sterling and Flated.
Drastic eee es,
50%.
Buy ahead for gifts.
624 Grove, Evanston.

EIGHT
piece fumed oak dining set: also,
4 piece wicker porch set.
1152 Chestnut
St., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 28.

THREE
able;
quire

FRIGIDAIRE,
Jewel
gas
stove,
bedrdéom
furniture,
dining
room
furniture,
daybed, andirons, fire screen, lady’s bicycle.
495
Sheridan
Pl., H. P. or Tel. H.P.
1828 Friday&amp; Sat., between 1 p.m. &amp;
8 p.m.

CLEANING:
plenty: of hot water is needed
to get that dirt!
An assured supply of
hot water is yours
with an automatic
storage gas water heater in your home.
See your plumber, dealer, or North Saar:
Gas Company.

pool tables for sale. Very Feats
two
baby
buggies
$5 each.
Inat Community Center.

OFFICE SELLING, etc.
INCINOR gas fired incinerator, burns garLACE: . Exquisite
French
iar fashi
Good opportunity
bage, trash and paper in your basement.
for ambitious man.
Experience desirable
to be made into a wedding gown. —
but not necessary.
Not a. fill in job.
$79.50
installed . . . Winnetka
Home
discriminating
person, who
ap
Appliance, 956 Linden, Hubbard Weeds,
Edward Hines Lumber Co., 319. Oakwood |
quality.
Reply
Box
EM;
°
Ave.
Tel. Pe om a
' care,
DS
ae, Winnetka
2000.

—

�se

ington

Road

WANTED
_ FREE
get

or

Lake

Forest

TO

BE

GIVEN

wood for your
it.
296 Hazel

734.

fire, if you come and
Ave., Highland Park.

_ MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

LOST:

AND

FOUND

LOST:
Black
&amp;
white
toy
fox
terrier.
:
Name
of ‘‘Toots.”
Reward.
Tel. H.P.
8182 or 1747 Broadview Ave., H. P.

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern Ave., L. F.
vi doo kts
606.
Our service department,
has the

LOST:
Gold
Bulova
lady’s
watch
with
black band.
Please return—no questions
asked.
Reward.
1857 Broadview or Tel.
H.P. 4187.

MOTOR

PLYMOUTH
Business
condition all around.
Grove

St.,

~

wit

as

Te.

ae

;

F.FP:

Ruffled

W.

Coupe
1936,
$400 or best

Glencoe,

Coupe

Park

19387,

good
Tel.

OLDS
1941 Hydromatic:
new, perfect condition.
or see at 131 Pleasant

i

LAKE

condition.
1080.

North

cylinder,
like
Tel. H.P.
1097
Ave., Highwood.

AUTOS

ACCESSORIES

FOR

PREPARE

Fine
stall
HP,

all
221

PUPPIES:
old,

BUSINESS

PERCY

Pedigreed

chocolate

Genesee
8054.

Street,

brown

female,

coloring.

Waukegan

or

SERVICE

H. PRIOR,

Jr.

Photographer
Specializing in
pictures of
Tel. T.P.' 3199

painted

RESERVATIONS

by

mail,

phone

or

in

available.
at once.

TREES

Ave.

HORSES

&amp;

Forest

1304.

PERSONAL
WILL

not

be

contracted
this date.

dress,

HAVE
for

Re

1320

by

responsible

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park,
Ill.
29-S-3-in-ts

-FLAGSTONE,
TOP
SOIL,
HUMUS,
CINders,
screcnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
down, power saw for hire; cog
hauling
and
welding.
Tel.
8931
or
8785.
John Tazioli.

Rd.,

for

any

bills

H.

P.

Jewelry.
Responsible
1947.
only,
April
30,

Polk.

&amp;

SIX

DECORATING

WALL
WASHING
Window Washing
Storms and Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
R.F.D. No. 1, Box 246-A
Libertyville, Illinois
Grayslake 5414

PAINTING AND DECORATING
Inside and Outside.
Tel. H.P. 3452 or 3053
R.

cu.

days

Bay

Conger

JOHN HALL’S
Tree &amp; Landscaping Service.
We trim,
remove &amp; spray trees.
Also landscaping
work.
219
Sheridan
Ave.,
Hwd.
Tel.
H.P. 3918.

grounds

or.6

Rd.,

Electrolux
Best

Homewood

or

weekly

Green
ft.

chauffeur,

drop leaf table;
several
chairs;

216

Gardener

4

condition.

worker

half

L.F..

Ave.,

days

Tel.

refrigerator,

offer.

Cast

at

L.F.
A-1

iron

street

lamp
post complete
with
globe.
Balsam Rd.
Tel. H.P. 2709.

2425

a

Adjustments, or corrections of error,
on Advertiser’s
written copy, not the
fault of the advertiser will be made by
correct publication without charge, only
if we are notified immediately following
publication.
Cancellations
must
be made
before
3
p.m.
Tuesday
for
Highland
Park
News
to be effective the same
week.
On
Telephone
ads
adjustment
is
made
only
on
errors
in
address
or
phone number reported immediately.
Copy is accepted only with the understanding that this paper assumes no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical or mechanical
error.
Reply to Real Estate and Situations
Wanted may be made by phone as well
as by letter.
To reply to such advertisements
phone
H.P.
4500,
4501
or
4502
Ad
Dept.
Your
name,
address
and
phone
number
will be placed
at
once in the box of the advertiser.
The
Wanted
Ads
with
BOX
NUMBERS
identity of any Box Number advertiser
or any
information
not
.contained
in
want ads will not be disclosed.
replies
livered
sented.

of our advertisers

to blind
ads
will
not be deunless the release card is preReplies
will be mailed
upon

request.

Right is reserved to revise or accept
copy
subject
to publication
rules.
To place your ad, phone H. P. 4500,
or

4502.

The office is open Tuesday until 5:30
p.m.
Ads forwarded by mail should be
addressed
to
59
S.
St.
Johns
Ave.,
Highland Park.
.
Tuesday,
5:0
Deadline on all Classified Ads
RATES:
Minimum
Charge $1.10 for
20 words or Jess.
Additional words up
to 55 words will be 5 cents each.
All
words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All
classified
display
ads
1 inch
or
more are charged at the agate line rate.

HENNING
O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North
Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, Ill.
Tel. Longbeach 2404.
Fully insured

E.

or

1194 N.
1718.

4501,

any
one
but myself
after
y W. Ruchti, former ad-

Deerfield

SOLD
Polk’s
my
own
debts

Lo

WANTED:

or

from

News.

Fort the protection

PONIES

SHETLAND
PONY:
Gentle, good for beginners.
Rides
or
drives,
saddle
and
bridle.
650
S. Waukegan
Road,
Lake

PAINTING

BEAUTIFUL
pointer
pups,
females,
3
;
months,
pedigreed, good hunting stock,
%
great
playmates.
G.
Gabrielson,
5040
Roscoe, Chicago 41.
Tel. Kildare 9227.
months

BOX

accepted

Park

gardener

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED
No Experience Necessary
To fabricate essential electrical
equipment
required
in home.
Drilling
eo
Tapping
@
Assembly Operations
Phone

THE
Shermer

Northbrook

M.
Rd.

B. AUSTIN

715

CO.

Northbrook

STREETS

THE

CITY

OF

Nor shall any person, firm or
place or maintain on any such

SECTION
corporation

2.

That

any

person,

who

may:

own

or

be

fences,

firm

hereby

authorized

to

set

out,

or

possessed

of any lot or other parcel of land in
City of Highland Park may and they
plant,

i

the
are
keep

or maintain in the parkways of the public
streets adjacent to such lot or parcel of
land
any
tree
or
shrub
the
lowermost
branches
of which shall be and shall be
and

maintained

not

less

than

ten

feet above the highest level of the paving
maintained
for vehicular
traffie adjacent
to such parkway,
provided
however
that
no person, firm or corporation shall hereafter plant, set out or propagate in any
city parkway those species of trees commonly known as soft maple, poplar, willow
or

catalpa

or

any

variety

thereof.

SECTION 8.
PENALTY.
Any
person,
firm or corporation who shall violate the
provisions of this ordinance shall be punished by a fine of not less than $5.00 nor
more than
$100.00 for each offense, and
the

provisions

hereof

shall

be

deemed

to

be violated and a separate offense thereof
committed
for each
day
in which
such
violation shall continue.
SECTION 4.
VIOLATION
A_
NUISANCE.
Any
and
all
shrubs,
trees
or
bushes now growing or hereafter set out,
planted
or raised
in or upon
the parkways of this city, in violation of the terms
of this ordinance, are and each of them is
hereby
expressly
declared
a public nuisance and subject to treatment and abatement as such.
Any such trees, shrubs or
bushes so raised or set out, contrary to
law, shall be abated as a common
nuisance by any member of the street department
or police department
.of said city.

SECTION

5

EMERGENCY.

WHERE-

AS, dangerous condition is deemed to exist
in the City of Highland
Park by reason
of the growth and maintenance of shrubbery,
trees
and
other
plants
in certain
portions of the city parkways
prejudicial
to the operation with maximum
safety of
motor
vehicles.
and
the _ protection
of
pedestrians and children involving thereby
danger to the life, limb, safety, health and
welfare of the people of Highland
Park,
an emergency is hereby declared to exist
and this ordinance ‘shall be in full force
and

effect

approval
law.

from

and

and

after

publication

as

its

passage,

provided

by

SECTION 6.
All ordinances or parts of
ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby
expressly repealed.
The provisions hereof
shall be deemed
to supersede and repeal
the provisions
of an
ordinance
entitled:
“An
Ordinance
Prohibiting
the
Planting,
Raising or Setting Out of Trees or Shrubs
in the Parkways of the City of Highland
Park
Except}
by
Special
Permission,”
passed June
11, 1928, and recorded June
21;

1928,

;

J.
ATTE
Vv. C. T MUSSER
City

B.

GARNETT
Mayor.

,

Clerk.

Filed: April 14, 1947
Passed: April 21, 1947
Approved:

April

22,

1947

Published:
Recorded

:April

22,

1947.

FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought for Cash
Oriental Rugs — Carpets
Silverware —
China —
Porcelains — Jewelry —
Pianos — Libraries.
Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service

construction.

@

PUBLIC
IN

street or parkway
stones, boulders,
rock gardens
or ornamentation.

kept

references.
Living
quarWrite
Box
G-155,
c/o

pair
table
lamps.
Libertyville, Il.

3

FOR
SALE:
Choice
Evergreen.
Reasonable.
Cash and carry.
Clifford C. Foote,
Rt. 45 in Half Day, just off Milwaukee

I

CANARIES:
Guaranteed
singers
in
eolors.
Also female for breeding.
McDaniels Ave.
Tel. H.P. 1502.

514
S.
Ontario

being

EVERGREEN

DOGS

FORTY
RABBITS,
mostly
young.
healthy
breeding
stock:
with
5.
Tel,
hutch.
All
at
a_ bargain.
1636 or 625 Laurel Ave., H. P.

-8

2764

eal

CATS,

DEPOSIT

now

as

BEAUTIFUL
6 leg cherry
antique
walnut
chest;

Forest

cleaned,

position

. Highland

Organization
Committee,
Room
205,
Glencoe National
Bank,
Glencoe4 Illinois.

ANTIQUES

- DASCHUND

SAFE

from
loop.
Help like stay.
Hills
Farm—Crystal
Lake,

Experienced
&amp;
ters
necessary.

SPRING!

Screen

head _ high-producing

Illinois,
Route
1
Phone Crystal
Lake 1320-W-2
If phone strike on ask directions
Standard station east of depot.

SOIL

FOR

removed,

24

IN

PARK.

BE IT ORDAINED
by the City Council
of the City of Highland Park, Lake County,
Illinois:
4
SECTION
1.
That it is hereby declared
and it shall be unlawful for any person,
firm or corporation to plant, set out, grow
or maintain any tree, bush, shrub or plant

permitted.
corporation

cows
and
all
necessary
machinery
less
than $40,000.
Gross annual income $7,316.
8
buildings
in
all
including
beautiful
9
room
modernized
brick
home—adjoining

DESIRE

&amp; hung.
Gutters
cleaned
and painted.
Vet’s Maintenance,
5124 Newport Ave.,
Chicago 41. Tel. Bel. 5080 (collect).

CASH

Large Quantity:
EARLY
AMERICAN
PINE FURNITURE
And
“ENGLISH
18th CENTURY
ANTIQUES,
LAMPS,
Cc,
Owner going to England for the Summer.
No Reasonable Offer Refused.
COURT
ANTIQUE
SHOP
918 Linden Avenue
Hubbard
Woods
Winnetka 4085
BIRDS,

Storms

with

PLANTS
PARKWAYS

in and
upon
any public
street or parkway
in
the
City
of
Highland
Park
except
in
the manner
and
excepting the variety
and
species
of
plants
hereinafter
specifically

One of the best 80 Acre Country
entation
and farms anywhere.
Inventory- value over
$58,000.
Asking price Farm alone $30,000.

FARM

Lake

person.
Only limited number
Reservations
should
be made

ee
"87 to °47
Used
Cars.
A. G. McPHERSON,
Inc.
887 E. Park Ave., HH. r

i

FLOWER

Highway

SERVICE

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
DUE
ILL
HEALTH

One hour
Singing

drapes,

UP &amp; DELIVERY
SERVICE
Also car radio repair.
WICK’S RADIO
SERVICE
1151
PARK
AVE.,
DEERFIELD
Tel. Deerfield
525

WANTED

WANTED

FOREST
Skokie

TREE

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

Complete

OTHER

HIGHLAND

woods of hickory and oak.
This affords a
home.
business
and recreation all in one
for
less
than
a
comparable
city
home.

PICK

DODGE ’41 Convertible 5 passenger, radio
and
heater.
Almost new tires; perfect
condition.
Before 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m,
Tel. H.P. 5680 or 124 . St, Johns, H. P.

&amp;

your

for busi-

Wholesale
and
Retail.
CLEAN
PRODUCTION
TOP
SOIL
Tested
&amp; approved
by Pitts. Lab.
Supply Field: Co. Line &amp; Waukegan
Rd.,
Deerfield
A. F. VOLTZ
Box
178,
R.R.
1, Glenview,
IIl.
Fhone
Glenview
734

USED 1987 Dodge, four door sedan. Haak’s
Auto Supply, 29 S. Second St.
Tel. H.
P

PARTS

panels,

BLACK

HUDSON
1938 four door sedan, good condition; radio &amp; heater.
See at 300 Oakwood Ave., H. P. after 5:30 p.m.

AUTO

curtains,

8

FOR
SALE:
One
Ford
dual
carburetor
manifold with one carburetor and linkage.
Also 84 V-8 Ford Motor and other
Ford equipment.
Can be seen
after 5
p.m.,
1800
Edgewood
Rd.
Tel.
H.P.
5892

serve

open

GARDENS — LAWNS
Hauling Dirt and Manure
Annual and Perennial Plants
Pansies

tires, good
Highwood.

H.P.

to

LANDSCAPING

good
offer.

Ill.

Ave.,H. P.

equipment

tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 5804

5720.

Club

53

Stop in today.
Now
C. T. Bartlett.

PARKWAY CURTAIN
LAUNDRY

SALES

Sedan 1941, good
47
Frairie
Ave.,

PLYMOUTH
condition.

modern

AUTOMOBILES

966 Northwestern
Ave.
Lake Forest, Ill.
Tel. L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.

865

most

ears.
ness.

VALLEY

“ORDINANCE | alk IBITING ©THE
PLANTING, SETTING OUT O) R MAIN- A
TENANCE OF TREES, cicnGes OR
AND

—_—_—_———

CRAFTSMAN
FURNITURE
REPAIR
“For Work
of Quality”
Upholstering,
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.
38rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Zion,
Tel. Zion 3496

Sunday
morning
in
$10.
Reward.
northwest
section H. P.
225 McDaniel Ave., H. P

BARTLETT

SKOKIE

AN

SURGERY

Treating,
Pruning,
Spraying
‘Dangerous
Trees
Removed
Also cabling and surgery.
All property
:
and men fully insured.
Illinois
Highwood,
822
Highwood
Ave.
Tel. Br. 2653
Earl Reynolds

TREE
TRIMMING
&amp; LANDSCAPING
Removing Dead Trees, Hauling Away
Cement
Work
Light Hauling —
Wood
ROBERT
L. WHITE
1002 N. Elmwood,
Waukegan
Telephone
Ont.
7530

Gold choker,

USED

TREE

186-J-19-tf

FOR SALE

TRAP
DRUM
outfit, complete with fiber
:
cases,
pearl finish, excellent
condition.
148 S. Green Bay Rd. or Tel. H.P. 5318.
LOST

‘Trailer Coach.
Regular bottle gas stove
plus
two
tanks.
Stainless
steel
sink.
Used
five
months.
Inquire
Bartlett’s
Resort, Diamond Lake, Mundelein.

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More
623 Vine Ave., Highland
Park
M. Preti
E, O. Inman
Tel. H. P. 5676
Tel. H.. P. 89

AWAY

ft. ““Streamlite”

| BARGAIN twenty-seven

MODERNE DECORATING
SERVICE

FENCING: "Riehty feet of “Dubois” split
_. sapling fencing with post.
410 Wash-

&amp;

WILLIAMS, BARKER
SEVERN COMPANY

Martha Mooney, Auctioneer
229 South Wabash Avenue
Chicago 4, Illinois
Harrison 3777

2

�RANEEDUCED!!
FOOD PRICES]

| Barek Party Saturday
On Saturday evening, May 3, at
8:30, Highland Park Post No. 145,
American Legion, will hold its final
games

at

party

the

and

dance

Masonic

of

temple

the

building,

North Sheridan road.
In addition to the games,

be dancing

season

there

will

to the music of Ellsworth

Sheridan’s
orchestra
from
until 1 a.m. There will be

ments

21

for all. Chairmen

10
p.m.
refresh-

You

Marvin Florent.
is chairman of

means

committee.

Nevada,

and

William

G.

Jahncke,

past worthy grand patron of the OES
of

Illinois.

Johanna

A.

Thompson,

junior past worthy grand matron
the OES of Illinois, will be guest
honor.

of
of

Bicycle Safety
(Continued
mobile

from

association,

and

Institute of America.
in

an

April

18,

7)

the

They

“Information

Friday

page

Bicycle

were used

Please”

at

the

program,

Elm

Place

auditorium.
The

purpose

of

the»

program

was

to make Elm Place students conscious
of bicycle safety and to acquaint
them with the requirements of the
Bicycle
formed.

Safety

club

which

is

being

Rex
Andrews,
chief of police of
Highland
Park,
who
was
present
commended
the boys on their program and gave the club his approval.

He

told

to

present

the

audience

that

plan

the

a

and

licensing

land

Park

of

Bicycle

club

he

DEL MONTE,

near

the

future

that

of

would

also

be

the

NAT. WHOLE

KERNEL

WHOLE

into

written

false,
test

multiple
will

2.

three

A

be

test,

either

choice,

given

to all

mechanical

bicycle
brakes,

parts.

or

a

true-

matching

in

of

the

which will include: testing of
handle bars and grips, pedals,

two

lanes

10

feet

apart.

The entire program will be carried
out by the patrol boys during gym
classes
and activity periods.
Each
child fulfilling the requirements set

up

will

receive

a

oo 3 Be

2!/,

a

QUALITY

Niblets Corn 2 Go% 29°

ONO8S os 6

LORD

LIBBY'S

CRISCO
VEGETABLE

x.

Green Beans 2 822 37°

Tomato Juice

“8:97 25:

Sifted Peas 2 N°2 29°

Big Sweets . . “9,2 15¢

LIBBY'S

COLLEGE

TOMATO

JUICE

Gocktaill. . . “685 25°

SHORTENING

$F

33

JAR

Done 20

TWICE-RICH

INN

SPRY OR

DURKEE'S

MARGARINE
OR

BLUE

BONNET

ws 39°

WINESAP APPLES ... 10°) /NATCO MILK
| FLO

‘JUICE ORANGES . 5 ws 29°
MUSHROOMS . . . - - «29°

| DAWN

FRESH

FLORIDA
OUTDOOR GROWN

CALIFORNIA
LONG \/HITE

c

FORA

TOP

AMERICAN HOME
OR DROMEDARY

GRAPEFRUIT
NO. 2
CANS

19°

FANCY

LB.

SALAD

LBS.

- 10. 49°

e

Cc

QUALITY

Tomato Juice

QUALITY

SUPER SPUDS.--

¢€

CAN

| CUCUMBERS

POTATOES
MAINE

TALL

14!/p-OZ.

BAG

2 2 BO:

students.

inspection

wheels, sounding devices, etc.
3. A riding test which will include:
(a) Slow riding test. Rider rides 75
feet in lane 3 feet wide in 30 or more
seconds. (b) obstacle test. Rider rides
figure eight around Indian clubs set

up

cn DEC

LIBBY'S DEEP-BROWN

Sauerkraut . NO2? 10°

~

REDI-MEAT

Kidney Beans 2 S22 25°

MOTT

today,

MOR—TANG

Sliced Beets 2 'SO2 25:

KERNEL CORN

to

divided
1. A

PLUM

DEL MONTE

2 Skx¢ 38°

Golden Corn

Store

savings

Prune Plums
NO.

SLICES OR HALVES

big

lipricots . . . 22% 29°

necessary

obtain a city license.
Captain Frank Salbego of the Elm
Place patrol gave the outline of the
plan to be carried out. It will be

SUGAR

Visit a National
these

FANCY

hoped

and

of

Tomato Sauce? $97. 15°

inspection

requirements

at National.

advantage

Peaches ..«.0 cccaw 29°

of all bicycles in High-

in the

several

for

better
take

PEAS
sx [Qe

Jerry C. Leamthe ways and

Campbell Chapter 712, Order of the
Eastern Star, will hold Grand Representatives night at the Masonic temple, 21 North Sheridan road; Wednesday, May 7, at 7:30 p.m.
In the East will be Alvina S. Culver, grand representative of the OES

do

EARLY JUNE

OES Will Hold
Special Meeting

of

always

and

ious committees are John Mansuette,
games; William J. Acker, Matt Maiman,
Leslie
B.
McCaffrey,
Albert
Axt, John Peters, DeWitt J. Manasse

and
ing

can

for the var-

membership

card

and a decal which will be attached to
his bicycle. The cards and decals were
donated by the Bicycle Institute of
America.

NEW
SOAP

LOW

FLAKES

American
SOAP

:

PRICE!

Famil

POWDER

bike

2

‘ee

Duz Soap Powder }
SOAP

POWDER

32

‘32c
32¢

LOE

-Oxydol Powder
SOAP

Ivory orSwan

FLAKES

Blue-White

Old Dutch
KARO SYRUP

=x¢:32¢

Blue Label

(dees

VEGETABLE OIL

i
eNO

TOILET

FLAKES

Lux Flakes
ARGO

N

COFFEE

i

MAXWELL HOUSE, MANOR
HOUSE, CHASE &amp; SANBORN

‘

ras

OR

LB.

rr A8c

me

eo)

DEL

MONTE

49°

Nj Al

SOAP

Lux Soap.
SOAP

PKe. O26

i

HILLS

#02 19¢

DISINFECTANT—DEODORANT
Linco
Bleach
2 ors. 25¢

= “an 10¢ = Mazoli Oil

Rinso ginso sricht

37°07 25¢

CLEANSER

Gloss Starch

2 cars 19¢

xe

346

2 -xes. 17¢

FOOD

STORES

�Page

Thursday,

42

|
Highland

TELEPHONE

We

Power,

Gene

1-2-3

PROMPT
SERVICE
Phone
Highland Park 570

|

Tierney

National Delivery
Service

John Payne, Herbert Marshall,
Anne Baxter, Clifton Webb

“The

Razor's Edge”

i Added: “Snow Man”;

Latest News

212 Railway

SHOCKING
PILGRIM”

PLUS
Mona Freeman,

“THAT
| THURS.,

and

GIRL”
May

and

8-9-10

|

LAST

Deerpath

DAY
Sharyn

THURS.
Moffett,

Wally

“GENIUS

“ERONTIER
je

.

Mat.

2

to

4

In Technicolor

May 4-5-6-7

SUN. thru WED.,

2 to 11

Cont.

FRI.,
Sat.

THU.,

SAT.
Mat.

Rains

Claude

Leigh,

Park

Ist-3rd

May

Scott, Binnie

Showing

One

“Five
3

Barnes
May

SATURDAY
Only—At

3rd

2

&amp;

COMEDY

Advance tickets now on sale
NOTE: Regular performance starts
4:30.
30c to 6:30

at

SUN thru WED.,
May 4-7
“IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE”
James

Stewart, Donna Reed,
Thomas Mitchell

THU., FRI.,
“KIT

Dana

SAT.,

-

Waukegan

Ave.,

NOW

News

Highland

Park

OPEN

SUNDAES
SODAS

SANDWICHES
PIES
Phone

Comedy

Best

1508

Entertainment

GENESEE
from

1:30

May

8-9-10

CARSON”

Andrews, Jon
Lynn Bari

thru

SATURDAY

BETTY
GRABLE
DICK HAYMES
in

Technicolor

Musical

“THE SHOCKING
MISS PILGRIM”

p.m.

Little Peppers and How
They Grew”
CARTOONS

961

May 6-7-8
Lew Ayres

PARTY

MATINEE

KIDDIES

6025

THE JUKE BOX
4-5

EVERY

Color Cartoon, Andy Cylde
SOMING: “The Verdict.”

NOW

“LAST OF THE MOHICANS”

SPECIAL

P.

605

FRI., SAT.

Randolph

H.

pa

for Vengeance

Continuous

Open: Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun.,
1:30
THURS.,

Program

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

GLENCOE
Highland

Weekly

Required

are

deposits

Until Proofs Are Shown

GUNLAW

In Technicolor
3 Stooges
Comedy

-

Your

BERNARD SHAW’S
“CAESAR and CLEOPATRA”
Vivien

Have

No

8-9-10

May
to 4

2

We

east of Highwood
station

Children’s Photos
Taken in Home

IN!

“THE DARK MIRROR”

Garfield

Joan Crawford, John

STOP

Ave.

Park

May 2-3
Durango Kid” in

&amp; MON.
May
A RETURN
ENGAGEMENT
Rita Hayworth, Lee Bowman
Janet Blair, Marc Platt in

Cartoon

block

:

Carney

AND

TUES., WED., &amp; THURS.
Olivia de Havilland,

WARNER'S
“HUMORESQUE”

North

Opening Special
doz. 5x7 for $16.95

- WRESTLING

1

AT WORK”

“TONIGHT AND
NIGHT”

Pierre

Jean

Donlevy,

Sun.

:

1

GAMES

OTHER SPORTING EVENTS

with Smiley Burnette
Also
Latest
News
Events
SUN.

“Song of Schererazade”

BOXING

P.M.

May
Toomey

HEAR

BASEBALL

DIVORCE”
Alan

FRI. &amp; SAT.
Charles Starrett as “The

1-2-3

May

Regis

OF
Brown,

“Gunning
THU., FRI., SAT.

CUB

ILLINOIS

Days—Show
Starts
7
Sundays—2:30
P.M.

“CHILD

LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS
TEL. L. F. 2106

Brian

Highwood

SEE AND

THEATRE
HIGHWOOD,

Shorts

Week

Sat.

THE
HIGHLAND PARK
STUDIO

Ave.

397

BARTLETT

Reed

Selected

Highwood

Highland

FUL LIFE” :
WONDERThomas
'S ABarrymore,
)ITLionel
Mitchell
News

346 Waukegan

Cartoon

Stewart, Donna

Late

Club Lorraine

TOWERHighwood
CASINO

James Dunn

FRI., SAT.,

James

o make a
hit wi
‘If youD wan
me, big boy—take me to The Tower Casino after the game!”
Spaghetti
- Ravioli
- Steak

MISS

BRENNAN
News

Ave.

Events

1 SUN., MON., TUES., WED. May 4-5-6-7
Betty Grable, Dick Haymes

“THE

1947

LOCAL
DELIVERIES

H. P. 2400
May

1,

FOR

Are First!

Park

1 THU., FRI., SAT.
Tyrone

Witty Witticism

May

Hall,

Starts

SUN.

for 4 Days

FRED MacMURRAY
PAULETTE GODDARD
in gay romantic fun

“SUDDENLY IT’S
SPRING”
IMPORTANT ....
No Performance Tues. Eve.,
May 6
Theatre being used Tues. by
ABBOTT LABORATORIES

The GLASS

HOUSE.

at: U. S. Highway No. 41, Lincoln &amp; Touhy Aves.
NORTH

SHORE’S SMART—DIGNIFIED DINING
AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE
ORLAND

FRANKLIN,
Popular

Radio

Singing

ROOM

Pianist

Star

Entertainment 9 until closing
Excellent Cuisine

Ultra Modern

Decor

�At
We

invite

quality
offered

you

Lowest

to

inspect

Prices
our

on

large

diamonds and nationally
to you on easiest kredit.

Easiest
and

Kredit

complete

stocks

of

factory

priced

watches,

known

PERFECT DIAMONDS

finest

Shock

==—|;

75¢ Weekly
Ladies’
17 jewel
or
jewel Bulova watch.

gents’
15
Small size

10-k natural rolled
gold
cases. Ask for No. 33.

.

Ring

L

ie]

SS

IBN.

WO

&gt;

OH

|

WY

Lf

7

‘BARD

=

Ac

size

10-k

plate

cases.

$1.75 Weekly
Perfect
center
diamond
with
two genuine side diamonds. 18-k
white or 14-k natural gold. Ask

94.

for

No.

7 DIAMOND
DING RING

ye

98.

natural
No.

shockSmall

rolled

gold

42.

ain
SNS

woe

on.eing
ww
pe

WED

YT

15 jewel
watches.

PERFECT

Perfect
center diamond
with
two genuine side diamonds in
neatly engraved ring of 18-k
white or 14-k natural gold. No.

Yin

Zam
fp
Hall

Benrus

$1.00 Weekly

Willd
Yeap

Massive

or gents’

proof

plate

PERFECT
Gent's

Ladies’

xy

S 7

yi

7

;

ae

&lt;A

he

50c Weekly

$250 en

Seven
genuine diamonds are in this
neatly
engraved
18-k
white
or 14-k
natural gold wedding ring. No. 41.

BUSCHS

PRICES ALWAYS

MATCHED

INCLUDE

FEDERAL

TAX

$6.00: Weekly

BRIDAL PAIR

Beautiful large perfect fiery center diamond with four sparkling
side diamonds in this latest style
ring of 18-k white or 14-k natural
gold. Ask for Perfect “300.”

Ah ly Wily

Large sparkling perfect diamond
in this heavy massive gents’ 14-k
natural gold ring.
A ring every
man will be proud to wear.
Ask
for gents’ Perfect ‘250.’

DIAMONDS
AND
MOUNTINGS
ARE ENLARGED
TO BRING OUT
OF DESIGN.

WATERPROOF
SHOCKPROOF
15

Cocktail Watch

WATCH
3

2 Diamonds—17

fs
$]

For
wedding

14-k
951.

engagement

matching
ring

natural

in

18-k

gold.

Ask

Weekly

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
NO CARRYING CHARGE

white

or

for No.

low

price—both

engagement
can be had

and

the

very

$1.50 Weekly

diamond

wedding

in 18-k white

ring

Beautiful

or 14-k

two

natural gold. Richly engraved
and well-matched. No. 74.

Monday

&amp; Thursday

KREDIT

Evenings

JEWELERS — OPTICIANS

1624 Sherman
Chicago
Also

4

Loop
Other

Avenue,

Store,

37

Conveniently

Evanston

E. Madison
Located

cocktail

genuine

watch

diamonds

and

with
four

simulated rubies in the tiny 14-k
rose gold case. No. 98.

RUSCH
Open

50c

ring

five-diamond

Jewels

S

$1.00 Weekly ©
4 peautiful combination—a

Weekly

Five-diamond

with

Sg. 0

5 ig $3.25

Both

Sturdy dependable sport watch
with sweep second
hand
and
easy-to-read night
dial.
Nontarnishable case.
A _ serviceable
watch and
an
excellent timekeeper.
No. 22.

SHOWN
DETAIL

St.

Stores

�a

100-BED HOSPITAL!
&amp;

ice

over

hospital

130%—-yet

building
mands
you

our

for 25

facilities.
of our

make

was

That

growing

years

Park

is why

hospital.

Your home

bor calls to

solicit

is

has been

serves
spent

is not equal

your

when

has
to

to the

increased
increase

its

health

de-

That is why it is so vitally important that
possible its enlargement.

a community

contribution,

non-profit

enterprise.

It is YOUR

When your neigh-

GIVE generously... give MORE than

. . . spread your contribution over a 3-year period

your gift as large as possible.

one knows

it

may be the next to need its services.

you first thought you would
—no

population

our hospital

community.

Hospital

the

not one cent

a contribution to make

Highland

to make

built,

his own

Remember, illness plays no favorites

family may need the facilities that cannot be

provided by a hospital that is too small.

@

Contributions are deductible in computing the income tax.
Appreciated securities may be donated at present market
values without capital gain liability.

Makea3 Year Contribution
HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL

$929,000 BUILDING

FUND

�</text>
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                    <text>Discussing
&lt;n

The

Production

Rehearsing
For
“Outward
Bound”

Deerfield Stagers Prepare for Newest Play
“Outward
are

Mrs.

Seated

Sheridan,

Bound”

Carl

Ross,

Mrs.

Carl

at the

will be presented
Martin

Decker,

Friday

and

table, left to right, Paul
Ross,

Thursday, April, 24, 1947

Martin

Decker,

and

Saturday evenings.

Russell

Mau.

Pagett,

Jr.,

and

Russell

Cynthia

(Mrs.

The

lower picture, left to right,

Robert)

Mau.

|

Gillespie,

Mrs.

Donald

~ \. per Copy

�We love 'em in December

as we doin May
lubrication, a body wash, battery
check or bolt-tighten. It means

are

our

smallest

That’s what your Buick was built
to do. Years and years of that kind
of driving are in it— especially

Buick-engineered

it

gets

the

interested,

formed car care this fine
mobile should have.

That

doesn’t

mean

an

inauto-

way

they should

We

have Buick

are

Even

the

handled

the

be for a Buick.
tools that do jobs

better and quicker. We have men
who know Buicks best. We have

parts

that are

clear, isn’t it, that here is

sandths of an inch thick, it’s a ‘““must’’
forthe high compression this powerful straight-eight is designed
for.
Other kinds that are thicker cut

down the compression and the car’s
In

Put that all together and it’s Buick
car care.
where your Buick will receive the
best attention? After all, we love
’em heart and soul.

One of the things that play a part in
Fireball snap is Buick’s wafer-thin
steel cylinder gasket. Just 15 thou-

liveliness.

precisely right for your car.

Pretty

just periodic

details

babies.

Sasteaenteeise coer

Buicks

a Buick.

we

always

Sesh

Buick

the wheel
— how you glided along
with foursquare BuiCoil springing
smoothing every wrinkle in the
road?

when

“Trop” SECRET

thorough attention by competent
Buick men—attention that keeps a

carbon

and

other where

placed,
SS

EMEMBER the day you first
R romped away in that Buick of
yours? How those eight Fireball
cylinders fairly floated you over the
hills
— how those road-steady two
tons of lively car answered sweetly
every light touch of your hand on

valve

this

only this

gasket

Buick

jobs,

or

any

must be re-

gasket

will

assure the fit Buick engineers intended. No wise Buick owner would

have any other in his engine.
Just

another

example

of how

you

get more for your money —in major
adjustments, tune-ups, lubrication or
anything your car needs—when you
make sure it gets Buick car care.

ytd

, ei
¥ F
re)

ee

at

NORTH

SHORE

110 SOUTH FIRST STREET

UICK

CO. ING.
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

�Volume

22, Number

4

To Date In 1947

Total $113,578
Nine

new

houses

for

which

mits have been issued since
1, 1947, in Deerfield are:

per-

January

January
Deerfield Construction Co.
1264 ‘Meadow tare cojificwis.igick $
1260 Meadow lane .........--..-.-.-.--.----

14,000
15,000

February
American
Construction Corp.
730 Hermitage
avenue
................ $
S62. Whittier: streets i: ..00-...0.-4.5
558 Whittier street ©.....................
1055 Oakley
avenue
................-5...1051 Oakley
avenue .............1.......1047 Oakley
avenue
....2..:.....-....2...

10,000
,00
10,000
10,000
10,000
10,000

April
Deerfield
Construction
Co.
for
David
Inman
Jr., , 304
DeerBAOLa
WOM.
Pt
ae yah lnadent Sacentokidins
PIBCER:

LO

CORE

Williams,

SDNEETVBLOED

Stagers pictures
Locke Rogers.

this

week

were

taken

issued

951

Cedar

2522S Se

to

date

Total

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

750

........2..-.+.-.+++ $9,250

to

date

............ $113,578

Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary Club Sponsors

&gt;

Wess

Musical Program
The Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary
club will sponsor a program by Northbrook High school students on Sunday
afternoon, April 27th, at the
Veterans’ Hospital, Bldg. 83, Fort
Sheridan. The program will consist
of vocal and instrumental ensembles
and solos. A mixed vocal ensemble
and a girls’ easels will sing several songs.
A flute trio, Phyllis LeFever, Martha

be

.

Loudon,

and

Jean

Wideroe,

MRS.

divi-

sion I winners in the recent District
Music Contest, will play the popular
Hook Sonata. Bill Tomes and James
Haskell, both division I winners in
the same contest will feature trumpet
duets.
Arthur Landwehr and Jean Wideroe will play saxaphone and flute
solos respectively. Other students who
are participating in the program are
Mary Ann Hopkins, Nancy Mathein,
Alice Willi, Ellen Roueche, Marilyn
Gullicksen,
Jean
Brown,
Kenneth
Jensen, Dan Parry, Charles Schwall,
Carleton Bergstedt, Melvin Peterson
and Jack Tull.
The program will be under the
direction of M. C. Dahlberg, music
director at Northbrook High school,
and a member of the Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary Club.

DONALD

SHERIDAN

peg.)
ee ae
Martin Decker
Pee
Tr uk Wei eect Cynthia Gillespie
POY
Ss id d peas Frank Sturtevant
MCSE TION Hcouncges ok Russell Mau
Mrs. Cliveden-Banks . Geneva Ritter
Rev. William Duke .. Paul Pagett Jr.
Mid@et

cig

Helen

Ross

Mr. Lingley
Thomas Evans
Rev. Frank Thomson, James Tibbetts
The stage crew will include J. G.
Russell,
Maurice
Allsbrow,
Milton
Merner, and others.
Player

Has

Mumps

Mrs. F. C. Ritter (Geneva) has had
the mumps for the past two weeks
and everyone is hoping that she will
be over the seige by tomorrow evening.

Personal Property Schedules
Sent by Township Assessor
Clarence Pedersen of North Waukegan road, deputized by Edward H.
Selig, West Deerfield Township assessor, is now going from door to
door passing out the new schedules
of personal property questionnaires.
These

forms are to be filled in, signed

and returned to the assessor’s office
before May 1.
Last week’s Deerfield Review explained in detail how these delinquent personal property taxes will be
collected.
Daylight

Saving

Time

This is a reminder that daylight
saving time goes into effect on Sunday, April 27. Deerfield clocks will
be turned ahead one hour.

am.

Presbyterian

rummage

sale.

8 p.m. Holy Cross card party in
parish hail.
8 p.m. Stagers Play.
SATURDAY, April 26—
8:15 p.m. Stagers Play.
MONDAY, April 28—
8 p.m. Legion Post.
8 p.m. Zone and Plan commission.
TUESDAY,
April 29—
10° a.m. Bus
Hearing at “ICC,
Chicago.
THURSDAY, May 1—
12:15 p.m. Rotary Club.
1:15 p.m. St. Paul’s Woman’s Guild.
2:30
pms
WSCS
of
Bethlehem
church.
3 p.m. High school PTA.
8 p.m. Eastern Star.
8 p.m. Amvets’ auxiliary.
FRIDAY, May,2—
8

p.m.

Amyets

post.

.

SATURDAY, May 3—
8 p.m. Deerfield PTA
ion &amp; Fun”.
TESDAY,

May

card

July

and their familie

invited

were

received

A

few

unmarked.

It —

is hoped that even the contestants
who did not receive an invitation will
attend and identify their entries.
An interesting program for the evening has been arranged by Executive
Chairman Howell W. Murray, who is.
being .assisted in the drive by Joseph
B. Garnett, general campaign chair
man, and Edward A. Menke, cam
paign co-ordinator.
The need for a
greater hospital in this community
will be explained by Frank F. Selfridge,
president
of
the
hospital.
Everyone is invited to attend.
Mailing to Every Home
Every resident of Highland Park,
Highwood,
Deerfield,
and
Glenco
( Continued on page 31)

Wilmot School Voters
Approve Bond Issue
A special election was held Satur-—
day, April 19, in the Wilmot Gram-_
mar school, with an 8 to 1 approval—
of the bond issue and the construction — ‘
of an addition to the school.
(a
The first. proposition: “Proposition
to construct an addition to the pre-—
sent school building” carried by a

vote of 87 to 10.
second:

‘

“Proposition

building

Amvets

Mothers’ club lunch-

party.

11-12-13—Firemen-A mvets
15-16-17—Legion

carnival.

Chamber of Commerce

“Ladies’ Night’ Dinner
The

be.

bonds

os

to issue

for

$80,000”

carried by a vote of 85 to 12.

Events:

carnival.
August

will

to attend.

been

school

“Fash-

WEDNESDAY, May 7—
12:15 p.m. Royal Neighbor luncheon at Phil Johnson’s.
SATURDAY, May 10—
1:30 p.m. Cub Scout Circus parade.
2 p.m. “Big Top” in school gymn.
8 p.m. Firemen-Amvets dance at
Briergate clubhouse.
Future

evening

6—

1 p.m. Wilmot
eon

the

have

The

parry

of

of the contestants
posters

THURSDAY, April 24—
9 am. Presbyterian rummage sale.
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce ladies night dinner at St. Paul’s church.
FRIDAY, April 25—
9

Contest

distribution of awards for the best
posters submitted by pupils of publi
and parochial schools and high school
students.
A large number of poster
was submitted, indicating great public
interest in the hospital drive.
All

street,

cist cece $

ais
ish pegs 2a $104,328
&lt;i pho. ccsc- sence dccdnceuddyedass
9,

permits

to attend.
A feature

Deerfield road and the railroad
tracks are the dividing lines for
the four section, excluding Woodland Park.

500

Poster

The $525,000 building fund driv
for Highland Park hospital will get
under way next week with a kick-off
rally Wednesday evening, April 30, a
8 p.m., in the auditorium of the El
Place
school, 233 North
Sheridan
road. The public is invited ard urged

secTuesday,
April
29—Northeast
tion.
Wednesday, April 830—-Southeast section.
Thursday, May 1—Southwest section.
Friday, May
2—Northwest
section.
Saturday, May 8—-Woodland Park.

,000

Present

Awards to Winning Pupils

since

Summary:
Goce. Oa
D PErMOAEHAPS

Will

Homer G. Cazel, road and bridge
commissioner, announces the annual “CLEAN UP WEEK” with
the dates of pick-up as follows:
;

Harry
Lense,
166
Deerfield
road,
BuKOOM
MOAI:
sa dave pasedesoneran
se font? 2,000
Robert Carlson, 713 Chestnut street,
exterior remodeling ....-.............-..--600
R. F. Grohe,
936
Knollwood
road,
addition
“tO: Parawe si. 66.060. 45s.
800
Henry
Kusher,
850
Rosemary
terrace, screened porch ................-.---300
Earl
Frost,
759
Osterman
avenue,
MO TUCO AI
iis icpn yl anaes oe ica eee 3,000
Forrest Pasley,
1057 Sheridan aveTARE,
OPO
sky cha lsudeqauee
igre ede eyena ts
300
Remodeling

CLEAN-UP WEEK
April 29-30, May 1-2-3

by

15,328

Janua
Arthur
Scheskie,
1063
Osterman
PRT te ihe, yeas bei oad 4 eek ah 102
Dr.
Dorothy
§S. Davis,
924
DeerBR
ING
6 NS, sags ta katc can ban tty
March
Harry

Deerfield Stagers will present the
third and final play of their eleventh
season, “Outward Bound” on Friday
and Saturday evenings of this week
in the Deerfield Grammar _ school.
Curtain time is 8:15 each night.
“Outward Bound” takes place on a
ship. Mrs. Donald T. Sheridan of
Saunders road is guest director and
the setting is in the present day.

Sk. ci ndee Bi) -e $104,328

Remodeling
permits
January 1, 1947 are:

Local Hospital
Drive Kick-off
Rally April 30°

Stagers To Present “OQutwar
Bound” Friday and Saturday

Building Permits

Deerfield

merce

is meeting

seven

o’clock

Chamber
this

dinner

of

evening
to

honor

Comfor
a

a

Public

Invitation:

No Admission for Movies

And

Refreshments

Amvets
inviting
Temple
p.m.

scenic

to

of Deerfield
the public
on Friday,
a

free

pictures

:

at Temple |
are

cordially

to the Masonic
Tomorrow, at 8

movie.

It

of Norway

will

be

the

taken by —

Phil Johnson on his most recent trip.
to the “Land of the Midnight Sun.”
Both men and women, young and Ae
old, are invited’ by the Amvets for
movies
and
refreshments. ~- Lewis
Thompson is commander and Harold
Root Jr., is publicity chairman.
i Aes
ladies at St. Paul’s church parlors. |
Roy Clavey is chairman of the pro- |
gram committee,
M. A. Frantz is
president.

�Page

. Thursday,

4

April

24,

1947

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

April

24,

Vol.

1947

22,

No.

4

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
Chestnut
St., Deerfield,
Illinois
Ruth Pettis, Editor
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday
745

Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate
— $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
Foreign
Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone

Tllinois

Press

Association
office

post

the

at

Act

the

under

Illinois,
field,
8, 1879.”

Novem-

matter

second-class

as

1944,

27,

ber

4500

MEMBER
Editorial Association

National
‘Entered

H.P.

year

Deer-~

at

March

of

Deerfield forum
An Open Letter
From the Village
President
To Deerfield

Residents:

A “hand-bill’” was circulated the
day before our Village election requesting that a write-in candidate be
for

voted

is

This

election.

the

at

entirely proper and one of the approved ways of making our democracy
possible.
It is regrettable,

ours that some
it necessary to

Village

Statements

Board.

in

the

above

mentioned

(hand bill) were made to the
of a “do nothing attitude” on

paper
effect
the

the

regarding

untrue statements

make

present

in

however,.that

a small Village like
of the citizens find

part

of_the

Village

Board

in

the

meetings of Monday, April 7th and
Tuesday, April 8th on the matter of
a petition of a property owner for
re-zoning a small additional section
from “Residence A” to “Light Manufacturing”.
These
statements
were
made
by
someone who
knows
nothing about

State

statutes or legal procedure

and

is, therefore, not competent enough
to discuss the matter, or by someone

intentionally
ment
false

making

for the
issue.

of

creating

a

The
meeting
mentioned
Monday
was not a meeting of the Village
Board but was
a meeting
of the
Board of Appeals
(none of which
members are on the Village Board)
for the purpose of holding a public
hearing on the petition for re-zoning.
This
is a legal
step required
by

State statute and must; be held before the matter can be voted on by
the Village Board.
The regular meeting of
Board on Tuesday could

vote

on the petition

the Village
not legally

until the opinion

of the Board
of Appeals
could
read before the vofe. There was

time
the

between
Board‘of

Board
opinion

the

public

Appeals

Meeting
for
of the Board

and

hearing
the

be
not

of

Village

the letter
of Appeals

of
to

be

presented for a vote on Tuesday.
The
present
Board
will have
as
one of its duties at the next regular

meeting the voting on the petition.
This will come under the heading of
unfinished business and will be handled by the present board before the
three newly elected members
take
their

places

on

the

board.

Robert
Village

S. Alexander
President

oto

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

‘S. Alexander,
Seated: Anthony J. Mercurio, trustee, 1945-49;
mayor, 1945-49; Chester Wessling, clerk, 1945-49; Homer G. Cazel, trustee, retiring.
Standing, left to right: P. A. Tennis, trustee, retiring; Floyd Stanger, trustee, 1945-49; George T.
Scott, trustee, retiring; Andrew G. Bradt, trustee, 1945-49; and Erwin Seago, village attorney.
The
Deerfield
tured above, will

Village
hold its

board, piclast regular

Last,

but’ not

working

man

least,

on

is

the

the

hardest

entire

board,

meeting on Tuesday, May 13, at 8
p.m. in the village offices in the base-

Homer G. Cazel, chairman of the road
and bridge and public works commit-

ment

of

year’s

business

tee,

the

Newly

assigned

be

The

completed.

trustees,

Trustees

will

Temple.

will be

elected

succeeding
Tennis,

Masonic

who

are

Cazel, Scott, and

sworn

into

their duties

on

office

the

“Village
for

their

Fathers”
services

receive

and

various

and

no

devote

pay

consid-

erable time to the affairs of the community.

A Tribute
to Three
est,

fearless,

has lost three
and

upright

good,

hon-

men

from

its village board.
Being
a_ village
trustee is a payless, thankless job. It
takes courage to vote right, with a
heckling audience ready to pounce.
P. A. Tennis, chairman of public
relations, often was called upon to
make

decisions,

when

the

least

pos-

sible resistance would have been to
give in. He heard all sides of every
question and was slow and thoughtful
in decisions.
"George Scott, chairman of the police

department,

came

in

for

consid-

erable outside work. His was a task
for amiable relations between police
and families whose children, got into
difficulties, as well as the usual details of

such

could

a department.

Both Tennis and Scott possessed
executive ability, helpful in the other
committees on which they served also.
Both felt pressure of business made
it impossible for further service on
the board.

of

be

better

named

grief

and

chronic

kicks.”
It Is So Easy
Working here in

to Criticize
the village,

Cazel

target

was

the

first

for

Mr.
criti-

cism, either in person, or by telephone. How easy it is to sit back and
complain about some one else.
These were some of the seasonal,
daily complaints
he
received,
and
which he so patiently explained would
be

Retiring Trustees
Deerfield

which

“Committee

committees.

an untrue state-

purpose’

Deerfield Village Board DJ.L.Members
1945-1947
Robert
engineer;
Walther,

taken

care

of

as

soon

as

men

and

tools and materials were available:
“My
sidewalk
needs _ shoveling,”
“There are thistles in my neighbor’s
yard,” “My street is dark—no lights,”
“The

snow

is

deep

on

our

streets,”

“The weeds are so high on vacant
lots that I can’t walk on the sidewalk
without
on and

tearing
on came

my
the

stockings,” and
telephone com-

plaints. The
telephone
strike
was
probably a boon for the overworked
Trustee Cazel, who heard every “kicker’s kick.”
Homer

Cazel

has

completed

two

terms, (8 years) of faithful service on
the most difficult committee.
Civic Duty
These three men did not become
trustees for the thanks they would
receive, but because they felt it a
civic duty. Do we really appreciate
what the village board does for us?
Greetings and best wishes to the
successors of these three fine men!
The

New

Trustees

New trustees to be seated are Joseph W. King, Eric C. Banfield, and
Harold L. Peterson.

Mr. King is assistant manager of
the Otis building in Chicago, a real
estate

ing

broker,

a member

Managers’

cago,

a member

of the

association
of

the

Build-

of

Chi-

National

Li-

cense Law Officials board, vice chairman Real Estate Examining committee, State of Illinois, and an alumnus
of Phi Delta
Theta
fraternity
of
Lombard college, Galesburg, Ill.; a
resident for 8 years.
Mr. Banfield is proprietor of the
D-X Service station, 714 Waukegan
road. He came to Deerfield in 1936.
Born in England, he went to Australia at the age of 14, later coming
to the United States. He was in the
regular army 1929-32, and served, also, in World War II, receiving his re-

lease January 9, 1945.
Mr. Peterson, the
date,

successful

surprise

in the

write-in

candicam-

paign against Homer G. Cazel, incumbent, who was seeking re-election, is
married

to

the

former

Dorothy

Fehr,

niece of Mrs. Chester Wessling. They
rent their home at 924 Central avenue.
A resident of the village for 17 years,
he was formerly employed by Public
Service Co., and ‘last year took over
management

of

the

bulk

truck for distribution
line and oils- of the
Petroleum Corp.

plant

and

a

of D-X gasoMid-Continent

Natural Gas Conversion
Will Be Made Next Month
Deerfield and Bannockburn will be
the
first
communities
in this area

to be converted to natural gas. Heavy
rains have delayed construction work
on the new natural gas line which
will soon serve this area.

�Thursday,

April

24,

Page

1947

§

HPHS Athletic Program Ranks with Nation’s Best

The camera snapped these scenes in the pool at H.P.H.S.. At left,
Mark Panther supervises a group of freshman-sophomore students
in some free-style swimming, while in the photo above, the same
group is getting some additional exercise in a water polo game, also
supervised by Panther.

Boys Have Benefit of Planned
Physical Education Training
By

T.

Louise

Anneaux

(Part V of a Series)
During the past 15 years, in spite
f inadequate facilities, the Physical
ducation
staff at Highland
Park
High School has installed one of the
nation’s
finest high
school
physical

education programs.
“An activity for every boy,” is the
theme around which this fine course
is planned.
Robert S. Kendig and
three other well-qualified instructors
are on hand to help, correct and offer
words of encouragement to the some

550 boys attending the local school.
With the aid of this staff of instructors

the

teaching

of

physical

educat

tion in small groups is possible; thus
when a boy signs up for physical
education at HPHS, he is assured
that he will receive as much individual

in

attention

other

in

subjects

this

on

department

the

school

as

cal-

given
term.

at the beginning of the
This includes medical,

and
for

eye

tests

examination
and

communicable

an

On

examina‘The

given

Special Classes
completion of the

the

is

school
ortho-

disease.

routine ‘examinations are
paid for by the school.

and

physical

examination, boys who have defects
that in the examining doctor’s opinion prevent them from profiting by
regular

gym

work,

are

assigned

to

restricted physical education classes
where conditional exercises and modified games

are

emphasized.

A

special

room is set aside for these classes.
All boys at H.P.H.S. must pass a
swimming requirement for graduation.
In the beginning,

each

boy

freshman

boy

at

not

H.P.H.S.

is assigned

a class according to his adaptability.
If a boy fails to learn to swim his

endar.

first year, he
class until he

is kept in a beginner’s
can pass the test.
Al-

To determine the physical statis of
a student before subjecting him to

though the swimming requirement has
been enforced for more than 10 years

most suited to the needs
of high
school
boys.
covers the fundamentals

sports

included

in the

at-

and interests
The
course
of almost all

school’s

intra-

mural
and
interscholastic
athletic
programs,
such as tumbling, appar-

atus work and
These classes

conditioning activities.
meet three times a

week,

being

two

days

devoted

to gym.

nasium or outdoor activities and the
remaining day to swimming instruction.
Freshman
boys also receive
two days of health instruction a week
under a special health teacher.
May Select Work
During the sophomore and junior
years a boy is permitted to choose
one of three following types of classes
which give him an opportunity to
specialize in sports in which he has
become

interested

through

contact

with them during his freshman year:
Advanced Gymnastics consists largely of advanced tumbling and apparatus work.
During the outdoor season

in

the

spring

and

fall,

these

classes have outdoor sports and games
plus conditioning activities.
He may select the Strenuous Sports
and Games class, which includes
wrestling,

‘

Photos by Percy H. Prior, Jr.
/
These pictures were taken during a tumbling class period at the
.school gym., Above, two students demonstrate the forward somersault
to remaining members of the class and at right, Bob Kendig, head of
the Physical Education department, holds hand up for student making
a forward scmersault off a springboard.

boxing,

speed

ball,

football,
and

tends what is primarily an orientation
course to all of the physical activities

work,

tion

yearly

The

class
pedic

a

at the local school, a boy will
fail to graduate because of it.

touch

volley

field

as

ball, basketball,

well

as

track

conditioning

ex-

ercises conducive to these sports.
Advanced Swimming is also among
the

selective

instruction
strokes,

classes.

in
life

This

advanced
saving,

includes

swimming

water

safety,

water polo and diving. Boys taking
this class spend two days a week in
swimming and one day of gymnasium
Physical Education IV includes instruction in sports suitable for use in
later

life,

such

as

tennis,

golf,

bad-

minton, swimming (one day a week),
volley ball, softball, horseshoes
and
conditioning activities.
This course
is required of all seniors and meets
five

days a week.
Classes for Incapacitated

Short and long term classes are
available at H.P.H.S. for boys who
experience minor illnesses or injuries
throughout the school year.
These
classes are of a type that benefits the
student and at the same time relieves
the teacher of the responsibility of
making a diagnosis
The sort term, which is not to
exceed

two

weeks,

is arranged

so that

a student may
spend the regular
exercise: period in’ resting or is
assigned a reading report from one of
a variety of health text-books or from
a sports text-book which deals with
rules and techniques in the sport be(Continued on page 20)

�“SALE

- RED on RED

many

of the

Special Prices

early

for

; Big Nine

meets

are

1409

PLEASANT
RAVINIA

4

of Highland

William

Park

are

N. Anspach
the

parents

of a daughter, Susan Gail, born April
13. at Edgewater hospital, Chicago.
The baby weighed seven pounds, 13
ounces at birth.

AVE.

prayer can do for you.

Mr.

disease. The

—

with
. Tom

\

the

Army’s

is Ist
neta

the CHRISTIAN
textbook and periodicals con-

DAILY-+

YOU

ARE

WELCOME

of

first time

in many,

many

moons a complete layette for the new
baby can be purchased in our Children’s

Store.

...

Manager

Edna

Ed-

wards and her assistants —- Dorothy
Bolle — are specialists in outfitting
the well-dressed baby.

Mr.

“DONT FORGET MOTHER”
Mother's Day May 11th

Tom and Mary Brennan are back
from Florida but not for long. . .
They find Miami to their liking and
will be returning there next week.

Thanks
Thanks
with

\

and to Bill True’s pro-

Country Club.

Palm

Beaches

we

have

memories,

of hurts

you

soothed

to send

your

bubbling

with

for your deep understanding
priceless

song.

of me.

Grade

a card

today.

SUGGESTIONS

Glassware—High

Ball,

Cocktail,

and Pilsner styles.
3 designs to choose from—Geese, Wheat

Old

Forged

Aluminum: Ware

—

and

Trays

Ice Buckets — Water Pitcher — Ash Tray

Palm.

—

Bowls

Sets, etc.

'

Be

sure

to drop

Dominic

Murphy

A son was born at Highland Park
hospital on Saturday,
April
19, to
Mr. and Mrs.
Allen
Murphy,
1520
Main street.
Edwards

Mr. and

Harvard

Mrs. Harry

and

C. Edwards

see our.

beautiful assortment of GIFTS today.

open

Park

hospital
;

Angiuli
A daughter was born at Highland
Park hospital on Sunday, April 20, to
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Angiuli, 327 Euclid avenue.

DOWNING’S FLOOR
SHOP
373

Roger

Williams

Floor

Ave. ’

and

Coverings

Linoleums, Asphalt and
Rubber Tile

4

Chandler's Ine.
525 Central Ave.

Tel. H. P. 3100

of

court, are the parents of a

Floors
in our store

Balentini,

Fashion

California China — Cigarette Boxes — Ash Trays — Sugar
&amp; Creamers — Salt &amp; Pepper — Vases — Bon Bon Dishes
Jam Jars, etc.
Hand

Mrs.

son born at Highland
on Sunday, April 20.

memories,

Mother

and

238 Llewellyn avenue, are the parents
of a son born at Highland Park hospital on Saturday, April 19.

Mom.

of a childhood

GIFT

seer

Fells|:
'

the

memory

Mothers Day Cards priced 5c to $1.00

gabardine,

tropical worsteds, rayons and_
- sucker suits to select from.
Just a reminder . .. We are
Monday nights 7 to 9.

laughter,

remember

High

-Qur
season’s
shipment
of Paim
Beach suits and slacks have arrived
and they’re good as ever... . In fact
a recent scientific test has declared
the
new Palm Beach suit actually
22% cooler than the average off 22
other Summer fabrics tested.
. Incidently, now is the time ‘to bey your
summer suit.
... In addition to the

for

the

For such

motion to Sergeant. ... Bill will take
- over Paddy White’s desk at the Police Station May 1.
. Paddy, who
has retired after wiaty yedes of faithful service, has accepted a position at

Northmoor

for

Thanks

Congratulations to George Hall on
his appointment to the Highland Park

Police Force

Castellani

Balentini

‘

‘For the

322

The Nello Castélfanis of 222 Morgan place, are the parents ofa «son
born at Highland Park hospital on
Friday, April 18.

43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN

Reynolds,

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Morgan, 631
Skokie avenue, are the parents of a.
daughter born at Highland Park hospital on Friday, April 18.

ROOM

READING

SCIENCE

Earl

Morgan

borrowed or purchased at

19th

Gunner

BIBLE,

CHRISTIAN

Mrs.

Kehrwald
-A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Robert
Kehrwald,
339 North
avenue, at Highland Park hospital on
Thursday, April 17.

have

SCIENCE
taining testimonies of healing may be read,

The

Yokahoma

thousands

been healed of all manner ofdiscord and

Wonsiay Clark, son of the T. P.
Clarks of Oakwood Ave., is stationed
at Beppu, Japan — 250 miles from
Infantry. ..
his squad.

Christian Science

it, countless

and

Highwood avenue, are the parents ef
a daughter born at Highland Park
hospital on Wednesday, April 16.

reveals the power of this healing prayer.
Through

A son, John Lee, was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Charles Ropiequet
of South St. Johns avenue at Highland Park hospital Wednesday, April
16.
The Percy H. Priors of 1026
Wade street are maternal grandparents, and the baby’s paternal grand-.
mother, Mrs. R. W. Ropiequet of
East St. Louis, Ill., is expected to visit in Highland Park " shortly, The baby
also has a great- -grandmother, Mrs.
Henry M. Prior, now in Florida.
Reynolds

You can learn at no cost to yourself what

Mentioning Winnetka reminds me
that Brother Abe has been elected
president of the Winnetka Rotary
Club. . .. Abe will represent his club
at Rotary’s International Convention
-at San Francisco in June.

-

Mrs.

’

Weddings—Bill Walters of Walters
- Shoe Shop is to be congratulated on
“his marriage to Miss Betty Glowe of
‘ _ Chicago last week. . . Art Hendrickson of our Winnetka store will marry
Miss Jane Ritter of Ravine Dr., Sat. On that same date }
vurday, May 3.
_ . Geno Tazioli will middleaisle it with
_ Peggy Meyerscough of Highwood.

_.

and

~ Prayer That Heals

to be

:

_

Mr.

results.

conferences’
slated

are

Ropipait!

ORRICO GARDENS

a held in Evanston.
t

better

Highwood,

hd

_adian Giant Pansies and other
Perennials.

track, tennis and golf teams will be
staying in Highland Park next month.
oe

on

. RED ROSE PLANTS

Plant

avenue,

the parents of a daughter, Mary Jane,
born April 19 at the Ft. Sheridan hoset

Double Red Poppies, Very hardy
no winter protection, and Can-

- The Washington Redskins of the
: National
Professional
Football
League will be at the Moraine Hotel
for ten days in September. . .. Daily
_ practice sessions will be staged at
the Highland Park High School Ath— fetic Field. .. . Next month the Big
_Nine’s annual spring coaches meeting
will also be held at the Moraine....

Incidently

_..

_

- Staff Set. and ‘Mrs. Toeekh ‘Pideldo.

of Funston

Floor Sanding and
Finishing

Tel. H. P. 566

.

�sFestive
Spring Card Party Wednesday
Dessert-Luncheon,

Two

Fashion

Shows, Bridge, Afternoon Fare
Under the direction of Mrs. Burton
Smalley and her various committees,
the Lincoln school spring card party
will be held in the school’s auditorium
Wednesday

afternoon,

April

30, at 1:30

o'clock. Proceeds will ne added
Lincon PTA fund.

to the

The party this year will be filled
with surprises, and will be a combination dessert-luncheon, style show and
bridge party. During the luncheon and
style show, three chalk tandscapes by
C. J. Bergstrom will be auctioned, and

table and door prizes will be awarded.
At

the

conclusion

program,

there

of

will

this part
be

time

of

for

the
unin-

terrupted bridge,
either
serious
or
social. According to Mrs. Smalley, this
arrangement

has

been

planned,

to meet

almost everyone’s schedule.
A juvenile fashion show of clothes
for children of all ages is to be staged
by the Marian Michaet snop of Winnetka, with the following kindergartento-eighth grade children chosen to
model the attractive apparel:
Hawley Vance, Ann Seyfarth, Mary
Brace, Mary Watkins, Judy Schweiger,
Judy Williams, Robin Smalley, Jean
Youngs, Shirley Bock, Suzanne Stunkel,
Geraldine Wilkinson and Margaret Anthony.
An

adult

style

show

is. another

at-

traction of this unusvat party. Garnett’s
department store will display summer
cottons and Fell’s store will provide
suits to be modeled in the show. Hats
will be shown through courtesy of
Mabel Ann Ernst.
Highland Park business people have
contributed the folowing prizes to be
given away at the PTA’s party:
The Gift Corner: The Child from
Five

to Ten,

by

Dr.

Arnold

The Coiffure shop:
cream.
Alden Harris studio:
trait

(of

Davis

winner

&amp;

of

Jar
A

An

Lucile

Ullman:

Paper

place

mats..

Williams Florist: One potted plant.
The Knit shop: One knitting bag.
A pair of. lady’s hand-knit argyle
socks has been contributed by Mrs.
Charles Simpler, president of Lincoln

PTA, and Mrs. E. M. Hadley has do-

nated a cotton apron.
The following members
as chairmen
of
Mrs. Smalley:

are

committees

serving
assisting

Mrs. John Morrissey and Mrs. E.
M. Hadley, style show; Mrs. Thomas
Keogh, refreshments; Mrs. J. M. Maxwell, decorations; Mrs. T. P. Jardine,
prizes; Mrs. W. M. Washburn, card
tables; Mrs. A. E. Patton, publicity;
Mrs. Vance Wilkinson, tickets.

Babies

Photographed
Proof
Shown
' Quality Work
6 for $10.50 in folders.
Banquets and Parties covered.
Wedding Albums with complete
coverage of ceremony.
Priced

from $32.50 for
$89.00 for 25

KILCOYNE

OF

12

to

DEERFIELD

Photographer
H. P. 4470
Deerfield

678

Gsell.

of

hand

4 x 5 por-

prize).

Maurine:

screw driver.
Chandler’s: Paper waste basket.
Picchietti &amp; Ori grocery: Basket of
fruit. _ Neild’s Sport shop: One soft ball.
Brand’s studio: One gold miniature
frame; one silver miniature frame.
Lucille Hilborn: One compact.

electric

light

This

Is

Pharmacy Week
So accessible are the products
of Pharmacy
to the average
American that they are taken
for granted. But behind these
bottles
on
the
pharmacists’
shelves is a vast science, industry, and prefession employing many thousands of people.
Every
day
in
large,
well
equipped laboratories, scientific
pharmacy continues its search
for

newer

drugs.

The

pharmacy

and

more

industrial

works

Now...

effective

part

of

constantly

to

by

improve its methods of producing, processing, and marketing
to give the public better drugs
at less cost.
_At every hour of the day and
night
somewhere
throughout
the land. members of the pro-

Sizes 10 to 18.

|

cure iliness or to relieve pain.
As Pharmacy has grown its
ethics and its service has been

I. H. NEMEROFF

JEWELERS

Fine

&amp;

BPs 680.

to the

of the people.

best

—Pharmacists—
Highland Park
Phone

2600

ne

$14.95

interests

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

OPTICIANS

Watch-Jewelry Repairing
Across from the bank.
:
35 years

pepe ot ole

conformed

Serbin

A cutaway front, perky pleats in back . . . done
in your favorite for summer, checked seersucker. With blue or salmon predominating.

fession are compounding medicine the doctor has ordered to

...a bold, adventurous pattern created for you who welcome the unusual. A place setting (six essential pieces)
costs $30.55 (including federal tax).

A Cotton Suit

Ravinia
Phone

2300

—

|

Garnett e Co.

on

�eo

ag 8; Dp

om

‘Mr. and Mrs. William Cruickshank
of Ringwood, Ill., formerly of Deer- field, announce the engagement of
_ their daughter, Jean, to Frank C.

Pfister Jr., son of Mr. and
Frank C. Pfister of Chicago.

Mrs.

A graduate of Highland Park High
school, Miss Cruickshank is now employed
in Chicago. Her fiande, a
- graduate of the University of Illinois,
_ served as an officer in the navy during the recent war.
They
plan
to
be married in the near future.

Auxiliary

Mothers’ Club Plans

Last

week

the

school

PTA

promised

more

details

of their “Fashion and Fun” night
scheduled for Saturday, May 3, at
8 p.m. in the school gymnasium.
Selecting

the King

tainment

will

be

free

and

they

will

coronation

_ Deerfield Woman’‘s Club Wins
Second Prize in Class D for
Its Publicity Scrap Book

and

*

2

the

PTA

will

announce

man

for

the club,

assembled

all news-

paper
publicity concerning the club
and pictures and articles of interest
concerning the community, into her
scrap

book,

kept

annually

as an

addi-

tional record of the activities.
The clubs are classed according to
membership and Deerfield is in Class
D, membership between 100 and 200.

Faculty
Wilmot,
have

been

members
of
Deerfield,
and
Bannockburn
schools
invited

to

hear

Norman

Cousins, editor of the “Saturday Review of Liturature” speak at Lake
Forest
High school auditorium
on
_ Friday

evening

(tomorrow).

The

sub-

ject of his talk is “Don’t Resiap from
the Human Race”.
Mr. Cousins is speaking at the
invitation of the heads of Lake Forest schools, and there is no admission
eharge.
_ Invitations were made _ personally
to the local schools by Mrs. Carl T.
Anderson of Chestnut street, a teacher at Lake Forest Day school.
ped

Style

Show

Mrs.

Vernon

Paul

Giss

and

are

in

Jones,

for

reports

Mar-

that

this

Mrs.

her

co-chairman,

ecstacy

over

the

John

ies.

all

of

Highland

Park;

Katherine

those

names

and

Special

Vierege

promises

some

lined up

tables

community

event
is invited

Deerfield
Mr.

Mrs.

and

T.

W.

as coorare hav-

Arbor,

to

Mich.,
to

their
visit

in

Ann

off

this

past

Mrs.

Richard’s

daughter,
Mrs. Stanley F. Brower
and family at 747 Chestnut street.
A

number

were

represented

party
Grove

Mrs.
the

Deerfield
at the

last
Friday
grade school

Henry

main

“The
ized

of

Pantle

prizes,
Golden

married

Grove

families
school

evening
at the
on Dundee road.

received

one

of

a radio.
Band”,

newly

couples’

club

Conrad

organof

St.

is entertaining

members of her bridge club at luncheon today at her —
in Highland
Park.

fun

of

Saturday,

Fourth
By

been

Miss

Grade

Beth

Andrew

Miss Andrew prefaced
the board of education
with an approval
of individual and
small group in-

a game
May

orphans”

of

3, at

the

big

cards,

side

8 p.m.

in

the

ment

of

keen

sense

a

too
of

competition.

In-

dividual development of self confidence,
persistence,

and

good

study habits are
the aims of the
fourth
grade
and the subject
matter is outBeth Andrew
lined) briefly
from her talk:
Social studies encompass the study
of geography with map reading and
development of travel interest. Here
also

the

children

background

Engagement

for

begin

the study

to

form

of

a

ancient

reading and reporting.
Arithmetic, which is taught with
the aid of a text book, aims at the
mastering of the fundamentals and

A)

the

Announcement is made of the engagement
of
Miss Ruth
Schmidt,
daughter of Fred Schmidt of Saunders

road,

to

son of Mr.
ger

of

Edward

and

Wilmot

early summer

Mrs.

Horenberger,

Carl Horenber-

road.

It

will

be

an

Wilmot

Mothers’

give a dessert-luncheon

Tuesday,
school.

May

Mrs.

6,

Harry

use

of

Club

card

at

the

will

party

on

Wilmot

L,. Thomson,

pres-

ident of the club, is being
the plans, by Mrs. Harry
Mrs. Fred Baarsch, Mrs, G.
quist, Mrs. W. C. Darling,

assisted
‘in
Williams,
E. HolmMrs. Ar-

thur Wolter, Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Kenneth Hall, Mrs.

Alexander,
Lloyd Ru-

dolph, and Mrs. John Kinzie, as committee chairmen.

the

multiplication

tables.

In spelling, the fourth year HornAshbaugh work book is used.
This
series of work books is used throughout the school at different levels.
The study of English is facilitated
by the oral and written sharing of
experiences

wedding.

Wilmot Mothers’ Club
Luncheon-Party, May 6
The

Paul’s church met Saturday evening
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. David
Lundquist of Woodward avenue.

"Mrs. Viola

on

and

after

again

and

home

stopped

J
the

widowers

herself

HovenbergerSchmidt

Rickard

Richard’s mother, en route from

California

“PTA
be

have

|and current cultures by personal reports, use of text books, newspaper

Activities

Mrs.

will

on May
to share

events, fashion show, and comradery
Deerfield Grammar school.

articles

unusual
from the

temporary

mama

good

struction
and
the
discourage-

ing so much fun planning this party that they have
to be slowed down regularly, and she has assured

several

These

for bridge,

Mrs. Robert O. Clark, who is acting
dinator of committee chairmen, says they

that

a

YOUR SCHOOL

Foreword:
her talk to

Prizes

with

condensed from their talks before the
Deerfield board of education given
earlier in the school year.
This is the fifth article in the ser-

later.

awards such as a permanent wave
Deerfield Powder Box, a spring bonnet from a
Chicago milliner, designed especially for the
recipient, and “bushels of penny gifts.” Mrs. N. C. Lane and Mrs. Henning
Hermanson report that local merchants have given generously to this party.

The

KNOW

Town

Shop,

off

cup of coffee and a piece of cake.

months.

Mrs. Lewis Hayner and her commitee have
pinochle, and lotto. Prizes will range from two
gallons of paint to sporting goods articles and
an autographed copy of Joe E. Brown’s book
sent by him to the PTA.

weekend

Local Faculties and Friends
Invited to Lake Forest to
Hear Norman Cousins Speak

enjoyed

selection
of
wearing
apparel
for
women
and children for the fashion show to bé staged
through the courtesy of Georgian
Shop of
Deerfield; Garnetts, Fell’s Children’s store, and

Games

- the annual contest of the Tenth Dis‘trict of the Illinois Federation of
Women’s clubs and was on display
Monday at the district meeting in
Waukegan.
Mrs. R. M. Harvey, publicity chair-

be

Mrs.

party is being planned in the same
informal way as the last one, with
the hope of a pleasant evening for all

Smith Ferguson of Evanston, and many more.
:
This week the models are being chosen

The Deerfield Woman’s club has
received second prize in Class D for
its publicity scrap book entered in

_
_

to

scene.

Mrs.

_ tense moments of the bidders to get
that certain lunch.

and in the veterans’ hospital.

gifts

committee

and

A series of informative talks by
the teachers of the Deerfield Grammar school, District 109, very briefly
summarized, will be presented’in the
Deerfield Review for the next several

the

Climaxing the so-

She suggested many ways in which
- the Amvets’ auxiliary could assist in
- postwar activities, which met with en_thusiastic approval of the unit.

many

The

Killian,

for

cial event was the auctioning of -the
many
beautiful
box
lunches
with

_Cross,

receive

Mrs. Charles
tin Hart.

attending—topped

- social was a success. The school gym
was artistically decorated with colorful balloons and ribbons festooned

_

and Queen

are
Mrs.
P. Carroll,

days and evenings to come.
Mrs. Herman Frank has arranged a preview of the coronation and with
the help of a local artist, she now has a clever exhibit in the window of the
Georgian shop.
Henry Kofsky of Rosemary terrace did the background

Has

Music and dancing were enjoyed
by the guests.
At their regular meeting last Thursday evening, Mrs. Carl Scheer gave
an interesting account of her work in
_ aiding veterans,
both
in the
Red

charge
of
.arrangements
Benjamin Widoff, Mrs. W.

Following in the pattern of “Queen for a Day” on the well known radio
program, Deerfield will select, by lot, from among those present, a king and
a queen to be crowned-in a most spectacular manner. Their evening’s enter-

The Amvets’ Women’s auxiliary box

in rainbow colors.

The Mothers’ club of Holy Cross
school is sponsoring a card party on
Friday, April 25, at 8 p.m. in the basement of Holy Cross church.
Members of the committee
in

Grammar

Deerfield

_ Two Successful Events
_

Card Party April 25

At “Fashions &amp; Fun” -

Whd

Phister a :

Amvets’

_|Holy Cross School

{Two Crowns Await.
Coronation, May 3

Ce

and

interests.

Reading aims at the development of
voice as well as the selection of and
desire for good reading.help and stimulation.
The development of social
poise is gained through school assemblies, room announcements,
lic appearances.

and

pub-

House Warming
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Spars
entertained their Deerfield pinochle
club at a six o’clock housewarming
dinner Saturday evening at their new
home, 1314 Church street in Northbrook. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin nae Milwaukee were also guests.
pa
es

�Na

,

Post 145 Plans

Describe Alaska at

Dance May 3

Lions Ladies’ Night
Martin
fur shop
other

A

Victor Jr., owner of a retail
in Highland Park and an-

recently

purchased

in

Juneau,

Alaska, will be the speaker this evening at the Lions club ladies’ night at
the Moraine hotel.

games

party

held at the
evening,

and

Masonic

May

3,

dance

temple

from

Rotary Club to |
Hold Debate Monday

*

Martin Victor Will

8:30

will

“Why I Selected My Line of Business and Why [ft Benefits the Public.”
is the topic of a debate to be held at
the regular meeting of the Highland

be

Saturday
p.m.

to

1

a.m., under auspices of Highland Park
Post 145 of the American
Legion.
Music for dancing will be furnished
by Ellsworth Sheridan and his orchestra, and
the
evening
will include
prizes

and

Freshman

refreshments.

at Carthage

Park

class of 392 at Carthage
Ill.

The

class

.

Monday,

April

28,

Phone

4579

for

FREE DELIVERY

College

ELVIRA
HEALTH... SALON
304 Railway

largest

Special— PRIVILEGE
Blend

Ave., Highwood

Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

college, Car-

is the

club

starting with luncheon at 12:15 p.m.
at the Moraine hotel.
The program has been arranged by
Elmer T. Skidmore.

Robert D. Hastings Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. R. D. Hastings of 614 Vine
avenue, is a member of the freshman
thage,

Rotary

ee:
WEEK-END
a

Dont a

in

of

5th

$442

Str.

Whiskies

William
Penn

the history of the 77 year old school.

5th $3 39
A

distinctive
Blend

Originated

MARTIN

VICTOR,

BEST IN DRAPE

JR.

Mr. Victor has made 22 pelt-buying
expeditions

into

the

Alaskan

able
these

CLEANING

amount
of
publicity
through
Arctic journeys in newspapers

all over the country.
turned

from

Cardinals,

where

he opened

who_will

be

treated

a steak dinner May
8 by
Kilowatts, the losing team.

to

demonstration

of

FOUR

makeup,

DUFFY

&amp; DUFFY

5th
WINNETKA

PARK

}

Lawn Making is Easy With SCOTTS!

5th
GILBEY’S

sponsorship of Gamma Sigma Omega
sorority at the YWCA, 374 Laurel
avenue, Friday evening, April 25, at 8

Full

Also on the program will be Nina
Marguiles, who was featured in the
picture section of a recent issue of
The Chicago Daily News, to demonstrate the type of makeup that should

) NK i

street

ae

1

wear and
social wear.
Models
will
show the audience the art of correct
posture and walking.
The
public is welcome
to attend

program.

There

will

be

no

charge.
‘

Glass

Age

MIRRORS

:

AND GLASS
of
EXQUISITE DESIGN

Glenview, III.
Glenview 1212R

ad-

quart

KINSEY

o’clock.

mission

$3.90

SEAGRAM’S
7 CROWN
5th
$3.94
LORD
CALVERT

Gita hee

telle Compton
Model institute, Chicago, and
several
assistants
under

this

$3.90

3 FEATHERS
RESERVE

Sth

hair

for professional work,

$4.25

HUNTER’S
5th
$4.23
Old Underoof
5th
$4.09
SCHENLEY
RESERVE

Cleaners
HIGHLAND

styling, wardrobe and poise will be
given by Estelle Compton of the Es-

be worn

ROSES

5th

Keller’s

Gamma Sigma Omegas
Sponsor Program on
Correct Grooming
A

CORBY’S
RESERVE
5th $3.37

Recently he re-

Juneau,

his new retail fur shop, now in charge
of Mrs. Emily Mullen, his assistant,
and plans to establish a fur-processing factory.
The Lions 10 week attendance contest has been won by Schweiger’s Comic

IMPERIAL
5th $3.39
PARK &amp;
TILFORD
5th $3.53

interior

in the past 24 years, traveling by dog
sledge. He has received a consider-

in

eti

"

pl

\
ae

4

Scotts

for Dense

RAILWAY

$398

GIN

FLEISCHMANN’S
GIN 5th
Bis. 1 1 ae

feast

F

ie

ys

.

ne

Shade,

SHERONY
314

$3 88

GIN

$312

Us

1

VAN)

a,

.
(75,98

'
4

r

4s
.

Ae,
Ny

#7,

°

ae’,

Anyone can succeed with Scotts Lawn Care products. First
call on the magic of Scotts Weed Control to banish dandeNext, restore grass
lions, plaintain, buckhorn and the like.
Fill in
health and color with a meal of Scotts Turf Builder.
bare spots with vigorous growing Scotts Seed.
SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Quick destruction of weeds with$1.25, $3.85.
out harm to grass.
SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—Complete food for grass. Quick
acting and long lasting.
25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft.
50 Ibs. - $3.75 feeds 5,000 sq. ft.
clean, 99.91% weedfree for
SEED—Triple
LAWN
SCOTTS
5 Ibs. $6.25
25 Ibs.
lawns in full sun, light shade. 1 Ib. $1.25
$29.85.

$4.52

same

prices.

HIGHWOOD,
Tel. H. P. 2041

Bonded Whiskies
OLD GRAND DAD
OLD TAYLOR
OLD FORESTER
OLD FITZGERALD
KENTUCKY TAVERN
Phone

4579

Phone

4579

APT Ly
LIQUORS
nh
SERVICE

Riel smee- 2081S

HARDWARE

AVE.

$319

ILL.

335

Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
FREE DELIVERY

;*

�has shown definite
and

progress

signs of growth —

within

the

past

few

months, with the units headed by Bob

Spring Trip to
Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

— New Address —
62 E. VAN BUREN ST.
HARRISON 3747-3748

The North Shore Area council has
announced May 2, 3, &amp; 4 as the dates
of the annual Scoutleaders’ weekend
at Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan.
This trip
to camp, made each spring by the
Scout leaders and council committeemen, promises to be
‘the best
attended in the history of the council.
Scouters planning
to attend
are
asked to work out their own transportation. However, in the event this
is impossible, the council headquar-

TRAVEL
Without

A Care!

SPRING AND SUMMER

OZARKS

Tours

to:

MEXICO
GUATEMALA

SMOKIES
CALIFORNIA
7-Day

GREAT

Cruise

on

LAKES

From $98.50

H. and R. ANSPACH
TRAVEL BUREAU

ters

370%
Central
Avenue
George L. Lundberg, Manager
Phone: Highland Park 1211
Book Now and Avoid Disappointment.

will

provide

ways

and

means

of

is essential, as
are
the
necessary
WORK clothes. It has also been suggested, if not requested, that a hammer and
personal

All else that is needed is a real desire for fun and fellowship, of which
there

will

be

plenty.

First Aid Meet
The North Shore Area council First
Aid meet will be held Friday April 25,
at the Central
school
in Glencoe.
First Aid teams that qualified in the
recent District First Aid meets will
participate in this event.

getting you there.
Plenty of cold
weather can be expected on this early
The council
contest
spring excursion, so warm clothing” merit badge first aid
teams

Join

Our

BLANKET CLUB
A

a paint brush be part of the
equipment of each scouter.

beautiful
free

Come

to

all wool
our

blanket

club

in immediately

raffled

members.

and

register.

Norge Refrigerators
Washers
ABC
Universal Cleaners
Norge Ranges
Proctor Automatic Toasters—lIrons
lronrite
lroners
Over 20 years of quality merchandising.

Highwood

Ave.

receive

an

“D”

rating,

based

to

solve

the

problems

feature

problems
“A”,

on

“B”,

their

given

“C”,

ability
them.

All teams qualifying for the Council First Aid meet and participating
on April 25, will receive a special gift
from Harold J. Peacock, president of
the North Shore Area council.

Senior Scouting

1455

I wish to express my hearty
thanks
to the good folks of
Highland Park for the support
given me at the polls on April
15. I also wish to cast an extra
vote of thanks to the many
friends who by their unselfish
efforts in my behalf assured my
election.
While in office as one of your
commissioners I will try to keep
Highland Park the kind of a
spot you and I want to live in.
Sincerely yours,
|
ED MORONEY

STRAWBERRIES

.... per box 37c

FLORIDA ORANGES
GREEN ASPARAGUS
HEAD LETTUCE

35c
25¢
19¢
17¢

2 bchs. 15c

GREAT-NORTHERN
GROCERY
375

view Naval Air station, an event
proved a tremendous success.

Two

more

Senior Scout events re-

New Troop
‘Scouts and Scouters of the North
Shore Area council welcome Troop
54 of Half Day into our: Scouting
family. This unit is sponsored by a
group of citizens and meets each Saturday evening at Half Day school.

&amp; MARKET

ROGER WILLIAMS AVE., RAVINIA
Highland Park 6585
}

clothes they soil will come

°®

back

from Reliable as fresh and clean
asa day in May.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618 N. Green

that

main on the spring program, the first
being a model airplane meet to be
presented by Newell’s Air Scout unit,
Sunday afternoon, April 27, at two
o'clock at New ‘Trier High school’s
north athletic field. Then, on Sunday
afternoon, May 4, there will be a
Senior Scout track meet at the Highland Park High school athletic field.
These activities, planned by Levings, Newell and other senior unit
leaders at a mecting
in Highland
Park a month or so ago, are unique
in that they are not limited to Senior
Scout units alone. Any high school
age scout, regardless of troop affiliations, can participate.

Whenever April
Showers come my
way, there’s a rain-.
bow of happiness in knowing the

Fruits &amp; Vegetables
FANCY

March 30, Levings conducted a Senior
Scout swimming meet at the Glen-

April Showers Can’t
Stop Me!
——a

ROUND STEAK
PORTERHOUSE STEAK
POT ROAST
RIB ROAST OF BEEF
GROUND BEEF
LEG OF SPRING LAMB
LOIN LAMB CHOP
ROAST PORK
ARMOUR BACON
COLD MEATS

EXTRA

and

Senior. Scouting on the North Shore

SOMENZI &amp; SONS
336 Railway

will

or

will

Levings of Wilmette and Bob Newell of Deerfield leading the way.
Bob Levings, in addition to being
the leader of a Senior Scout unit, has
been instrumental in developing two
of the finest athletic events for Senior
scouts in the history of the North
Shore Area council. Newell, on the
other hand, has developed the top Air
Scout unit in the council—a unit that
is the example for present Air Scout
units and for the units still in planning stage.
During spring vacation the Senior
Wilmette
and
Scouts of Deerfield
took a boat trip down the Mississippi
river—a Newell
planned
adventure
that challenged the interest of our
young men in Senior Scouting. On

Bay Rd.
Highland Park

Tel. H. P. 177

|

�Thursday,

April

24,

Page

1947

Last Hearing Tuesday
On Proposed Bus Line

Elks Officers Are Installed

JOHN
RUGS

Final hearing of the Highland
Coach lines petition to operate a bus
route
between
Highland
Park
and
Deerfield, including a revised application affecting the proposed
route

within the limits of Highland Park,
is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29,
starting at 10 a.m. before the Illinois
Commerce commission,
Salle street, Chicago.

The
David

North

La

the

has
completed
its
case.
hearing. is a postponement

March

27

hearing

MORAN

-

FURNITURE
- CARPETING
CLEANED
LIFE-TIME MOTHPROOFING

Glencoe

Tel.

Ave.

H.

P.

1137

Tea

bus company, represented by
Axelrod
of Highland
Park,

attorney,
Tuesday’s

of

160

717

11

\

previously

GO EASY WITH THOSE
7OE HOLOS — THAT'S
MY LAST DECENT PAIR
OF SHOES #

scheduled.

tomorrow evening to see and hear all
about the school work for the year.
It will be an open house event and a
happy time is planned for those attending.
All teachers will be in at-

tendance.
p.m.

en,

Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Guard;

Nafe

Larson,

secretary;

George Rich, Tiler.
Players asked to attend

next

Sun-

Neild’s Nine Will
Hold First Workout

day’s. session are “Lefty” Zimmer,
Al Sordyl, “Bubs” Rogan, Eddie Ro-

Sunday Afternoon

gan,

“Bocker”

Peterson,

man,

Shorty

Scornavacco,

Neild’s Sport shop, Highland Park’s
top major league softball team, which
will carry the city colors in top-flight
competition this summer under the
floodlights at Sunset Park, will hold
their first practice session of the
season Sunday, April 27, on the Sun-

nan,
Jobbie
Eiserman,
Mel
Drinkwine, Chuck Bergling and all other
Neild’s players from latter years.

set

park diamond at
The Neild’s team,

2:00 p.m.
winner
of

are

no

longer

a

member,

such

powerful

clubs

as

at

7:15

Cole-

Bren-

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION
322 N. First St.

AUTO

Tele. FP

We never go easy on
in that broken radio.

to be satisfied when
..47

the “kinks”
You’re sure

you bring

“deel
Guaranteed

cooEn

Pes
AUTO
PAINTING

A SPECIALTY

Place Parents to Visit

School Tomorrow Night
Mothers and fathers of pupils of
Elm Place school will visit the school

and

Pick

Up and

Delivery

RADIO SERVICE
Husenetter &amp; Cronkhite

the

Somers,
Wis.,
Cardinals,
Kenosha
Zippers,
Acme
Tools
of Berwyn,
Joliet Rivals, Cooney’s Rockets of
Highwood and many other top flight

365
Ravinia,

clubs.

Roger

Williams

II.

and Radio

PLY

Cr

Edie)

REUTER
305

WAUKEGAN AVE.
«
ea

HIGHWOOD,
RK

UA
ILLINOIS

24 hour SERVICE
on DEVELOPING
Day

Ave.
H.

P.

or Night!

609

vee
——

Announcement
Get Better Action Pictures
With This High-Speed Film

Sophie

Ansco Superpan Press

is back from California and will be
us again starting Monday, April 28.

with

FOR COMPLETE
BEAUTY SERVICE
Get a permanent best suited for
your hair!
Individual

hair

styling —

Leon

Manicure.

Call H. P. 724

GARNETT’S
508

BEAUTY

SALON

Central Ave. (Balcony)
Jos. Weng, Prop.

PHOTO CONTEST
$400 Given Away in Prizes
Enter Today!
Entries Close May 15th!

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE
6 NO. SHERIDAN
pa

RD.

it

to Columbia Household Appliances
for repair.

May.

city champs since 1941, will field a
team this year which will compete
against

Pie

open

First night game of the season will
held about the second week in

Elm
the

North Shore Softball league sportsmanship
trophy in 1941, in which
they

be

Danny

will

Jr.

THESE NEW OFFICERS OF THE HIGHLAND PARK ELKS Lodge
were installed at a recent dinner meeting attended by 225 members.
Seated, left to right: Ernest Belmont, treasurer; Karl Hansen,
Leading Knight; Sam Bernardi, Exalted Ruler; John Zahnle, Loyal
Knight; Carl Arens, Lecturing Knight.
Standing, left to right: Mort Singer, chairman of the board of
trustees; James McKillip, Esquire; Dr. Rosie, chaplain; Cyril Duffy,
Inner

School

H. P. 206

�ie

To Surprise Guests F riday at
NU Settlement Birthday Fete

a ensen,

ie, and ‘eg! Leo D. Jensen of 746
Braeside road, recentty announced the
engagement of their daughter, Gloria
Betty, to Herbert S. McAllister, son
yf Mrs. SidneyG. McAllister of South
. Deere’ Park drive.
_ Miss Jensen attended Northwestern
pve
:
sty and. University of Missouri.
r fiance was graduated from the

BCigivsteity of Arizona.

_ The wedding will take place in Highland Park some time during the summer
Following their marriage, the
. couple will make their home in Cali-

‘Club to Have Two
Closing Dances
The Ravinia Woman’s club is ‘givg a dinner dance in Ravinia Village
house Saturday evening, starting at 9

o'clock.
y the

Mrs.

The

party is being planned

social

Mark

committee,

G. Brown.

headed

by

dance of the season for the club, but
“because
more
members
wished
to
attend thant could be accommodated,
a second dance is being planned for
heey 24 so hat the group may be
Mean Hart and his
play ata both, dances.

orchestra

will

When the strains of “Happy Birthday to You” echo thru the Saddle and
Cycle club tomorrow during the Tenth
Anniversary cocktail parry of North
Shore Junior board or Northwestern
- University settlement, many
of the:
guests will find to their surprise that
they are on the receiving end of the
birthday fete.
Halfway thru the party, which starts
at 5:30 p.m., a huge birthday cake
designed by Mrs. James L. Peirce will

%

club.
_ Huntington B. Henry, member of the
board of trustees of the Seeing Eye
and

chairman

of the

Chicago

executive

committee, spoke to guests on the work
and accomplishments of the Seeing Eye
In the past year. Mr. Henry’s talk
_ followed that of the guest speaker,
-Joe E. Brown, currently starring in
“Harvey”.
Mrs. Michael Cudahy, chairman of
the Chicago
enrollment committee,
closed the meeting with instructions
CA workers on procedures to be followed during the four-week enrollent of members for The Seeing Eye.
Mrs. H. H. Hixson, 596 Kjmball road,
is chairman of the Highland Park
_ team for
f
soliciting enrollment for the
organization.

Salas Lake Forest College
-Pre-Century Dinner April 11
Charles Perrigo of Highland Park
attended Lake Forest college’s Pre‘Century
dinner at the Edgewater
Beach

hotel,

Chicago,

event

marked.

April

. observaites:

11.

df.

The

the

school’s 90th anniversary.
Mr. Per_ rigo was a member of the class of

Bride

Blackhawk Society to
Celebrate Sixteenth
Anniversary With Tea
_ The Blackhawk society, North Shore
chapter

of

the

Children

of

the

Ameri-

can Revolution, will cetebrate the 16th
anniversary of the society with a silver
tea on Sunday May 4, from 4 until
7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Edwin
Hadley Jr., 629 Kimball road.
Miss Nancy Waggett, president, will
be wheeled out onto the floor, At the |
preside during a short business meetinvitation of Mrs. G, Kenneth Crowell,
ing when Miss Bette Jane Parliament,
general chairman of the benefit, certain guests will be bidden to “cut them- - treasurer of the organization, will present a report of contributions to paselves a slice of birthday cake.” Their
triotic and
charitable: organizations
“Portions” will include an evening for
made during the year.
two at one of the large loop hotels,
Following the meeting, the members,
dinner for two at several widely known
their parents and guests will view an
restaurants, and bottles of champagne.
interesting movie of Greenland to be
Miss Harriet Vittum, who will represented by Jewell Word of the Alden
tire in the fall after 41 years as head
Harris studio.
resident of Northwestern settlement,
Tea will be served by the hostess,
will be introduced by Mrs. J. Hayden
Mrs. Hadley, and her assistants.
Macdonald,
president of the ‘ Junior
board. There will be music and games
all evening, and those wishing may remain for an informal supper from the

Infant Welfare '

Seniors to Observe —

sandwich and salad bars.
Among the Junior board members
who are taking their guests home for
buffet suppers after the party are Mrs.
James L. Pierce, Mrs. Joseph D. Landes Jr., and Mrs. Lyman Ware Warfield. Mrs, Warfield and her husband

will leave the following week to drive

- Nearly 300 volunteer workers attend-d a luncheon-meeting of the Chicago
‘Seeing Eye executive committee held
on Tuesday, Apel 22 at the Casino

Wiss Bowes | bo bs

to New York. Also planning a holiday
are Mr. and Mrs. G. Kenneth Crowell,
who will go to the Homestead at Wis,
ginia. Hot Springs in May. Mrs. Bernard John. J. Mooney, who had one
Florida vacation earlier this winter,
flew to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., last
week with Mrs. Carroll G. Wells for
another short stay. Mrs. Mooney will
be back the day before the party. Dr.
and Mrs. Eliot Foltz have been in
North Carolina and also will be on hand
for the benefit, which is planned to.
raise money for the settlement’s House
in the Wood summer camp for children.
Set.

Fahey

Home

On

Furlough

Set. James G. Fahey, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. Gregory Fahey, 1357
Greenwood avenue, Deerfield, is home
on furlough
from Fort Ord, Cal.,
where he was sent for training following his enlistment in the U.S.
Army eight months ago.
Sgt. Fahey
was graduated from Highland Park
High school and attended Marquette university a year before joining the
army.
Return

From

Western

Trip

Baby Week Monday

Luncheon

arrangements

assisting

hostésses

Franklin

J.

Brown, Jr., Alfred
cv Pinkerton.

As

an

in

Mesdames

Robert

T.

observance

are

M. Knox and

are:

Lunding,

Sihler

of

The altar
of
Trinity
Episcopal —
church, Highland Park, will be the
_scene-of one of the spring’s loveliest
weddings tomorrow, when Miss Barbara Bowes, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Heroine P. Bowes. Jr., becomes '
the bride of S$. Parker Johnston Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Johnston of
Highland

C.

and D.

Baby

week,

members of the local group are asked
to take contributions of baby clothes,
toys or other infant articles to the
Thrift shop, 35 North Sheridan road.

“Yerina”

at

Goodman

Miss

Smith

Theater

appears

in

both

the opening ballet and as the “second
sister-in-law.” She is the daughter of
‘Mrs. Bradford Smith, 233 Laurel avenue, Highland Park.
—

Plays

At

Part

in “Romeo

Principia Upper

and

Juliet”

School

Thomas
Heath, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard N. Heath of 387 Moraine road, played the part of Gregory
in Shakespear’s “Romeo and Juliet”
last

week

in

the

annual

a

To Hold Luncheon at

Edgewater

Beach

The annual spring luncheon of the
Mothers’ club of St. George High:
school, of which Mrs. Samuel Martin
Jr. of Highland Park is the newly »

elected

president,

will pe held in the |

ballroom
of the
Edgewater
| grand
Beach Hotel on Thursday, —
8, beginning at 1 p.m,
The highlight of the piauaas which ,
marks the close of activities of the club
for the season, will be a musicale presented by three talented young artists,
Vera Fitzgerand Hazen, lyric soprano,
Margaret L. Cashman, pianist-composer —
and solovox artist, and Jack Hurley,
tenor, a former’ member of the Old

octet. Arrangements

spring

pro-

Mr. and Mrs. W. Clarence Walsh
duction of the Little theatre at Prin-.
and children, Gerry and Billy, and
cipia Upper school, St. Louis, Mo. He’
Miss Dorothy Budge, daughter of Mr. is a junior student. His sister, Miss
and Mrs. Donald Budge, have reSuzanne Heath, is a senior at Printurned from a two-week vacation trip
cipia College of Liberal Arts, Elsah,
through the Southwestern states.’
Ill., and will be graduated in June.

for

the program are in charge of Mrs.
Alfred E. Austin.
Following the luncheon and prior
to the program,
Mrs.
Leonard E. »
White, out-going president, will turn |
the gavel over to Mrs. Martin who
will. then introduce the newly elected
officers.
Mrs. Paul C. Tuohy, 5527 Artesian ,
avenue, Chicago, is in charge of reserv- —
ations and will be assisted by Mrs.
James H. Coffey, Evanston and Mrs.
Harry Schermerhorn,- Wilmette, who &gt;4
will take the North Shore reservations. |
Dirtress

Barr

Maior

In “The Circle” at NU

Anne W. Smith, a student of the
School of the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, is a member of the cast of
“Yerina,” by the Spaniard, Frederico
Garcia
Lorca, now
playing at the
theater.

_

St. George Mothers

James

Anne Smith in Cast of
.

Park.

The wedding will take place at
4:30 p.m., the Rey. Charles U. Harris,
church. waahor officiating.

Heidelburg

The Highland Park-Ravinia Infant
Welfare Senior group will meet Monday at the home of Mrs. Bernard
Newman, 122 North Sheridan road.

‘charge of Mrs. Edward

teen

Role

Theatre

James Barr, son of Mr. and Mrs. ©
Jacques Barr of 618 South Green Bay |
road, is playing a! major role in the |
Northwestern University theatre pro-duction of Somerset Maugham’s “The |
Circle,” which. opened Tuesday eve-_
ning and continues all this week. The™
role is Mr. Barr’s second since enter-_
ing Northwestern.
Last summer he
appeared in “The Would-be Gentle- |
man.”
He received his early dra-—
matic training at
Amherst college in
such plays as “Death Takes a Holi-—
day,” “The Eve of St. Mark” and
“The Admirable Crichton.”
i
Heads

Unaffiliated

Students

Harold Kramer Jr., sonof Mr. and
Mrs. Julian H. Kramer, 802 South |
Sheridan road, Highland Park, has

just

been

elected

Northwestern
association

president

of

the™

Unaffliated — Students _
during

the

association’s

¢

recent election of officers for the
coming year.
This is Harold’s firs A
year at.
¢ Northwestern, sai

�Thursday,

April

24,

1947

Page

Collectors’ Antiques in Show

PERCYPhotographer
H. PRIOR, Jr,

Gtely
eymed
articles
held
sorship

of

collector's

catiaue 11 Fol. U.P. S198

at
the
Park
Wounder spon-

Highland
man’s club

the

;

club’s

study

group

April
15 and along
Is.An;|
Wild
by
owners
the
North

Shore

and

Brass

Rods

Birds

Add

with

she ex-

clock

Feeders

keep

are

H P. 64

now

available

to

Your

birds

‘in

full

Garden
view

while

an

“EYE-SAFE”

ORANGE

FEEDER

FEEDER

.......

$2.50

3 23c5o ce

Ee

Squirrelproof Stands
ATTRACTIVE
RUSTIC

as

$2.25

for feeders
BIRDHOUSES

audubon gy workshop

planned table. A Queen
Anne
lowboy.
Sand- | wich
and
Flint
salt
containers and articles
of
painted
tin
were
exhibited by Mrs. Ship-

520

Drexel

;

INCORPORATED

NOT

ILLINOIS

GLENCOE,

leenrclans’ ate

Ave.

Tel.

Glencoe

1559

"sin tne rottom seene||

MVigther Deserves the Finest

macaw" "||

Be Sure the Finest Is Given

Sigmund
Livingston
is
examining
a
sample
of
the
lustre
ware
she _ contributed

Percy

H.

Prior,

feeding.

SGUIRRNLSS “DEFEAT &lt;..c5665...
ee
ee $5.50
AUTOMATIC FEEDER
_.. $2.50
SQUIRRELPROOF “EYE-SAFE” FEEDER ...................... $4.75

hibited.
Among
her
other antiques on display
were
papier
mache
items
and
an
old drop leaf table.
Below, Mrs. Wilford
Shipnes,7 director of the
2

Oe

Feeders

Charm

Audubon.

the West suburbs.
po
ro
eee
Golector'sqroup, ‘wes
photographed

a72, Contra

for our Squirrelproof

E

STON

&amp;

I LL

H

Highland Park, Ill.

from

antique

INSURANCE

Specializing
in natural
of a
unoer’ ee
party, wedding or reception

Hundreds enjoyed the
unusual show of priv-

13

Jr.

With a Portrait From

ALDEN HARRIS, protograpiy
7 S. St. Johns

Ave.

Highland

Park

FROZEN FOOD
WEEK
April 26th to May 4th
Sponsored

by the

Visit

the

Quick

National

Frozen
Food

Food

Show

Association

at

Amphitheatre,

the

of Chicago

International

Chicago

We carry a variety of foods, including whole meals
at
Frozen

Fruit

lowest

prices.

Fruits

Turkeys

Juices

Vegetables—Lge.

&amp; Small

Pt. 32c

Ice

Size

Squabs

Calves

gal. $4.75

&amp;

Frozen

We

Deliver

in

Liver

Chops

Sea Food

Chops

- Pork

Tenders

-

Lamb Legs

- Also Whole Carcasses

Pastries

Cooked

Meats

Beef Tenderloins, - Steaks

Pet Foods

Fish

- Geese

- Capons

Pork - Veal - Beef

Cream

14 gal $1.20

All Kinds, 24

- Ducks

Chickens

Dairyairy Product
Products
Bendfelt

,

Processed

Foods

Made

By

Highland Park
FOR DEERFIELD

Famous

Call Enterprise
860

CALL

We Specialize in Processing Meats
Your

Home

(Lowest

Chefs
1215

Ready for

Freezer.
Prices)

~

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
Clarence

724

Deerfield

Rd.

S. Wilson

Deerfield,

Ill.

�|To Form Highwood Softball
League at Meeting Tomorrow
Objective Is Eight Teams to Be
Sponsored by Highwood Groups

I. C. Mother’s Build
Plans First Annual
Luncheon W edneday
The

Mother’s

Conception

guild

school

of

wii!

Immaculate

hold its: first

annual lunchéon on Wednesday, April
30, at 1:30 p.m. at the Moraine hotel.
All members who have not yet made
reservations

fives You

Slimming
Loveliness

are

urged

to do

so

imme-

diately by contacting one of the following committee members:
Mrs. R. J. Sheahen, Mrs. Robert
Denzel, Mrs. A. J..Goeckner and Mrs.
Tom Clark, president. Members also
may make reservations for guests if
they wish.
The committee is planning entertainment to follow the iuncheon.

Post 145 Auxiliary
Initiation May 1
New members will be initiated by
the Highland Park American Legion
auxiliary during its regular meeting
May 1 at 8 p.m.
Entertainment and
refreshments will follow.
All wives,
mothers

are

and

invited

sisters

of

Legionnaires

to attend.

Bill Casey,
L. Casey

stage

“Lost
Lake

Horizon”
Forest

college

1. Bill, a freshman
stage

manager

the

production

of

be

presented

at

to

for

April 30 and

May

at the college, was
the

last

viduala who wish either to play or to
sponsor teams, are urged to attend. It
is hoped that there witl be enough interest to organize a league of eight
teams.

Organizations which have been asked
to have representatives at the meeting
are the Highwood American. Legion,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, Highwood
firemen, Marconj soctety, St. James
Holy Name society, Modenese society,
Highwood

Boosters, Tavern

two

Marigold Kids Defeat
Traveling to the Highland Park Ten Pin
from Marigold
Arcade, the Marigold Kids
defeated the Bob-Mari bowlers by a margin of 94 pins.
&lt;A large crowd
watched
the match
which
featured
18
years
old
George Faul of the Sunkist Pies in ChiClassic

league,

bowled

with

Scores

bowled

with

the

Bob-Mari

C.
Ws
Py.
M.
G.

Re

say

cseaba tant

211-189-215—615
171-178-192—-541
169-193-165—527
864-983-969-2816

Bob-Mari
G: Meintsér cic
Gy: Moen
3.03.42.
W.
Schmauss
..-M.
Fredricks
.
BS. PW WEDOR. &gt; Sass ccxcoagesteencdee
Bob-Mari

Marigold

Kids

with our scientific treatment
applied hot.
The shingles still
retain their natural appearance.
Repairs made if needed.

Marconi

large

match

Bowling

crowd

game

League
L.
32
43

@

Ben...

visi

unk

44

Sisk

45
47
47
49

Highwood

55

Grocery
High
Gheardini

oy

.

Series

Ladurini
Carlini

On&gt;&gt;

.

WH&gt;&gt;

“Jlusion” half sizes 16% to 22%.

the

Silver Dollar
................
MB
C2 oters
ae:
Olah. DLOrrartne: ook
key cp. os-

embroidery on fine Sanforized

‘rose pink or-buttercup yellow.

the

to make

MAS

Bros.

Bomenst

poplin by BATES.
Martha Manning’s compliment?
to the taller, younger, lovelier
you. Morning glory blue, wild

also

Morrelli Trucking
Bigtiwood Kadte 328.00
Passages!

The coolness of white eyelet

155-141-1838—-479
214-148-204—566
194-213-167—574
191-161-177—529
184-195-195—573

938-858-926-2722
wishes to thank the

team
and

which turned out,
a huge success.

Roof

team.

*
Marigold Kids
Greenstein:
aiieiiic uk: 175-217-209—601
SOR
Gc
an abiecais cigs 138-206-188—532

The

PRESERVE
Shingle

who

were:

“Protect the Things You Own”

Wood

Twice

Team

Bob-Mari

dra-

matic productions, and recently was
initiated into Kappa Sigma fraternity.

Your

Association

and the Highwood Boys club.
League games
will be played at
Memorial park during the spring. and
summer.

the
Marigold
Kids,
and
Bucky
Walter,
member
of the Sunkist Pies in the Ran-.
dolph
Classic
league
of
Chicago,
who

son of Mr. and Mrs.
of Highland Park, is

manager for

Representatives of att male organizations of the post and interested indi-

cago’s

Bill Casey Is Stage Manager
For Lake Forest College Play
W.

A meeting for the purpose of discussing plans for the formation of a
city 16-inch softball league will be held
at Highwood American Legion Post
No. 501 tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.

Fondi
Gheardini
Fioechi
Carlini
Tondi

Gheardini
Palmet

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Estimates

TOWN SHOP
504 CENTRAL

“There’s

Without Obligation
a ‘Midwest’ Roof

Your

in

Neighborhood”

Midwest Asphalt

Roofing Corp.
P. OG. Box

Ist Nat'l. Bk. Bldg.

103

H. P. 758

Rt.
Rev.
Rev.

Deerfield and Green Bay Roaas
Highland Park 20z
Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison,
Pastor

Rev.

Edmund
John P.

J. Skoner,
O’Connell,

M.A.,
M.A.,

iia
S.T.v.

MASSES:
Sundays—6
:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:60
and 12 noon.
Weekdays—6 :30 - 8:15.
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
eves. of First Fridays ane
Holy Days
4:00 and 7:80 p.m.

�Something new

HAS BEEN ADDED!

Although we are firm believers in advertising,

(particularly in the Highland

Park

News),

we

have

refrained

from

advertising for fear of encouraging more job printing than we could produce, since our shop has been running at
capacity, day and night, and we don’t like to disappoint our friends.
Two important changes enable us to increase our production, and offer a complete job printing service.
We

proudly

introduce

CHESTER HOLSINGER,
our Vice-President and
General
,

who comes

Manager,
to us from the

Regensteiner Printing Company,
Printers of Esquire Magazine,
where he was Plant Superintendent.

Many

noteworthy

improvements

have been made under his direction.
SINGER
EUGENE
President and Founder

In the Service Men’s Issue of the “News”
of Offset

by the addition

Printing

as soon

in 1943,

letter...

you

dewe

may

we

that

Sea

CHESTER HOLSINGER
Vice-President and General Manager

‘

we announced our plan to increase our printing facilities

as this equipment

was

available

our

and

21 boys

had returned.

TODAY
-« « the first of these presses is in operation in our shop, another
is now being installed. By the addition of this equipment we will increase our
job printing production by 35%.
NOW

«

QUICKER

«

«

SERVICE

Weare ready to offer you a complete printing service.
&amp;

W

INTELLIGENT
We

COOPERATION

can now duplicate

®

BETTER

CHOICE

OF

PAPERS

your repeat forms at real savings

Drop in and see this new, modern process of printing in operation.
to discuss your printing problems without obligation to

We'll
you.

be glad

SINGER PRINTING &amp; PUBLISHING COMPANY, ix.
7

SOUTH

ees

GREEN

Printing

&lt; cerenen

reen
Just

South

Bay
of

se

‘

BAY

ROAD

PUBLICATIONS

«

HIGHLAND

- COMMERCIAL
Pp

STATIONERY

f

ILLINOIS

e

\ DIRECT

MAIL

5;

Roa
Central

PARK,

HIGHLAND

- ANNOUNCEMENTS*-

i,

val
PULLETS

PHONE

j

PARK

PROCESS

COLOR

reen
oF rap

- JOB

ye Entrance

,
'

3482-3

ers

Just

South

Bay

WORK
on

;

Roa
a

Central

�“_ Word

the H. ‘ Nebel ‘Eaake
formerly of
Landis lane, "tells us that they have
bought a home a few miles out of
- Portland and will move into it in
June. They have been rencing a house
from
friends near Gresham,
Ore.,
‘since their move from Deerfield last
fall. Dr. Noyes is dean of the dental

school
and

at

the

was

University

formerly

at

of Oregon

Northwestern

- university.
Mr.
and Mrs. J. H. Kies are
new owners of the Noyes home.

Mr,

and

Mrs.

Martin

the

Hart

and

- Victoria, of 1057 Greenwood avenue
were guests on Saturday at the home
of Mrs. Hart’s sister, Mrs. John H.
Hamer in Chicago, for a family reunion to meet a cousin whom they
on “had not seen for several years.
_ Theodore J. Knaak,
returned Sunday from
_visit

with

vin

~ Deerfield : Animes ,

i

his

Knaak,

local druggist,
a two months’

brothers,

Otto

in California

and

and

AI-

Wash-

OE

EE

home
and are moving to Hyannis
Port on Nantucket Sound Mass.
oe

Mrs. Delbert Meyer was hostess to
members of her evening bridge club
on Friday at, her home on Sunset
court. Made up, in the majority, by
teachers, this
club could well
be
called the “Absent Minded Teachers’
club”, for almost every month some
of the members forget the date and
have to be rounded up in the most
unusual manner.

of
at

a

in

dinner
the

party

Robert

O.

Saturday
Clark

evening

home

on

Brier-

hill road. The Paysons have sold their

Phone
Res.

Be

708

Deerfield

Phone,

Highland

Waukegan

Road,

Park

RELIABLE GARAGE
J.

&amp;

W.

White

had

home

just

returned

in Billings

spending
ity.

on

seven

to

March

months

DCX]

their

14, after

in

this

vicin-

visited

at the Oral

Kitch

homes

Kitch

in

Sunday.

and

Bourbon,

Arthur
Ind.,

on

:

Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Blixt (Dolores Frost) and little daughter came
from Iron Mountain, Mich., on Fri-

turns

to a veterans’

igan

for

supper

guests

at the home

Libertyville.

Mrs.
Joseph
Knox
Miss Patricia Osness,

day

to their

home

from

Billings,

been

called
death

and her
returned

on

Mont.,

on
of

Forest

avenue

Their

704

Tel.

POKORNY

Percy Prior Sr. (Irene Stevens) will
be interested to know that they are
proudly

J.

their first grandchild. Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Ropiequet (Jean Prior) have
a son, John Lee, who arrived
on
April 16 at 2 a.m.

Academy
90

announcing

While

sightseeing

GILLWEVE
Miss

Rd.—Deerfield

Deerfield

Open
Saturdays

Ili.

The many friends of Mr. and Mrs.

of

and Mrs.

Dorothy,
Permanent
Expert

Bowling
and Sundays

a small

the

arrival.

in

the

BEAUTY

and

Chestnut

762 Waukegan

Rd. @

The

club

884

at
of

Thursday

of

afternoon

The

into
1565

of
Mrs.

Fred

sewing

for a luncfieon
Chester

Schleifer

family

Wolf

moved

the newly completed home at
Woodbine court this past week.
into

will

Bartons
month.

of

their

be

at

an

840

newly

event

POWDER

completed

for

Westcliffe

the

Paul

road,

next

BOX BEAUTY
SHOP

623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julie
Expert
Permanent
Wavers
Try our Circlette Wave
that is. sprayed into your hair.

DEERFIELD

NEWS

NEWSPAPERS
Home
Delivery

CIGARS

AGENCY
MAGAZINES
Service

(PENGUIN-DELL)
CIGARETTES

Waukegan

SOFT

Rd.

VANT

BOOKS
DRINKS

Deerfield

&amp;

175

SELIG

Established
1924
REALTORS |
Real
Estate—Loans
764 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Ill.
Edward H. Selig
Haroid R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

Apparel

Grimes

it was

Killian

guests

the home of Mrs.
Deerfield road.

758

635
Deerfield
Road
Tel. Deerfield 806
Open Monday Evenings
We invite Charge Accounts

Franklin

were

is meeting ‘today

POCKET

Deerfield

Charles

street

MILDRED WALLDREN
Women’s

Mrs.

that

all.

parish.

Mr. Gillen,
‘Mr. Weve
Waving Our Specialty

Styling and
Shaping
Free Consultation

decided

after

Killian’s mother, Mrs, Theresa Power, in Chicago on Friday and attended
a party that evening at St. Timothy’s

French

SALON

and

world,

Moving

father,

Mr.

unexpectedly

home

they

parents,

Waukegan

in Mich-

because

W. White. Accompanying Mrs. Knox
and Miss Osness were Mrs. Knox’s
two sisters, Mrs. R. E. Lacey of,
Downers Grove and Mrs. M. F. Mink
of Elgin.

hospital

treatment.

11,

Knox’s

had

further

where

April

Mrs.

niece,
Mon-

Ronald, of Clay street, and Mr. and
Mrs.
Robert S. Ramsay and their
two sons, of a insey road, met quite

Mr.

Mr. and Mrs. James Mailfald and
two children, Melvin
and Marjorie,

of

5869

Deerfield,

EKER EX EXER EXER EEN encessesteeteot EXE EEE

day to visit Mrs. Blixt’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore Frost of Woodward avenue. Mrs. Blixt and the baby
will remain here while Mr. Blixt re-

Sunday

Deerfield Bowling

250

‘Odes ¢ cently,
Mr, and Mrs. F. C. Ritter and son,

of Mr.
and
Mrs. Chester Wolf of
Deerfield road
were
Mr. and
Mrs.
Wilson Olendorf and son, Kenneth,

the

Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Payson
_ Barrington were guests of honor

EEK EE EK EEK ERE EX EXER EX EX EXE EEK

. Ouetice sant ee

&amp; Company

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet’ Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Il.
Telephone Deerfield 33

-

LUCIUS ERSKINE
REALTOR

BUSINESS

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DIRECTORY
x

FROST'S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

THE GEORGIAN SHOP
DRY GOODS and GIFTS
816

Waukegan

Road,

Tel.

Refrigerators - Ranges
- Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of appliances

Deerfield

95

760

Tel.

W. R. MITCHELL
REAL

Available

Deerfield

29

758

Deerfield

BETTER

VANT
;

764

HOMES

Road

Tel.

&amp;

419

Banfield,

813

Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

CAKES

Prop.

Mercer
Lumber

Waukegan
Deerfield

-

Coal

THEO

880

Deerfield

and

Deerfield

Phone

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

DEERFIELD

1

Deerfield,

DEERFIELD
&amp;
756

Roads

TAXI

SERVICE

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD
Day and Night Service

R. Ph.

1884

Waukegan

81

CO.

Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers

Drfld. &amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield

722

295

BLUE

STORE

Deerfield Road—Tel, 767
“Best
Quality
Always”

GROCERIES
FRESH

‘Tools
Goods

Deerfield,

Road

ROYAL

IL

HARDWARE

PAINT

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
~Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting

577

Waukegan

J. KNAAK,
Est.

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND
SAUSAGE MARKET
Telephone

O.D.

KNAAK’S PHARMACY

Companies

Building Materials
612 Railroad
Ave
Deerfield,
Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

G. C. PARKNEN,

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
Phone
674—Deerfield
' Offiee Hours Evenings
by appointment

Road

- PIES - PASTY
FRESH DAILY

Lumber
-

DR.

Telephorme

Established

}

808

122

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES, Inc.

SELIG

EST. 1925
INSURANCE
in
all its branches
Waukegan
Road - Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 155

5§62—Eric

Deerfield

DR. R. D. MOORE
OPTOMETRIST

Sanitary and
Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING

FOR

- Tel.

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

M, A, FRANTZ
®

Deerfield

Road

ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION

ESTATE AND
INSJRANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Il.

Always

Waukegan

X

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP

FRUITS

—
&amp;

MEATS
VEGETABLES

Il.

�neyWi
Radio

Network Planned
Arthur
visor,

M.

Baker,

represents

township

West

super-

Deerfield

at

the fake County board of supervisors
at its meetings in the See court
house in Waukegan.
Vital to Deerfield’s law a
order
are
two issues which
were studied

last week by this board.
A drawing of the new county jail
reveals a modern three story building
which will be located immediately
north of the present court house.
Groundwork for the establishment
of a county-wide police radio network
in which all Lake county law enforcement agencies would: be linked was
laid recently when Harry Quandt,
county

radio technician,

proposed

that

the board of supervisors take over
operation of the county radio equipment.
Quandt’s plan, an extension of the
ultimate proposal of the late. Sheriff
Thomas. E. Kennedy, would remove
the county system from the sheriff’s
control and would provide better cooperation between all police depart_ ments.

"REPORT

A match game between DeerfieldNorthbrook Rotarians and the Glencoe Rotarians was held last Sunday
at the Wilmette King Pin Bowling
lanes with Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary five winning with a total of 2626
pins over Glencoe’s total of 2589.

Deerfield-Northbrook’s

line-up

showing

at

the

close

of

Vogue Fashion Show

State Bank

business

on

Grand

Total

a student at Vogue School of Design.
On Sunday at a fashion showing by
students of the school under the supervision of the director, Mrs. Ruth

Wade Ray, Mr. Meyer showed
hats and one sun suit of his own

six
de-

and

He also suggested that the board
employ women operators because of

a cape.
Mr. and Mrs.
Bruno Meyer attended the fashion showing Sunday
evening in the Gold Ballroom of the

personnel

during

achieved

the

as radio

war.

Palmer

Bannockburn Resident,
J. D. McDermott, Dies
James

Daniel

(3): Total:
Grand

depbslter

Total

67,

of

Telegraph road, Bannockburn, passed
away Tuesday following a long illness.
Funeral services will be held
Friday morning from the Kelly Funeral home in Highland Park and at
St.
Patrick’s
church, West
Lake
Forest.
Burial will be made in St.
Paul,

Eilean

are his wife, Mrs.

McDermott;

three

Mrs.

Elizabeth

Alice
gail

Mr.
pic

sisters,

seven

children,

Kimball,

and

Chicago,

and

about

his

owned
302

Flynn,

Mrs.

the

Olym-

S. Canal

street,

sons

were

asso-

business with him.
The
have lived in Bannock-

20

years.

Josephine

merce

Jewett

Josephine

J.

Jewett

awayat Lake Forest
hospital on
Saturday.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at a funeral home in Austin,
and burial was in Howell, Mich.
The late Mr. and Mrs. Charles G.
Jewett bought the James Galloway
farm on County Line road in 1918,
now occupied by Dr. and Mrs. Carl
The beautiful natural park in
Reeb.
the center of the village of Deerfield
‘known as Jewett Park is owned by
the family.
Miss Jewett has |lived in Chicago
She is sursince leaving Deerfield.
vived by’ a brother, Charles G. Jewtt

guaranteed

............

#

.42

yo

ee, B Uheeahasth
esate $1,486,319.91

' J. W. McGINNIS, Cashier.
Correct. Attest:

worn

as

HARRY
E. WING,
FRED J. LABAHN,
Directors.

STATE OF ILLINOIS, } gs.
COUNTY OF LAKE { *
Subscribed

and

sworn

to

before

me

this 3rd

day

of

April,

1947.
ARLINE MENTZER,i
Notary Public.

(SEAL)

cit

at

160

N.

La

Salle

Lines,

Inc.,

ee

The World’s Luxury Cleaner

Highland

completed

Coach

its

case,

and

this

de-

layed and supposedly “final hearing”
is a postponement of the March 27th
hearing,

to

allow

the

North

Shore

Electrice Line to have more time for
“more opposition”. It is suggested that
residents

might

find

Light Work

this

Satin Sheen

meeting interesting to hear why the
North Shore Line is opposing a bus
for Deerfield.

Notice the polished highlights, when you clean with

Royal Neighbors Will Have
Luncheon Card Party May 7

a
passed

—

Chicago.

The
has

1947,

Chicago.

commission

The Royal
members are

Buried in Howell, Mich.
Miss

be

The final hearing of the Highland
Coach Lines petition for bus service
between Deerfield and Highland Park |
is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29,
at 10 a.m. before the Illinois Com-

Deerfield

McDermott

ciated in the
McDermotts

Miss

Ella

Harbek.

Commissaries,

burn

Mrs.

can

March,

I, J. W. McGINNIS, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear ‘that
the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief; and that the items
and amounts shown above agree with the items and amounts shown in the report to
the Auditor of Public Accounts, State of Illinois, eer
to law.

For Proposed Bus Line

Maude

J. Lawrence, Blanche Sullivan, Mar‘jan M., James J., Mrs. Duncan Reeds
(Eleanor), Claude D., and Thomas L.;
and

hood,

House,

street,

Minn.

Surviving

or

of

Liabilities

Final Hearing April 29

McDermott,

fully

creation.

hat

day

LIABILITIES

Meyer, son of Mr. and Mrs.

board of supervisors.

they

29th

Resources

The sun suit was of black and persimmon colored silk faille.
It had a

reputation

the

. Cash and due from banks
U.S. Government obligations, direct and/or
. Other bonds, stocks and securities
Loans and discounts
OVP APEIRG | co Nede sgh dere-beikes
ve
. Banking house.
Furniture and fixtures
. Other real estate
. Other
resources

Each
police force
would pay a
nominal rental for the equipment and full skirt tied with a large black. bow,
the maintenance of the equipment and a short blouse
with
hood
atwould be the responsibility of the) tached. The
outfit
was
reversible,

the

ILLINOIS

RESOURCES

Bruno C. Meyer of Forest avenue, is

the

OF

12. Capital
stock
14. Surplus
eee ntcccessncenscccenneet** eecesece cee ceecenesecsncccenensepenereessesenesees
15. Undivided profits
(Net)
16. Reserve
accounts.
17. Demand
deposits !..........,...-:.) Nuatetdeyee
TB: Pitre - Gepos ite ssh
es 0 es, in ak catch mbp aceevsebenouae
Total of. Deposits:
(2) Not secured by pledge of assets ......... Rasaaic $1,486,319.91

Original Designs in

and

condition

in-

Robert Meyer Exhibits

sign

CONDITION

‘DEERFIELD,

cluded Joseph
Korenin,
Roger
K.
Dardeene,
John
B. Kress,
Frank
Spannraft, and John Picchietti.
Glencoe
Rotarian
team
members
were Dr. Albert Richberg, Dr. Louis
Richberg, Charles Mansfield, Albert
Landi, and Robert Rich.
High game score was 246 made by
Picchietti.

Robert

OF

; Deerf ield

RON
OQo
oe

ns

Club Bowls With Glen oe C be

Sani-Wax!

Neighbors sewing club
acting as hostesses for

luncheon-card

party

to

be

given

Wednesday, May 7, at 12:15 p.m. at
Phil Johnson’s restaurant at Lomiity
Line

road.

All Royal Neighbors and guests are
invited. Mrs. James Mailfald, oracle,
wishes reservations for the party to
be made with a member of the committee which
includes
Mrs. George
Beckman,
Mrs. A. J. Johnson, both

Deerfield, and Mrs. Harry
of Highland Park.
Just

The

Sew

Newmeyer

Just

Sew

club

will

be enter-

tained in the home of Mrs. William
W. Clark of Deerfield road, on Tues-

day Neher

FURNITURE

beautifying cleaner that does
professional work.

BMAMELS
PORCELAIN:

CLEANS
with
a SHEEN
Buy a bottle, and see!
¢-

Quarts

PINTS

Club

Sani-Wax is rich and smooth,
but FAST. Skims off dirt and
grime with an easy stroke, and
leaves a lovely finish. It’s the

For WOODWORK

$1.39

Halves

2.39

Gallons

3.95

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
_ DEERFIELD

756 WAUKEGAN RD.

ae

_

�Italian Mission to-

HOW ARE YOUR SCREENS?

Be Held at St. James

&amp;

'_©@

An

Italian mission will be held at
St. James church, Highwood, beginning Sunday evening, April 27 at 7:30

%

Father

FOR

arrived

ESTIMATE

A.

in

sermon

Terms

H. P. 5102
Deerfield 416

ducted

Spring's here and we're ready to change our spring
fever to spring fervor.
See our lovely packaged roses—Hybrid Teas, Ramblers and Climbers.

Also

Shrubs and Vines
PORCH
PERFECTION

beautiful

in their mother

mission

60 Green

and

gifts and

garden

wrought

ornaments.

Shop

Bay Rd.

Winnetka

132

WET
_ BASEMENTS
WATERPROOFED
@

Complete
and

Redecorating

Service

H. P. 6443

Funeral

' bed
Gy XY 7

Ren

Directors

DP
All

Phones

IMPORTANT

936.E. 47th
Street

i e/

SRS

Las
Kenwood

sermons

recitation

of

Such

as hymns

mission

is

by the choir.

designed

The

as a

the tepid, to instruct the uninformed,
and to recall to the practice of their
faith those who have been remiss in
is

“a

source

of

consola-

tion in sickness and in the bitter disappointments of life. Here is revealed
best

of how

wisdom

of

to suffer

life,

party

following

during

numbers

panied
berg,

by

on
and

lodge

was

pre-

evening:

Rosemary

piano

accordian

the

16.

program

the

the

at

April

Holm,

violin
accom-

by Vernah
numbers

by

Chicago

0700

ANNOUNCEMENT

We
offer complete
and
highly adequate
facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known
Furth staff of directors.

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

SjoEu-

gene Tagliapietra and Louis Guino.
Arrangements for the affair were
in charge of Jean Mett assisted by
Frances

Porco.

Members of the lodge will journey
to Waukegan when the conferring of
the Friendship degree will be held on
Sunday,

May

chapter.

Those

are

asked

10 a.m.

4,

to be

for

at

the

Waukegan

eligible for the degree
present

at 8 a.m.

and

registration.

spiritual

tonic to confirm the fervent, to arouse

mission

luck

Mrs. Minnie

the

with joy.

secret

The

lost

dollar and the broken health will not
be restored nor the dead recalled to’
life, but the heart will be taught how

Poston

Dies At Home of Son
Mrs.

died

Minnie

Saturday,

Stockdale

Poston,

April

following

19,

88,

a

brief illness, at the home of her son
and
daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs.

W.

S. Poston, 930 Wade

land

street, High-

Park.

Mrs. Poston was the widow of
late Edmond D. Poston, who
ceded her in death in 1896. She
born in Springfield and had made
home in Highland Park for the
seven years,
Surviving in addition to the

the
prewas
her
past

ian-speaking person to come to this
mission.
He urges all to extend this
invitation to those hesitant, religiously
timid men and women who have been

with whom she made her home, are
another
son,
Edmond
D.,
and
a

away from the practice
ligion for many years.

both

of

their

re-

No reproof 1s so potent as the silent
lesson of a good example.

—Mary

Baker

Eddy

daughter,
of

Mrs.

Vincent

Y.

Dallman,

Funeral services in charge of Kelley
and Spalding, were held on Monday,
April 21, at Springfield, and interment
was in Oak Ridge cemetery in that
city.

SEED,

WEED

with

Beautify your lawn with a triple
play—a
meal
of
Scotts
Turf
Builder
grassfood
to
restore
health and color.
A sowing of
Scotts Seed to cover the lawn
with millions
of husky
grass
plants.
Call on the magic of
Scotts Weed Control to banish
Dandelions,
Plantain
and
the
like.

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For
1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. $6.25
Shade same prices.

lawns in full sun or light shade.
25 Ibs. $29.85. Scotts for Dense
~

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—Long lasting grass food. 25 Ibs.
- $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft.
100 Ibs. - $6.50, 10,000 sq. ft.

SCOTTS

WEED

CONTROL—Quick,

of weeds

without

harm

to

grass.

$1.25

SCOTTS CLOVER—For
thickening
% Ib. - $.90 1 Ib. - $1.80.

HUSENETTER
365 Roger Williams

son

Springfield.

SCOTTS LAWN CARE
PRODUCTS

Cleaning

FURTH &amp; COMPANY
and

of

the public

FEED,

JAMES J. MOONEY

Advisers

tongue.

series

to God
a

2

Basement

Tel.

with

a

to suffer with joy in union with Jesus
crucified.”
Father Bartolai invites each Ital-

DECORATORS

&amp;

is

Most
sung

A

reed

EXTERIOR

Sun-

pot

Wednesday,

sented

Italy,

mass,

a

hall on

their religious obligations.

aluminum,

E oleyial Garden

from

the Rosary, Benediction of the
Blessed Sacrament, and prayers

the

many

country

at the 8:30 o’clock

coupled

assembled

joyed

recently

vited to accept this opportunity to assist at these religious services
conA

We have
iron furniture.

this

who

day
May
4. All
Italian-speaking
members of the community are in-

150 S. First St.

FOR

Bartolai,

will
conduct
the
mission
nightly
through the week of April 27 to Sunday, May 4. The solemn papal blessing will be bestowed at the closing

H. N. GAMLIN
BH.

Sam

=

Women of the Moose and members of the Loyal Order of Moose en-

o’clock.

if you prefer we will rewire your present
screens with bronze or galvanized wire.
CALL

Pot-Luck Supper

Beginning Sunday

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combination screen and storm sash.
Or

ij Moose Members Enjoy

permanent
and

destruction

$3.85.

lawns

on poor soil.

HARDWARE
Tel. H. P. 4387

�Thursday,

April

24,

Page

1947

Speaks at Holy Name Breakfast

19

I MOVINGREDALE
AND PACKING OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS
:

AGENT ALLIED VAN LINES

STORAGE
374

Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Three
Three

R. C. Ryniker, chief of special
services of the branch office of the
Veterans Administration in Chicago,
will be the featured speaker at a
meeting of the USO Committee for
Downey Hospital which will be held
at the USO club, 150 South Sheridan
road, Waukegan, on Monday, April
by

Highland

representative

on

Park

public

to hear

Mr.

Ryniker.

The

is invited.

Rummage

Sale

business

charge from the army,
tion of the new firm.

at Presbyterian

Highland

will hold

Park

Association

of

Presbyterian

its annual

sale on Thursday,

Spring

May

For Photographers...
We

are now offering our
customers a 24-hour
Developing Service
Done by our
technicians in our own
laboratories
under the most exacting

Gutters

rummage

1, in the base-

CAULKING

Cleaned,
&amp; Coated

conditions.

church

ROOFING
—

to forma-

By Photographers...

the

ment of the church, 300 Laurel avenue. The hours of the sale will be
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Articles for
sale will include clothing, millinery,
furniture and bric a brac. Members
of the association are urged to bring
articles for the sale to the church
as soon as possible.

SIDING

prior

Repaired

Suburban Roofing Co.
Free Estimates
Highland Park 1767

Roast
Turkey

Highland

Park Only

Guaranteed

24-Hr.

Developing Service!
If we fail to do your
work in 24 hours,

There Is’ No-Charge!

Alden Harris
PHOTOGRAPHY
7S.

St.

Johns

Highland

Ave.

Park

I

Sprinkle the inside of a Wilson’s Certified Turkey with salt (2 tsp.
for a 16-lb. bird). After stuffing, rub skin thoroughly with Wilson’s

1

Bake-Rite. Place breast down on a rack in shallow roasting pan;

cover with clean, white cloth moistened with melted Bake-Rite.
Roast, uncovered, in slow oven and as cloth dries, moisten with fat
drippings. If breast isn’t sufficiently browned when bird is threefourths done, turn breast side up. For that good butter-flavored skin,
remove cloth about half an hour before turkey is done and brush skin

i

with softened Clear Brook Butter.
Roast Turkey Time Table

ee

Woman’s

here

Clinic’, special-

izing in the repair of the home or
household equipment.
Each of the partners had been doing this type of work
individually
along the North Shore since his dis-

Church, Thursday, May 1
The

enterprise

Home

the

committee.
Other Highland Park representatives on the committee are Dr. N. C.
Risjord and Wilfred Seguin.
Chairman is Joseph P. Daly of Waukegan.
Mr. Ryniker’s subject will be “The
Place of the Volunteer in the Special
Services Program.”
Since
the
Highland
Park
community has been actively participating
in the program of this committee, it
is anticipated that there will be considerable representation from Highland

a

as “The

ee

YWCA

announced

Osborn,

formed
known

veterans,

Norman
R.
Crocoll, have

ee

Park

was

L.

Park

ee

it

Highland

Donald
R.
Christman,
Christman and Robert

ee

p.m.,

:

Are you money-wise this Spring? If so, you’ll be
serving delicious, plump turkey for Sunday dinner
often. Yes, turkeys are plentiful and economically
priced . . . and that adds up to plenty of good eating for all.

ee

8

Theodore

Organize

SS

SN

I

Weight when
stuffed
8 to 10 lbs.

Oven
Temp.
325° F.

3

Roasting
Time
to34hrs.

15 to 18 Ibs.

300° F.

3% to4

4°

hrs,

i
1
I

to 4% hrs.

;

18 Ibs.
20 lbs

300° F.
300° F.

44%to5
5)
406°.

hrs.
Dra:

10 to 14 Ibs.

ee

at

Veterans

The Home Clinic Here

Committee Meeting

Mrs.

H. P. 181

Money-Wise Cooks Serve Turkey

office.

VA Official Will
Speak at USO Downey

28,

Park

By Stange hector

ee

in

Highland

:

t=

term

Ave.,

Jr.

JUDGE WILLIAM D. CAMPBELL, a judge of the federal court,
is seen addressing members of the Holy Name society of Immaculate
Conception parish at their annual communion breakfast held at
the Moraine hotel Sunday, April 13. More than 200 members were
present.
ty
New officers were installed as follows: Thomas Hart, president;
Thomas Morren, vice president; Harold Duffy, treasurer, and Don
Seguin, secretary. Among plans for the year, the new group hopes
to have the well known Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen as a speaker during
their

Central

SS

Se

SS

325° F,

SS

SS

eS

SS

A

SSS

SS

SS

SS

SD SS

a
a
i
Nt

oe

Good Companions

Week Day Magic

A successful dinner is ‘‘in the bag’’
when you serve Wilson’s Certified
Turkey with plenty of tasty bread
stuffing, mashed potatoes and giblet
gravy. New buttered peas and a salad
of fresh pineapple and avocado provide
just the right Spring note. Rhubarb
sherbet will bring the meal to a perfect ending.
Dress up Mr. Gobbler in his best
Spring finery with fresh strawberries
and water cress surrounding him and
you’ll have an all-time winner.
Equal parts of whipped cream and
Wilson’s
Mayonnaise
mixed together to top the salad is nothing
short of wonderful.

Leftover turkey will receive wholehearted approval when it reappears on
the table as Turkey Tetrazzini, Pour
creamed turkey and mushrooms intoa
nest of cooked spaghetti mixed with
half its volume of white sauce, sprinkle
_ with grated Certified Cheese, brown
in the oven.

Looking Ahead
Salvage the wishbone, clean well,
and let it dry out thoroughly. Add a
coat of bright enamel and save for a
perfect ornament for a package, come
next Christmas.
Sincerely,
SN

Re
Wi

�FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS

Physical Education
(Continued

Bought for Cash
Oriental Rugs — Carpets
Silverware —
China —
Porcelains — Jewelry —
Pianos —

Libraries.

Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service

WILLIAMS, BARKER
&amp; SEVERN COMPANY
Martha Mooney, Auctioneer
229 South Wabash Avenue
Chicago 4, Illinois
Harrison

3777

from

page

unable

5)

ing covered in his physical education
class.
This report must be written
out and presented to the instructor
at the end of the period.
Should the student’s ailment continue longer than two weeks, he is
required to have an exemption card
filled out by his family doctor.
The
doctor

is

requested

to

state

the

activities in which the boy may or
may not participate, and through the
medium

of

the

doctor

and

to take part in regular class

work,

instructor,

a boy may still receive the benefit of
organized activity, even though he is

Fair Competition

Perhaps one of the most successful
phases of the well-planned physical
education program at H.P.H.S. is the
Intramural Program, which offers a
wide

variety

activities are
home rooms,
team which
of the same

of

activities.

These

organized through the
each room having a
plays other home rooms
year in school.
The pro-

gram also includes individual sports
events in which boys not proficient in
team games can participate. In addition,

each

boy

may

take

part

in

recreational
swimming
one
day
a
week.
All boys in school have an
opportunity

to

engage

in

intramural

An exceptionally fine feature of the
Intramural Program at the school is
keeping the contests at a level where
the average boy can compete successfully. Boys on the squad of an interscholastic athletic team are not allowed to compete during the period
they

are

on

the

squad,

and

letter

winners in any sport are not allowed
to compete in that sport in the intra-.
mural program.
The

Interscholastic

Athletic

Pro-

gram
at the school includes
freshman-sophomore and varsity teams in

all sports except golf.
There are 13
teams that carry on competition with
other schools in the following sports:
football,

basketball,

swimming,

baseball,

tennis

golf.

and

track,

A gymnasium, wrestling room and
correction room are devoted to teaching boy’s physical education at the
local
school.
Ground has been purchased in the west part of the city
Which will greatly facilitate the teaching of all outdoor
activities. The
boys share the swimming: pool with
the girls, and each locker room, as

well as the pool are filled to capacity
the entire school day.
Inadequate
locker

space,

the

small

pool

and

anti-

quated gymnasium, present a problem
none can deny, but in spite of this
handicap the staff at the school is
carrying on a program that attains
the objective of promoting in the student

greater

stability,

confidence and

increased

a happier

Athletic

self-

disposition.

Instructor

Mr. Kendig, who has played a most
important part in the setting up of
this

program,

has

been

at

Highland

Park High school for 22 years.
He
was graduated from the American
College of Physical Education in Chicago, and also has done graduate
la~

AISY-GAY PRINT
A two-piece costume with
jutting peplum and push-up
sleeves. Blue or black background, in rayon crepe,

sizes 12 to 20, $49.95

Martha Weather
THE

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THE

950

THE

EVANSTON

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THE

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OAK

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e

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950 N. MICHIGAN AVE.

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¢

1636

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730

LAKE STREET

work

at’ Northwestern

university.

In

addition to teaching physical education classes, Kendig is head swimming coach.
Last year the team
placed second in the Suburban league
and in the same position in the IIlinois state meet held at New Trier.
Mark Panther is freshman-sophomore swimming coach.
He teaches
physical education classes and is head
track

coach

at

the

school,

and

in

addition to these activities teaches
senior life saving in the pool.
He
came to H.P.H.S. in 1937 and served
in the US Navy during the recent
war.
George Grover (picture on Sports
page) has taught at Highland Park
High school since 1940. He teaches
physical education classes, is freshman-sophomore
football coach and
this year undertook his first season
as head baseball coach.
Grover also
served in the navy during the recent
war.
Chester Carlson came to Highland
Park in the fall of 1943. He teaches
physical education classes, is in charge
of the
intramural
program
and _ is
head basketball coach.
He was graduated from Whitewater Teachers college, Whitewater, Wis., and also at-

tended University of Wisconsin.
He
taught
in
the
Whitewater
public
schools before coming to Highland
Park.

Money earned by disabled veterans
making poppies fon the American Legion Auxiliary amounted to $311,879.17
last year. The flowers are worn on
Poppy Day to honor the war dead,

-

�Thine Mave Liked
By Dorothy
That
the
out

I could

Major Tremaine to Be
Entered in Memorial

B. Zick

actually

stand

under

shower, wash my dirty head withbeing
interrupted
by
almost

breaking

my

neck

getting

out

of the

tub, hurriedly going down stairs with
soap suds sliding down my forehead

into

my

eyes, wet

feet

leaving

pools

to

Highland Park’s first war casualty
be enrolled
on the permanent

National Roll of Honor at the unfinished Washington
cathedral, Washington, D. C., is the late Major Jay

Eugene
Forest

of soapy water on every step, racing
past the front door half clad, picking
up the receiver only to hear “Sorry,

week

there is no one on the line now”
slamming it down again;

morial

That I could now go back
each morning without being
cut
up

and

to bed
jerked

of a dream just as I was going
the
gangplank
of
the
“He
de

France”
swathed
in mink,
loaded
down with green orchids, followed by
my dogs and gobs and gobs of luggage,
all full of
only
to hear
a
“What’s new?”;

That

just

as

Hattie
female

I

had

Carnegies,
voice
say

beaten

seven

minute icing for five and a half minutes, to have to leave it only to hear
“Won’t
you
please
take
out your

magazine

subscriptions

and

an

such

through

such

orphanage”;

That just as I reached the top step
of the porch, arms full of bundles
including
individual steaks, mushrooms and the like, to be greeted by
a piercing ring,
to open
the front
door, to fall over the three happy
dogs who were there to welcome me,

spilling

the

whether

phone

steaks

to rescue

because

and _

them

debating

or answer

the

it might be something

really important, to run to the phone
and hear “Mother, I won’t be home
for dinner”, to look around and see

that

there

anyway

wouldn’t

because

be

the

last

any

dinner

of the

“high

cost of living’ was disappearing down
a canine hatch.
Not

to be

always

startled

joyous

at 1 a.m.

long,

by

long

that

distance

ring, to sleepily
reach
for a robe,
mules, always missing one, blink your
eyes as you switch on the light, to

speculate

who

awful hour, to
a beat as you
and then stop

is calling

at the

Tremaine
avenue,

by

the

Jr., formerly

it was

Rev.

liams,
canon
of
chairman of the

of 817

announced

Merrittt

Yes,

the

Wil-

the
cathedral
National War

and
Me-

committee.

Major
Tremaine
served with distinction with the army medical corps
in the Philippines liberation, and was
awarded the Bronze Star, the Silver
Star, and the Purple Heart with citations “for gallantry in action while
surgeon of the Zamboanga sector in
Zamboanga City, Mindanao.
During

the

night

raid by

a provisional

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NORTHFIELD,

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WINNETKA

pany of the Philippine constabulary
on the enemy positions, Major Tremaine
voluntarily
accompanied
and
actually led the right platoon of the

ILL.

2936

raiding force. After fighting his way
to the heart of the city, Major Tremaine was one
from the action

of the last
and assisted

to retire
in carry-

ing a wounded man to safety.”
Mrs. Clara J. Tremaine of Palos
Verdes estates, California, submitted
her son’s name and war record for
enrollment.
‘
Names and service records of both
the living and the honored dead of
the nation, submitted
for cathedral

tribute by members
will be enshrined
war

memorial

of their families,
in the proposed

chapel

of

the

scaneo ELECTRONIC owe

unfin-

creates

ished Patriots’ transept.
The*transept, upon which more than $375,000
has been expended for construction of
its foundation and lower works, will
form the southern arm of the cathedral.

HEARING

a

INSTRUMENT

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UNLIKE

ANY

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Jesus throws down the dividing prejudices of nationality, and teaches untversal

love,

without

distinction

of race,

merit, or rank.
—Geikie.

god-

have your heart skip
pick up the receiver
in disappointment as

strike

has

been

a

A battery-contained, all-in-one
hearing instrument—incredibly
small, beautiful and powerful.
Come see and hear this great
electronic achievement!

relief,

us girls, it has driven

Saturday Evening Square Dance
The
Saturday
Evening club will
hold another of its square dances at
the YWCA
Saturday, April 26, from
8:30 p.m. to 12 midnight. Noble Fin-

nel will be the caller. For information,
call Betty Frech, H. P. 5377.

Organization
As

members

Quick

sociates

52

ea
Avenue—Room

Highland
Telephone

Park
'H.

P.°1553

the

we

have

reliable

in

distant

cities

often
value
calls

be of
when
must

known

12

North Second
Highland
Park,

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of Electrical Hearing Aids

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Park

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\

SEGUIN FUNERAL
HOME

Service

a

of

mortuary
service affiliations throughout
the
country. Most of our asus and can
inestimable
out-of-town
be made.

WES

. .

A.M.A. Approved Funeral
Service,

are personally

Central

@

com-

me wild not to be able to pick up the
phone and say “Let’s play bridge”!

397

last

F.

a voice says “San Francisco calling”
and then a male voice saying “Is
Janet there?” She is—asleep.
but just between

CONCRETE BLOCKS

: War Record of Late

In the Phone Strike

At

921 ROGERS COURT, WAUKEGAN
DAILY NEXT WEEK 9 TO 9

3878

ian

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OR

PHONE

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FOR A HOME DEMONSTRATION

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OME DAY soon—the sooner the better—make

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a long look at these great Lincoln and Mercury
motor cars everyone is talking about. You'll be
pleased with the distinctive styling, the new color
combinations, the luxuriously smart interiors.

more

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at its best—the kind of service that ma
and keeps them!

_ HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN - MERCUR
108 N. First St.

Telephone H. P. 1777

�_

| Representatives to

| Library Notes

Complete Plans for
Softball Season.
Plans for this years softball league
program in Highland Park will be completed at a meeting of team representatives
in Community
center
tonight
(Thursday) starting at 8 o’clock. Mel
Mullins and Al Danakas, league directors,

will

conduct

the

session.

Managers or other representatives of
all Highland Park 12-inch and 16-inch
softball teams planning to take part in
league play this summer are urged to
attend this meeting. Play will start on
May 7.

4747

will

Park
sponsor

Memorial
a»

May

Post

No.

dance,

the

“Snafu Session”, featuring Johnny Olin
and his orchestra on Saturday, May 10,
at the Labor temple. Jackie Lou Sebbes
will be featured vocalist.
Tickets for the affair may be purchased from any VFW member or the
following committee
members:
Bud
Moroney, 575 Glenview avenue; John
Moran, 717 Glencoe avenue; Jerry McCaffrey, 573 Glenview avenue and Allan Gerkin, 137 S. Green Bay road.
Those selling tickets are asked to return any unsold to the committee members.

Teen Age Open House
Tomorrow;

to Hold

Spring Dance May 10
All teen-agers livingin the Highland
Park High school district are invited
to attend an open house and dance to
be sponsored by Teen Age club in
Cokes Me Inn, Community center tomorrow (Friday) night. An orchestra
will play for dancing from 8 p.m. to
11:30 p.m., according to Dick Eubanks,
_| president. Ping pong and cards will be
available to the non- “dancers. Refreshments will be served.
Teen Age club is now making gala
plans for a spring dance to be held

you

our

t, now
need.
service

friends —__‘

NC.
Highland Park

WITH

Wendell Holmes
All of the Civil

parents

which

FIRE—
War

Justice

letters

Oliver

.. Safely Cleanaa™

Oliver
fo his

Wendell

Holmes possessed, as well as the Civil
War diary, are included in this portrayal of a great American.

ALEXANDRA

KOLLONTAY

— Isa-

bel de Palencia

From

her

is recommended

father,

a

general

in

the

nationally

Tsar's
army,
Alexandra
learned
the
elements of her future beliefs. A valu-

Amenca’s

full of anecdote, human touches,
sketches of world leaders.

religious tracts, and was a friend
England’s great for sixty years.

You

of

night,

May

10, in Lincoln

school auditorium. Dress will be semiformal and an outstanding band will
play for dancing. Mary Lou Cameron
and her committee will ptan the floor
show.
Tickets for the spring dance may
be purchased from any member of the
club.

Y.W.C.A. Calendar
THURSDAY, April 24,
10 a.m. Creative Writers.
12:30 p.m. Luncheon.
7:30 p.m. Painting class. (Last class.
Anyone interested in outdoor sketch
classes is asked to contact the ‘Y’.)
FRIDAY, April 25,
8 p.m. Program on style and poise
by a well-known modeling school. Public invited.
SATURDAY, April 26,
8 p.m. Saturday Evening club dance.
WEDNESDAY, April 30,
10 a.m. Sewing group.
THURSDAY, May 1,
6:30 p.m. Friendship ctub.

sage

in

the

land,

and

of their

see

them

restores
*

the

care

Pile

gone

resilience
unmats

to

and

Edited

an

mothproofed,

if de-

* Also

*Charge

reasonable.

.

.

. . . AMBassador

Division

of HOME

839 Waukegan

Symphony
music

AMERICAN

critic

SERVICE

Since

1844

by

CHICAGO'S
aed
MORTGAGE
HOUSE

Smith

Orchestra
of

the

by

3222

a

Boston

and TRANSCRIPT.

Ask Grade School Boys &amp; Girls
To Stamp Club Meet Saturday
Highland Park boys and girls of
grammar school age are invited to
attend the meeting of Junior Stamp
club in Community center on Saturday at 2 p.m. Charles A. Sanborn is
adult leader. The club meets the second and fourth Saturday afternoons
of each month.

135 S. LA SALLE ST.
PO

CO.

Rd., Deerfield

This is the much publicized biography
of the
celebrated
conductor
of
the
former

—

Duraclean Co.

HORACE
GREELEY,
PRINTER,
EDITOR, CRUSADER—Henry Luther Stoddard
©
Written by a newspaper man, this is
the study of the intrepid editor whose
moral courage helped raise yournalism
to its present level.

Boston

fibers

oe
y

Phone Deerfield 444

his granddaughter, Lady Nora Barlow,
who also examined the small notebooks
which he carried on his inland journeys.

KOUSSEVITSKY—Moses

pole We

Colors

revive

Chicago

newspaper

introduction

wool

rises

editor

with

given

*

sired.

Phone, today

A series of thirty six letters written
by Darwin to his family during the
famous five year voyage are here published in their entirety for the first
time.

Home

* Duracleaning

CHARLES
DARWIN
AND
THE
VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE—Lady
Barlow,

fe

viel

empire.

Nora

y

yin i
yA

“Coast to Coast Service”

but

AN AMERICAN
DYNASTY—John
Tebbell
.
The amazing story of three of America’s most influential newspaper families, the McCormicks, the Medills, and
Pattersons,

dV

,

yh

In the

can

having

who would have been the first to laugh
at pretense to the title.

the

We

furnishings * No inconvenience in

HAYDN—Karl Geiringer
A modern presentation of the life of
Haydn containing many hitherto unknown or unpublished marerial which
has come to light in the tast forty years.
Special regard is paid t@the family and
youth of the master musician.

a

lead-

Service

resting 18th century
English
personality who wrote plays, light verse, and

became

a

|

and

HANNAH MORE AND HER CIRCLE—Mary Alden Hopkins
Hannah More was a vivid and ar-

who

x‘

by

ing furniture &amp;
dept. stores.

GEORGE ADE—Fred C. Kelly
A richly entertaining study of a man

'

Saturday

TOUCHED

able member of the Party, she was
Lenin’s head of the Ministry of Social
Welfare and later Minister to Norway,
Mexico and Sweden. Her biography is

Highwood Legion to
Sponsor May Dance
Highland

BIOGRAPHIES

a4)

_

�Page

24

Thursday,

SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Hotel
Newly
Private

trips

Sovereign
Decorated
Ballroom
Rooms for Weddings,

quets

and

Business

NOW OPEN
Pool Available

Swimming

Kenmore

Phone:

and
Ban-

the

Public

at Granville

BRIiargate

An eye-witness account of Germany’s
fall will be told by ex-G. I. Charles E.
Wilson at St. John’s Evangelical and
Reformed church, Green Bay road and
Homewood avenue, Wednesday, April

through

this

country’s

30,

8000

at 7:45

p.m.

The story is told with beautiful color
film and sound and presents a historical,

vacation

authoritatively

areas. His latest film portrays the
beauty, charm and romantic appeal of
the North Woods. His appearance in
Highland Park is sponsored annually
by the Playground
and _ Recreation
board.
No admission will be charged, but

Meetings.
to

Sam,Campbell, naturatist and lecturwill
present
his
1947
program,

“Summer Homing and Roaming in the
Great North Woods,” at tne Elm Place
school auditorium on Sunday, May 4,
at 3 p.m. His talk will be illustrated
by Kodachrome films.
Each year Campbell makes extended

GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50

the “Fall of

documented

a Nation”.

account

The

of

story be-

The
scenes
progress
to Munich,
birthplace of the Naz party, and to
Nurnberg, political center of Nazism.
The film continues with pictures of
the concentration camp at Ohrdruff,
incredible scenes of human degradation and conclude with pictures of the
destroyed
cities of Germany,
“The
Judgment within a Generation.”
The public is invited to come, see
and hear the message of a veteran as
he presents the gospe! and discusses

expenses. All money collected over that
amount will be used for youth activities

today’s need of every Christian to give
utmost devotion to his Christ and his
church. Everyone is wetcome to this
program,

in the

Austrian

Atps,

showing

Bavarian countryside, colorful
and majestic cathedrars.

at Community

the

Center.

RRR

SITIO

sk the Man

sooner

you

the greatest
Your next new car will be your first
in five long years—so choose wisely!

e

Fact No. 1: We've built quality
cars for 47 years . .. this stunning,
powerful new Packard tops them all.
More than 4,000 factory inspections
per car make sure of that.
Fact No. 2: Owner satisfaction is
at an all-time high. Service adjustments, under the new car warranty,
are near the vanishing point.
Fact No.

Come

3: Wise

in

buyers

who

now—for

our

order

it, the

Packa

sooner

re

placed their orders early are keeping
them in—and the sooner you join
them, the sooner your new Packard
will arrive! Meanwhile...
Be safe—and

save...

Be safe—Follow the guide at right!
Save—through low-cost protection
against expensive roadside break-

downs, and long lay-ups for major
repairs.

Drive in soon for a free estimate
of what your car needs now!

low-priced

you'll

Who

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One

get

ever built!
HERE’S YOUR

SAFETY-SERVICE

GUIDE

Brake adjustment—No matter how soon
you plan to turn your car in, keep
brakes up to requirements.

Steering

and

Wheel

check-up—Avoid

hidden dangers and make old tires last.
Seasonal Lubrication—Timely, low-cost
insurance against burning out a hardto-get part.
Cooling System check-up—lIt can save

you from sitting on the roadside while
your car boils over!
Engine tune-up—Restores pep, smoothness, dependability.

spring-conditioning

“‘package.”

RAVINIA MOTORS, INC.

22-24 S. FIRST ST.

1947

castles

gins

a silver collection will be taken to cover

The

24,

Will Show “Fall of a Nation” at
St. John’s Church Wednesday

Sam Campbell Will
Give 1947 Outdoor
Program Here May 4
er,

April

HIGHLAND

PARK,

ILL.

�Form

Women’s Hats Were
Laughing Matter
Even

dealership

Reading of early American literary
journals, significant research and reference acquisitions just received by the
Northwestern’ University library, reveals that women’s hats were the targets, 85 and more years ago as now, of
journalistic satire.
What was the view of
feminine
millinery in the spring of 1861? In
the April 7 issue of “Vanity Fair,”
considered one of the best humorous
of the period,

a satirist wrote:

“Appreciation
of
the
fitness
of
things is not a characteristic of the
milliner of the period in which we live
.... All her so-called creations in the
way of bonnets and hats are but ill-disguised

modifications

is a bonnet

in

every

bird’s

nest

... and a sweet love of a hat in the
shell of the tidy shore.”
“Little

Seaside

Thing”

The collaborating cartoonist supplied
a sketched profile of a damsel of the
60s, hardly a “cover girl” by present
standards, and captioned it “the halfshell,

sweet

a

thing

seaside

little

for

the coming summer.” The hat thus
lampooned was an inverted shell, jutting a good distance over the forehead.
The Northwestern collection of ““Vanity Fair’ for the period of 1859 to
1863 is complete except for two,issues.
Also included in the journal acquisitions, valuable to researchers and students

the

of history,

social sciences, lit-

science and other
political
erature,
are_three volhumanities,
the
of
fields
umes, covering the 1842-43 period, of
the “Boston Miscellany of Literature
and Fashion,” a critical magazine containing contributions by Lowell, Hawthorne and Poe.
Also

The

in Collection

“Literary

Authors,

a Gazette

World,
and

Readers

for

Publishers,”

1847 to 1853, also is in the newly acquired collection. The journal was the
first weekly to discuss current books.
The “Monthly Anthology and Boston
Review,” 1803-11; the “New York Review,”

a complete

1837-42;

file of

ten

volumes; “Republic, a Monthly Magazine of American Literature, Politics
and Arts,” four volumes, 1851-’52, complete file; “Today,” a Boston literary
journal, two volumes, complete file for
1852; the “American Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge,” 1834n
37, complete file; and the “Souther
Literary

Journal

Monthly

and

Maga-

of
zine,” a Charleston, S. C., periodical
‘and
slavery
ned
1835-38 which champio

recorded

southern

Chicago Red Cross Has Large
arments and Dressings Quota

Sales and

Henry

Inc.

in

H.

and

vice

president

The

new

makes
Mr.

of

to

new
operated

Raymond

A. Fencl,

service

manager.

service

handle

service

Pulver

business

with

Ford

15

Motor

in the

years,
company

Following

two
Mr.

years
Fencl

Upon

Surgical

at

his

release

from

Yale

he

and

needed

University
in

as

follows:

local

each

To

month

civilian

he served
during the
the

Do

for vet-

hospitals.

We

in veterans’ hospitals.

gasoline and service business at 660
Vernong avenue,
Glencoe,
present
address of the new firm.

Have All New
Equipment
Your Work Right

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood

Approximately

the

entered

We

garments

National Red Cross has asked’ that
all chapters, try to complete
their
quotas
of
children’s
garments
by |
June 30. Large afghans also are badly

principally
Nash

1 were

children’s

dressings:

required

erans’

automo-

enlisted

coast guard, with which
four and one half years
war.

all

and

April

15,745

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE

the
Red

for overseas
relief; 3,245 children’s
sweaters; 1,827 coat-type sweaters for
hospitalized veterans.

agency
on

as of

Sewing:

150,000

has been

Motors. He was graduated
university in 1926.
Illinois,

Cross,

gen-

cars.

bile

of

by

and

and

Production
requirements
of
Chicago chapter, American

Nash

president

and

car sales

equipped

a

Glencoe,

Pulver,

eral manager,

is

is

Build Lawns and
Driveways
TRY US OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137

N. Second,

All Phones

3785

of the coal-scuttle,

the beehive, and the casserole . . . The
fault of the milliner . . . is that she will
not go to nature for her moulds.
..-.
There

Nash

Pulver-Nash,

in 1861

weeklies

New

Service Agency in Glencoe

culture,

likewise

Everblooming

We, the members of the
Party, wish to
Progressive
e of Highpeopl
thank the
wood for their support in our
successful Aldermanic election.
Oliver Zanarini
Louis Baruffi

Americo

Floribunds and

Hybrid Tea Roses

crimson-Maroon............ $1.25
Quinard,
Ami
Autumn, burnt orange .........+seeees iveitchae
Betty Uprichard, salmon pink ..........-. 1.25
Briarcliff, rose pink ...........+. Fe u'e sle bosle aeeo
Bright Wings, burnt orange ........ bhvceneasOw
Caledonia, double white ...........-+seeeeee 1.25
California, copper yellow, pink tones...... 1.50
Christopher Stone, velvety scarlet red .... 1.25
Crimson Glory, deep crimson, very fragrant 1.50
Duquesa de Penarando, coppery apricot.... 1.25
Editor McFarland, brilliant pink .......... 1.25
Edith Nellie Perkins, salmon pink to copper 1.25
E. G. Hill, red shading to crimson ........ 1.25
Etoile de Holland, dark velvety red ...... 1.25
Golden Dawn, yellow fragrant ...........- 1.25
Grand Duchess Charlotte, red to coral pink 1.50
Hinrich Gaede, copper-yellow, fragrant ... 1.25
Joanna Hill, ivory with bronze shading in
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die
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oe
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Margaret McGredy, orange scarlet ........ 1.25
Mary Margaret McBride, salmon pink .... 1.50
McGredy’s Ivory, creamy white .......... 1.25
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Mirandy, deep crimson, fragrant .......... 2.00
Mme. Henri Guillot, pink with gold base.. 1.25
Mrs. Charles Bell, salmon pink ............ 1.25
Mrs. E. P. Thom, canary yellow .......... 1.25
Mrs. Pierre S. DuPont, golden yellow ..... 1.26
Mrs. Sam McGredy, scarlet coppery apricot 1.25
Peace, All America Rose, 1946, yellow buds,
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cig
ope
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Pink Princess, bud red, flower pink ...... 1.50
Poinsettia, bright scarlet .............ec00- 1.25
Pink Radiance, rose pink ..............ee0. 1.25
Pres. Macia, pink flowers, long buds ..... 1.25
Red Radiance, clear red ..............c00 1.25
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PR
ag
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We positively sell no Texas roses.
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are

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Pachysandra terminals 12 for 3.00, 100 for $22.50
Vinca Minor 12 for 4.00, 100 for .......... 30.00

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mixture consisting

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15%

for

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1.50
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Hardy Climbing Vines
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J. Grootendorst, large clusters of small
PO SIOWONE eis
S be Us ca abe awe vind oe ate 1.25
Hugonis,
golden rose of China,
single,
yellow, bloome in: May, :&lt;. 5.0.60.
d ee sic es 1.25

| plants

roses.

Roses

F.

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12 to 49

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DISTRIBUTORS,

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IMPORTERS

�Foreign Language_
_ GENERAL REPAIR
‘

CONSTRUCTION
4a

Dormers,

laries, Werner
of German and linguistics,

Discovers

Studied

Learning
a foreign
language in
later life is infinitely easier than’ the
process a baby goes through in acquiring his first knowledge of his
mother tongue, a Northwestern university linguist has found.
The infant struggling through the
cooing and babbling stages to his
|} initial’ grasp of words is having a

and
etc.

| Tel. Niles 9805

he the s

stu- | opment

of a Bilingual

Child, a Li

foreign vocabu- | uist’s Record,” the second vol
F. Leopold, professor of which has just been published by

Easier for Adults,

Linguist

than

oO

with

declared.

Daughters

He ought to know. He has watched
two
daughters
experiencing
the
throes of learning, not one,
Janguages,
German
and_

Careful
in

notes

which

taken

Hildegard

during
and

but two
English.

the years

Karla

Leo-

pold were learning to speak bilingually are the basis of a series of four
books

on

the

subject,

“Speech

Devel-

the Northwestern University Studies
in the Humanities.
The small child’s problem in language mastery is described thus by
Prof. Leopold in the newly published

volume:

“Even when we disregard the tremendous problems of meaning which
the child faces in trying to find order
and system in the chaos of linguistic
phenomena

with

which

he

is

con-.

fronted and which he must learn to
understand, assimilate and reproduce,
all this being only a small sector of
the overwhelming
variety
of
life
which
rushes in on a child and
clamors for organization... even
then the task is greater than it may

seem

at first glance.

:

“Not only must words be isolated
from the great blur of sounds heard
(such must be a child’s first impression of speech). Word sounds must
be
of

perceived,
production

their complex manner
grasped, their articula-

tion reproduced with
and muscular control.”

growing

Easier

Life

in

Later

skill

Learning a foreign lamguage in
later life is easier than first learning
the mother
tongue, Prof. Leopold
explained,
because
objects,
actions
and

MEANING

THERE’S

Disti

A

A

TO

0

tl

qualities

some

keys,

.

example,

aud Vutertor Decorations
Within a single phrase we can only indicate the superiority of Porters ‘Distinctive Furniture

Porters’ fame in the furnishing field is far-reaching. In

fact, in your own community many of your own neighbors have found it worthwhile to look
furnishings. For hereis a store different for many reasons.

Besides offering only the products of manufacturers who meet rigid standards of style, material
and craftsmanship, it offers exclusive features such as the Guild
Galleries, nine inspiring model rooms, and the Boudoir Bazaar, a
separate shop devoted to complete bedroom furnishings. Discriminating homemakers appreciate these
to make

their homes

certain of winning the’ admiration of
‘

family and friends. Visit and re-visit Porters soon and personally
discover the advantages of living with
.

eo

.

“Distinctive Furniture 3

6tT\.

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.

from

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oes :
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——

ee

ri

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f

Ta

nd

Interior Decorations’.
Available at Porters is an intelligent, workable
interior decorating service, offered without
charge... and of course, deliveries are free!

Prof.

his

been

Hildegard’s

Leopold

daughter

a

and

butter.

for

three,

of

box,
block,
as the Ger-

spoon,

“wee”

was

used

feed

and

read.

“My,

balloon,

it was

reproduce

During Hildegard’s
remarked,

found,

variety

In addition,

her
interjection
to
sound of thunder.
life,

few
For

(tummy) and “baden”
little girl’s. “boo” was

expression

24th
to

the

month

express

And

my,”

when
she

of
feet,

she

wasn’t

acting either surprised or disapproving. A typical woman, even in miniature, she was saying “My money.”
\

English

Further

data

Predominates

supplied

by

Hilde-

gard’s developing speech habits are’
summarized by her father as follows:
at the age of 15 months, she used
23 words, more German than En-

glish.
A
ys
ref LLL aim

(Ns

“ba”,

to

man “Bauch”
(bathe). The
her

opportunities

derived

things,
including
ball,
Paul and piano, as well

pooh

to Porters at Racine for better home

previously

early speech, which may aid a
puzzled
mothers
and fathers.
meant

and Interior Decorations’. However,

have

organized. Speaking has been establishedas an acquired experience.
The majority of parents seem to
be able to “translate” baby talk, but
the linguist’s written studies offer

(Prof.

Leopold

addressed

her

consistently in German; her mother
in English.) At 18 months, Little Miss
Leopold
employed 74 words, more
English than. German; at two years,
241 word, the great majority English,
presumably because her “exposure”
to that language ificreased as her
social contacts widened.
“A child, in developing language,
learns only the most useful words,”
Prof. Leopold said, “and is the sole
judge as to what is useful. Words
are not invented ‘out of nothing,’
Early language is strongly emotional.
However, factual, objective use of
words
begins
early and increases
steadily.”

Human affection is not poured forth
vainly, even though it meet no return.
Love enriches the nature, enlarging,
purifying, and elevating it.
|
=
.»
Mary Baker Eddy. 43

�‘Green Bay PTA”
Sponsors Child
Guidance Talks
Miss Lawry Turpin opened a panel
discussion at Green Bay Road school
last’ Thursday by presenting the teacher’s views

on

the

subject,

“New

Hori-

zons in Our Responsibilities towards
Children.”
Miss Turpin stated that respect is one
of the most importanr traits for children to acquire in learning to live a
useful, satisfying life with others.
The second speaker in this PTAsponsored panel discussion was Mrs.
Ernest

Belmont

mothers’
fic

who

represented

point of view and gave

examples

of

the

need

for

PULVER-NASH, I

the

specirespect

on the part of children. Mrs. Stanley
Lind stressed the importance of religion in a child’s life and Mr. Henry
Stein spoke on abstract thinking and
materialism.
Moderator was Dr. C. O. Dahle,
superintendent of School District 107.

FOR

SALES ano SERVICE
IN GLENCOE

To Select Local Scout
For Culver Academy
Scholarship Exams

A Complete Nash Dealership in every detail . . . from friendly showroom to a completely equipped service department.

The Emily Jane Culver scholarships
valued
at
$4,275,
providing
board,
room,
and
tuition
for
three
years

beginning September, 1947, at Culver
Military academy, will be offered on
a competitive basis to the Boy Scouts
of America in Region Seven (Indiana,
Michigan,
Illinois
and
Wisconsin),
and in Region Two (New York and
New Jersey).
Designation of the two
regions
by
the
Culver
Educational
foundation was announced by Colonel

W.

E.

Gregory,

week.

superintendent,

‘

this

;

George R. Boardman of the North
Shore Area Boy Scout council and
the local executive committee
will
select a candidate for the competition
before May 15, the closing date for
nominations.
All local scouts interested

should

contact

ter.

their

©

On display are the new
for 1947.

Nash

“600” and

the new

Nash

Ambassador

The new Nash “600” in the low price field is the forerunner of the
car of tomorrow—delivering 25 to 30 miles on a gallon of gasoline at
moderate highway speeds and offering those features now in appearance, comfort, performance, maneuverability, conditioned air and
quietness which make it the sensational new car of 1947.

The

new

Nash

Ambassador,

in the medium

price

field, offers

per-

formance, luxury and appointments to a degree that once you've gotten

behind the wheel to experience them nothing else in a motor car will
be able to satisfy you.

Be sure to ask for a demonstration of the famous Nash Weather Eye
Conditioned Air System.
You are cordially invited to bring your present car in for the Service

that will keep it running the way it should as long as you drive it.

scoutmas-

:

Eligibility

requirements

reveal

that

Scouts of first class rank or higher
who are not less than 13 years of age
nor more than 15, and who are ranked

scholastically
cent

of

their

in

the

class

upper

are

10

per

eligible.

Academically
the candidate must
have completed the ninth grade and
not be beyond the first half of the
tenth grade by June, 1947.
On the
basis of scholastic records .and ‘tests
the Scholarship committee will choose
candidates

to

meet

a

regional

com-

mittee who will select a winner.
The records of 29 Emily Jane Culver scholars who have graduated from
the academy since they were first
established in 1931 reveals outstanding accomplishments; 24 have been
elected to Cum Laude the National
Honorary
Scholastic
society;
four
have won the scholastic medal for
high

academic

standing;

cadet commissioned officer;
have won varsity letters in
competition.

22

were

and 18
athletic

Pamphlets issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce on establishing
and operating various types of small
business,
as
well
as
BUSINESS
WEEK, a weekly magazine giving upto-date business trends and information
may be borrowed.

YOU'LL BE AHEAD fh
_ WITH
660 Vernon Avenue

i

Glencoe 674

'
:

�Defeating

New

Trier’s Nine

in Opener

'H. P. Wins Second

Proviso Here

League Game;

Lead League

On Saturday
Hh First Double

Header

on Tap

for

Don Harder Pitches Brilliant

. Parkers At Athletic Field
PROBABLE
- Malizia,

McDermott,

Murphy,
The

LINEUP

:
(

3b
Pirates

will

afternoon at 1:00

be

here

p.m.

for

» a double header with Highland Park.
This will be the first twin bill of the
_ year for both teams. The Little Giants
e enter the game boasting a record: of
~ two wins and no losses. (Deadline
prevents
including Tuesday’s game
with Waukegan)
Tf
the
excellent
pitching
which
vo_ Highland Park has been getting continues, and the fielding improves, the
‘Little Giants will be a tough team to
_ beat.

Starting

time’ for

Saturday

after-

-noon’s game with the Pirates is 1:00
p.m. at the High
School
Athletic
Field on West Park Avenue. Inci© dentally, there is no admission charge
S80 these corttests.
7

- Baseball

Schedule

Saturday, April 26—*Proviso (Here)
Saturday,
May 3—*Morton
(Here)
- Tuesday, May 6—Evanston
(There)

Saturday, May 10—*Oak Pk. (There)
Tuesday, May 13—Waukegan (Here)
Saturday, May 17—*Thornton (Here)
Tuesday, May 20—New Trier (There)
* DOUBLE-HEADER

: Fccbssoph Track Team
To Meet Argo at Local
_ Athletic Field Today
_. Highland Park High school’s Froshsoph track team, coached by Mark
Panther, will open its outdoor track
season
today
(Thursday)
against
Argo High school of the South Suburban League.

_

The
which

- follows:

Parkers
are

Don “Mel” Harder pitched a beautiful one hitter last Friday as he won
his second straight game for Highland. Park,
4-0. It was
Highland
Park’s second league victory of the
current campaign, and put the Giants
in first place.
The Parkers weré a little weak on
defense making four errors, but had
enough offense to push fotir’ big runs

rf

Proviso

Saturday

One Hitter for Second Victory

c

_ Meggorini, cf
— Ott, ss
_ Martin, 1b
Plummer, If
Piacentini, 2b

entries

subject

to

for the meet,
change,

are

as

wo

420.) yd. . High:
Hut.dles—Behr,
Schlossman;
100 yd—Knowlton;
- Deaver, Kiddle; 660-Demichelis, Hennig, Wilbor ; 120 Low Hurdles—Behr,
-Schlossman, Wilbor; 220—Knowlton,
_ Dever, McKenna; 440 Relay—Behr,
- Knowlton,
Dever, McKenna;
Pole
-~Vault—Pinkerton; Shot Put—Knowlton, Goldsmith; Discus—No Entries;
- High
Jump—Behr;
Broad
Jump—
Knowlton.

: Golf Team Meets
Taft, LaGrange

Tomorrow;

|

#
mee

BillWith

Sat.

_ Facing Taft High school of Chicago
tomorrow
(Friday) and La Grange

on Saturday, the Little Giants will be
ready
to
defend
their
Suburban
League championship next Wednes_ day against Thornton at Sunset Val-

across

the

plate.

Harder

struck

i
‘
s
ae

out

eight

Photos

by

Henry

X,

Arenberg

VARSITY BASEBALL COACH GEORGE GROVER keeps an alert eye
on developments, left, and Tom Martin, first baseman, catches
on
a little rest as the HPHS team defeats New Trier 5-4 in the league
opener April 14. In one of the games tense moments, right, Catcher
Moose Lauer of New Trier steps back as Bob Plummer, pitcher,

scores the second run

for Highland

Varsity Thinlyclads
—
to Compete in Wheaton

Rain and Cold
Stop Spring

Grid Training

Relays on Saturday

Rain and cold weather prevented
Daye Floyd from beginning Spring
football training at Highland Park
High school last week. The training
was originally scheduled to commence
on April 15, but has been postponed
to this week. The field was in a very
muddy condition because of the rain,
but with the sunshine of the past few
days has dried considerably.
All
who

Boys Urged to Report
boys, who are not seniors, and
are
not
now
participating
in

another

sport

for

training.

the

drills

May.

The
be

will last

Practice

grid
tough,

are
Mr.

schedule
and

urged
Floyd

into

uniforms
with

for

Park.

to

report

stated

the month

that

of

will be issued.

next

some

fall

will

experience

—

Evanston players.
Summary of Game
| First inning—Evanston—W eaver
grounded out. Anderson singled to
right. Muchmore struck out as Anderson stole second. Conrad struck
out. No runs—one hit. Highland Park
—Malizia
grounded
out.
Meggorini

singled to left, then stole second. Ott
grounded out, Meggorini taking third.
Martin singled through the box, Meggorini scoring. Martin was picked off
first. One run—two hits.
Second inning — Evanston — Marck
grounded

With
ten full weeks of practice
behind them the Highland Park High
school Thinlyclads
will travel down
to Wheaton to compete in the Whea-

—

out.

Lecy

grounded

i
_

out.

Kassell walked. Jenkins grounded out.
No runs—no hits. Highland Park—
Plummer struck out.
Piacentini
grounded out. McDermott fouled out.

ton Relays on Saturday, April 26.
The meet will be the second out-

No

with

first

runs—no

hits.

Third
inning — Evanston—M ueller
door
meet
of .the
season
for
the struck out. Weaver fouled out. Antracksters who opened their outdoor -derson got to first on Murphy’s error,
schedule this week in a dual meet then stole second. Muchmore got to
Argo.

’

Highland
Park’s tentative entries
for the Relays, which are subject to
change, are as follows:
Shot Put—Archer, Olson; Discus—
Archer, Olson; High Hurdle Shuttle
Relay—Miller, Haupt, Hesler, Behr;
2 mi. Relay—Bright, Farrel, Reitz,
Demichelis; Sprint Medley
Relay—
Hutchison, Knowlton, Demichelis, or
Bright;

100 yd. Dash—Miller,

Hutchi-

on

Murphy’s

error,

but

Ander-

son was out trying to score. No runs
—no
hits. Highland
Park—Murphy
flied out. Harder grounded out. Malizia grounded out. No runs—no hits.
Fourth

inning—Evanston—Conrad

flied out. Marck struck out. Lecy
struck out. No runs—no hits. Highland Park—Meggorini flied out. Ott
fouled out. Martin singled to center,
then stole second. Plummer grounded

and training, Highland Park could
son, Ryan; 4 Lap Relay— Halton, out. No runs—one hit.
finish right up there. The training
Fifth inning—Evanston—K asse1]1
Smith, Close, Stone; Freshman Relay
will consist of scrimmages, games,
—Dever, McKenna, Humphrey, Kid- struck out. Jenkins was hit by pitched
learning new plays and relearning old.
then
stole
second.
Mueller
dle; Low Hurdle Shuttle Relay—No ball,
ones. If possible an exhibition intraforced Jenkins at
Entries; Distance Medley Relay—No walked. Weaver
squad game will be held at the end
Entries; High
Jump—Hesler;
Pole third. Anderson got to first on Hardof the training season for the gramVault—Haupt.
; ers error loading the bases. Muchmar
School
students
of Highland
|more fouled out. No runs—no hits.
1947
Outdoor
Track
Schedule
Park.
Report
for
Spring
training
Highland Park
— Piacentini grounded
Wed., April 23—Argo Varsity (Here).
NOW.
out. McDermott struck out. Murphy
Thurs., April 24—Argo Frosh-Soph struck out. No runs—no hits.
(There).
Sixth
inning — Evanston — Conrad
Taft, which the Little Giants face
Sat., April 26—Wheaton. Relays.
grounded
out.
Marck
struck
out.
tomorrow
have
been
city
league
Wed., April 30—Waukegan Varsity Lecy walked, stole second and went
champions for four straight years.
(There).
to third when Malizia threw the ball
La Grange
is also a power
in’ the
Thurs,
May
1—Waukegan
Frosh- into center field. Kassell struck out.
West Suburban league.
Soph (Here).
No runs—no hits. Highland Park —
‘PRACTICE SCHEDULE
Sat., May 3—Mooseheart Relays.
Harder walked. Malizia doubled to
Wed., April 23 .... McHenry (Here)
Tues., May 6—Maine Varsity (Here). left, Harder
scoring.
Malizia
took
Fei Agsrl 25. 27s
a
Taft (Here)
Wed.,
May
7—Maine
Frosh-Soph third
on
a wild pitch.
Meggorini
Sat., April 26 .... La Grange (Here)
(There).
walked. Malizia scored and Meggorini
LEAGUE GOLF SCHEDULE
Sat., May 16—Frosh-Soph Invitational took second on a balk. Ott grounded
Wed., April 30 .... Thornton (Here)
at Evanston. —
out, Meggorini taking third. Martin
PSL, WAOY Boies 53 Morton (Here) Sat., May 17—District Track Meet at
grounded
out,
Meggorini
scoring.
Wed., May 7 .... New Trier (There)
Evanston.
Plummer walked. Piacentini flied out.
Tues., May 13 .. Waukegan (There)
ate, DAG Br es
... DISTRICT
Mon., May 19 .... Evanston (Here)

Tues., May 20 ...... Proviso (There)
NERY SO*O8 Nie ioe ks STATE MEET
Mon., May 26 .... Oak Park (There)
Sat., May 31I—SUBURBAN LEAGUE
TOURNAMENT AT H. P.

Fri, May
paign.

23—State

Meet

at

Sat., May
paign.

24—State

Meet

at Cham-

Tues.,

May

27—Lake

County

Lake Forest.
Sat., May 31—Suburban
at Evanston.

Cham-

Meet

at

eee Meet

#
Bi
:
4

Three runs—one hit.
«
Seventh inning—Evanston—J. Kassell batted for Jenkins and struck
out. Ehrlich batted for Mueller and
grounded
out. Weaver
struck out.
No runs—no hits. .

(Continued on page 30)

me

�|

ELF

OR

YOUR EN

FAMILY *

|

"PA YS $9.00 PER DAY WHEN YOU ARE Y MOSPITALIZED!

FINEST

“AMERICA'S

SPITALIZATION PLA
The Nurse

-

‘Here Is
Your

Encased in the

Guarantee:

Cross

PAYS FOR:

You RECEIVE:

@ PREGNANCY

_ ft. 31 Days Bed and Board

@ APPENDICITIS

2. Full Maternity

@ HERNIA

3. Operating Room

@ GALL

BLADDER

@ HEMORRHOIDS
@ ALL

|

FEMALE

DISORDERS

@ TONSILS

© First to Offer A $9.00 Per Day Benefit!
@ Not for Profit—Greater

Rates!

Lower

Benefits,

@ Check With Your Own Hospital or Doctor!

MEDICAL

WHAT IS ASSOCIATED
service plan that pays your hospital bills for you.

1. Itis a
2. A public-spirited plan chartered by the State of Illinois.

Anesthesia

5. General

Dressings

6. General

Nursing

7. Routine

Medications

Care

te

a

9. Delivery Room
CASES’

(0. Emergency X-Ray.

non-Associated Hospital
benefits up to $9.00 per

of Members!

by Thousands

© Recommended

ACCIDENTS

@ ALL

any

4. General

8. Routine Lab. Service

@ ALL

At

Care

you
day

receive

7

SERVICE?
HOSPITAL
oldest individual not-for-profit

hospital plan. |
3. It is the
4. It brings the finest hospital facilities within reach of
everyone.

WHY SUCH LOW COST
IS POSSIBLE

SIMPLY PRESENT
YOUR MEMBERSHIP CARD!

The Associated Hospital Service is a not-for-profit

Each member receives a membership card (pic-_
MEMBERSHIP CARD

corporation—all officers and directors serve with-5
4
os
pool” their
out pay. Its thousands of members
small dues to enable the greatest possible
benefits to be given when and as any member requires hospitalization, The hospitals co-operate

tured at left) which constitutes admission to any :

Kis Gatifies tha

a

hospital. There are no forms to fill out, thus avoid-—

ee- somewceers

is the holder of...44..06.5655:

Far er

Tes

seceedTeee

ing red tape or unnecessary

ASSOCIATED HOSPITAL SERVICE OF ILLINOIS. INC,

ries—we pay the hospital for you!

WHO MAY BELONG TO THIS PLAN?

PHONE
WABASH 4060

Anyone from age one to sixty, in good health, may enjoy the benefits
of this plan. Among those now enrolled are:
Thousands of individuals and families.
Large groups of employees in factories and offices
Large groups of doctors and nurses.
The faculty and student bodies of several colleges.
Social and fraternal organizations.

(group

OR MAIL THIS
COUPON TODAY

plan).

reek

Write—

HOSPITAL

“ASSOCIATED

PLAN
SURGICAL
AVAILABLE TO ALL A. H. S.
Now

Associated

Service

Hospital

members

fees in case of operation, through
@ Pays
®@ No

for over
physical

@ Choose

your

100

different

examination

own

may

A SPECIAL

doctor

also be protected

SURGICAL

types

of

required!

and

174

MEMBERS!

hospital!

operations!

Bivd.,

Jackson

W.

Chicago,

SERVICE,

a

Dept. PP424

Ill.

1 am interested in knowing more about this plan without being obligated.

wiga lied surgeon's

PLAN.

Associated

Hospital Service members have no financial wor

Hospital Divisi ion Director

Subscriber must notily Association when entering Hospital

with the plan.

i.
2.
3.
4.
5.

delay.

NAME

ADDRESS

eee

wees

see

seeeee

eet oe
Whee es ems ee ee om mk

eeeeeeee

eee

re

OS

ee

SSESEHHEH

COTO

eee

eee

A

eee

eee

reer

sa

SOE

HEHEHE

reso

esse

HHH

HEHEHE

esses

esse

EEES

esses

as Pihiseswe seh Gi

ON

eeeeeeee-

eee

sOOe

eeoeeeee

�ANN rae

Town Talk

OPENING

THE AVENUE
DRESSMAKING NOOK
“Fine

for

1947,

business

at

207

Lake

on

April

Western

24,

Ave.

Forest

(Next

Door

Hours—9:00

to

Bakery)

a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Daily
make your.clothes for

Let

us

Cleo

that distinctive look.
Hendricks Turk - Lillian Hairston
Proprietors

fashionable

spot

atmosphere

of

with

a

all

the

country

food will delight
super quality. It’s

personal

club.

The

those who
demand
a place where par-

ticular people entertain their distinguished guests. Henri Gendron’s Orchestra. Skokie at County Line.
WOVEN SUNSHINE
SPARKLING COLORS
For Porch or Sun
ful Wand Willow

in

House

and

Room is the beautiFurniture, Pictured

Garden,

and

Grace
Herbst—Interior:
Luxuriously
comfortable,

It

is

much

critical

easier

than

to

be

at

Furnishings
and
uphol-

“correct”

have

all

the

need

when

hot
you

automatic

for

gas

you

water
need

it.

water

you
An

heater

will supply it, cheaply.

April

Leagu

Ac.

Gi

bee

51

..............
an

50
49

Tommy’s Service Station ............
Tress} int | SHOP! so ae
Highwood Bump Shop ................

48
48
47

Duffy
Vorue:

Labor

MePhergon

&amp;

2.563

60
52
52

Duffy
Cleaners
Cleaners:
55.2.0

................

47

Anchor; Insurance -3) 5.echiok
Glader Tazioli Excavating ..........
Manhattan
Hat Shoe Service......
John B. Nash
OGIO.
TAVOIW
one
ee

Temple

Tavern

46
42
41

CWO
Wi
By:
A, 6
Oh
Pe

386
563
556
553
551
534

BEE BGs
es sds sali
ny ad ek ac
Meenigan
ice
SIQGROMA
OR 8 i.e
a Si ee
PARRMOD
5 oust
dtl
de eahcacae
EW GPMOT &lt; Aus scuacts sy agsiethn cele aeteetvee
IAP OE
Big RE
Sac
eee aoe

WiC RE

Siac

a

kc betalacce toa seppeu sacs

527

QUE

aude ae ttiiatnlie deck, «canoes
aes

514

ROMO
Orieehcds
ee ot ncaee
ETL
a
ee
oe
ROMS
a
ONC
ae tea
WOrvueee
he
oss ea
ee

514
514
513
513

big, gala, canvas.Umbrella. Miss Herbst
says “ORDER
NOW!” 563. Lincoln,

oi

Cpptellart

cite
oe aa coe:

506

Fis
Fae

FOUORMN
PORMBOR
CROWS

ee
ay ae So ak
Ga:
ei
ay
ah iis Rad
ec

504
504

ELAINES

conversation

are

pieces

Moose

the

in

Other

Cage,
single
Music

musical

clever

nores

stytes

on

are

Butterflies,
Spoons
pieces
are
Violin,
Note,
Mask
and

a

silver

Bird

and

etc.
New
Mandolin,
Fan
etc.

Room

newly

decorated

in

WStnere. TAVOrA:
ok oteaciituacians
Gearing’ 6 BeCOnaion
ices
Paganelli

50

North.

Shore:

&amp;

Buick:

Market

......

sien

Farmers

A

fool

some

and

his money

are

party.

An

enterprising

beauty

which

reads—“Don’t

whistle at a girl leaving here.
She may
mother.”

Dessert

fully cooked
801 Sheridan

and

Coffee.

be

your

grand.

to-the
health

But

you

will whistle

“work”

1947

“CP”

if

you

while

have

automatic

range

in

“CP”

does

your

baking

kitchen.

ically

...

and,

no

a

gas
A

automatmatches

the

....

SOFT ORGAN MUSIC
OF HILDEGARDE
Makes dining at Glenview Country
House a real joy. In the large, beautifully decorated Dining Room the best
food

is

served.

Featuring

T. P. “Tom” CLARK
Div. Mgr.

anis

23—Evanston
30—New

Feb.

6—Morton

Feb.

Feb.

(Here)

Evanston
from page 28)

WHOOPEE!
Evanston (0)

Player
Weaver,

ab
lf

...........

Anderson, ss ........ 3
Muchmore, rf ...... 3
Conrad, 8b .......... 3
Maren. 68 365:
3
ROOT
OS
eo
ae 2
PT. Reateu gp wc) 2
2b

..........

1b

........

Player

McDermott,

Murphy,
Marder:

Go 125 miles on
a gallon of gas.
Enjoy 5 to 35
mile-per-hour
performance
with a Whizzer.
ONLY

$975
97 a TAX
F.0.B. PONTIAC

WAZZER
MOTOR
Schwinn

Bicycles

rf

....

8h 2:3...
oo

r

h

0

0

0
0
0
0
0
0

1

2

0

Park

owner.

Gas

Ruth Wakefield
ADV.

Model Airplanes
and Parts

rbi

2

0

0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0

0

0

0

0

nf

0

0

(4)

y

h

1
0

rbi

1
1
0

2

1
0
0

2
0
0

1
0
0

2
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0
0

0

2
1

0
1

0
0

0
0

0

0

21

4

4

3

4

Plan Girl Scout
Council Course
InAprilandMay

0
1

|

A
Girl
Scout
Council
Members
course is scheduled at the community
center April 23, 25 ana 30, and May
2, 7 and 9. Morning and afternoon
sessions are planned for each day from
10 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Plans ‘include serving a beverage to
those who bring their own lunch.
The course is designed to strengthen
Girl Scouting in the community, increase the member’s value to her council and broaden her understanding of
her job. Anyone interested in Scouting
the meetings.
to attend
is invited
Registration can be made at the Highland Park Girl Scout office.

GLENCOE BICYCLE SHOP
364 Park Ave.
Glencoe 57

0

0

ab
3
2
3

1
0
0
0
0
-0

0

0

meertin,
“1h 2. le
3
Plummer,
If ........ 2
Piacentini,
2b .... 3

New

(There)
(Here)

Melisia..
chavs.
Meggorini,
cf .....
PAB
tpt
an vaatee’

Also

(Here)
(Here)

11—Thornton

20

BIKE

(Here)
(There)

7—Proviso

Highland

RIDE ONE AND
YOU'LL BUY ONE!

Trier

Steaks,

Chops, Chicken, Lobster Tails. Delicious Course Dinner served at 4 P.M.
Open at 12 Noon on Sat. Sun. and
Holidays.
Attractive
Old
English
Lounge open till the wee small hours,
Waukegan Rd. at Lake St. Wm. Buz“The Friendly People”

Jan.
Jan.

Park

Lineups:

Mueller,

for Doggies’
grounds for

“Tick-Tock”)

9—Waukegan
16—Oak

(Continued

Jenkins,

Beverage

THE

of

Jan.

Defeat

50

Beauti-

best in Italian and American Dinners
and a la carte specialties. The attractive
Cocktail Lounge has been open for the
past several weeks. On Skokie, 500
ft. south of County Line and Villa
(formerly

Jan.

Friday,

5—New

Friday, Feb, 13—Waukegan (There)
Friday, Feb. 20—Oak Park (Here)
Friday, Feb. 27—Evanston (There)

205

Bros.

outdoor play times. Excettent food. A
Licensed Veterinarian always in attendance. 2810 W. Park Ave. H. P.
2967.
ATTENTION FOOD LOVERS
OPENING TO-NITE
The “Commadore” will open it’s re-

Moderne.

Friday,

shining

modeled and newly cecorated
Dining
Room, this very nite. Serving the very

you

(Here)
(There)
(There)

Wed.,

and served charmingly.
Rd. Highland Park 4444.

minute equipment
and comfort. Big

(There)

Saturday,

LEADING A DOG’S LIFE
Is a pretty wonderful affair for Dog’s
boarding at the Butterworth Kennels
Large, modern buildings with all up-

parlor has a sign on the window

Rolls

Trier

Dec.
12—Morton
Dec. 19— Proviso
Jan. 2—Thornton

Friday,

white and French Blue. Luncheon only
80c, was Juice, Meat, Potatoes, Salad,
Hot

Dec.

Friday,

Meyer &amp; Brother
Manhattan
Hat, Shoe
Onesti

Schedule

Friday,
Friday,
Friday,

Friday,

Modern
Decorators
age
Giangorgi
Grocery
&amp;
Market.
48
Well Fo
Gril:
oe
ae eee
46
Seguin
Funeral
Home
...........
46
Northbrook
Tavern
............
44
Contri
Bros.
Grocery

Russell’s Huddle
Fred’s Tavern

Basketball

Friday,

215

Ww.
52
51

Grocery

1947-8

News

cute

Chandler’s, Sherman and Davis.
A TRULY FESTIVE
LUNCHEON
We had at the Moraine Hotel, last week.
Seated by a window overlooking the
Lake, the outlook was heavenly. Dining

446 Bowling

Harry G. Pertz, secretary for the
Suburban League, has released the
Highland Park 1947-8
basketball
schedule. The Little Giants will open
,jat New Trier on Friday, December
5, and will end the season on Friday,
February 27 at Evanston.

38

Bre

“CHIT-CHAT”

e

WwW.
POWer
OGKINS
foc ae
Mijcstram:
Coals... Sa
Washington
Gardens.
....2:...6.0.....

Oe.
I
By
Ps

Winnetka.

For Local Team

19

Divans,
Chairs, Tables, and Relaxer.
Smart Aluminum Furniture with woven colored plastics. Metal Tables! with

Truly

to

Bowling

522
521
516

bar.

is

Legion

Tees
oe, en fe ee
WR
SA
aici ks dune, secu oaks
SOMMER.
isha
ON
a

Sterling Silver affairs. One piece spells

It

American

Cage Schedule

News

Bie
Be)
Ee

d-e-a-rest

~

Bowling

stered in Sail Cloth or waterproof
Hometex—stunning colors and designs.

correct.
—Barrie

shown

Release 1947-8

Highland Ten Pin

SPRING
AND A YOUNG MAN’S FANCY
The two go together—or should! For
romantic moments and long remembered evenings, Dine and Dance
at
Frank Hutchins’ famous Villa Moderne.
It’s considered
a most
festive and

Sewing for Those Who Appreciate
Well Made Clothes”

Open

A

High

BESS SPOA PAM

tage

Bowlers

�T

7

Hospital Rally
(Continued
will

receive

circular

from

page

week

a

next

about

the

drive,

3)

Cooper; M. J. Schlossman and Mrs.
J. S. Wineman.
:
District 6:
Robert Bridges; Stan-

|

ley

descriptive
which

starts

officially May
1.
Included in the
mailing will be the hospital’s annual
report for 1946 which gives a complete picture of the part Highland
Park hospital is playing in the health
of the North Shore.
Door-to-door
solicitation will then begin, and it is
hoped that everyone will give generously, to maké possible the hospital’s
needed enlargement.
“It is not our purpose,’ says Mr.
Murray,

“to

tell

anyone

how

much

he should give—that is a problem for
every man’s conscience. However, no
cause is of more immediate importance to every home
in our community, because an adequate hospital
protects the health of every family
within its area. Please remember that
this is the first time in 25 years that
Highland Park hospital has solicited
funds for building improvement. And
remember, too, that your contribution
may

be

spread over

a

3 year

period.

So give generously, give MORE
you first thought you would.
hospital is YOUR business!”
Workers’

Names

than
The

Announced

Following is a partial list of the
men and women who have agreed to
give their time so that the hospital
drive may go over the top:
District

1;

Fred

P.

Boynton,

Jr.;

Walter F. Lubke; Maurice A. Rosenthal; Gervase L. Brown; Harry 6%.
Schram, Jr.; Melville Keim;
Mrs.
Arthur H. Swanson; Robert
M.
Schiller; Sarah H. Laegeler; Robert
S. Block; Fred Borgeson;
Mrs.
George Lenfesty; Alden Harris and
Mrs. Florence Lederer.
District 2:

Mrs.

Richard

Strong;

Frank

Charles

Trangmar;

Reginald

Morrow;

Reeves;

Lloyd

Tupper;

Johnson;

Bulmer;

J.

Frelinger;

W.
B.

Sprowl;

J.

Robinson;

G.

C.. Anderson;

R.

Donald

R.

B.

John

Forsythe; David
Holland;
Sidney

Welch;
Frisch;

Gordon
Wyatt

Jacobs; Melvin Todes; Judson Cross ;
Roy
H.
Olson;
George
Hadlock;
Elmer W. Rietz; James W. Barton.
District 8: WW. G. Edwards; Henry
Sanderman; H. C. Bartelman; Emilio
Gallasini;
Robert
M. Hendricksen;
E.

F.

Todd;

Mrs.

A.

V.

McPhee;

Arthur G. Wagner, Jr.; L. M. Eichler ;
William

M.

Buchroeder,

Jr.;

Frank

Keller; K: R. Jensen; John F. Romer;
K. E. Hornung; Mrs. William Shaw;
Bert

J.

Klein;

Mrs.

Jack

Mrs.

Robert

Churchill;

Mrs.

Holland;
Mrs.
Robert
Mrs. O. G. Smith; Mrs.

ter;

Wesley

Cyrus

E.

Esther

Mrs.

Gatewood;

Mrs. Frank Kendall;
District 3:
John A. Putnam; Henry Adler; Miss
Ruth Robbins; Robert Denzel; Mrs.
nasse

Bartell;

W.

Charles

and

District

Mrs.
4:

Edward

Rose

Mrs.

Dudley

Ma-

Onderdonk.
A:

Green;

J.

Gordon Smith; Robert Carey; Earl
E. Sproul; Elmer Freytag; Gilbert
George E.
Fuller; R. J. Sheahen;
Wallis; Arlen J. Wilson; Walter E.
Lilienfield; E. B. Curtis; Frank J.
Zipoy; Dudley Hall; E. P. Barnes;
Theodore S. Osborn, Jr.; E. T. R.
Murfey; Adolf Drey; A. S. Trude,
Jr.; Karl H. Velde; J. C. Redlich ;
Mrs. George Lyman; Robert C. Wilson and John Sheldon.
District 5: R. U. Baughman; Mrs.
Albert Louer; Mrs. Arthur Raff; M.
J. Winstin; Myron Hexter; Mr. and
Mrs. G. H. Ellis; Mrs. Morton R.

National Delivery
Service
212 Railway

Ave.

Highwood

District 11: J. M. Kilpatrick; Marshall Meckley; J. C. Frehner; Mrs. L.
E. Goss; Mrs. H. G. Reinicke; Jr.;
T. V. McDavitt; Herman Ritow; J.
H.
Cameron;
Ralph Smiley;

Lloyd
Lillian;
Mrs.
D. H. Julian; Edward

Gosswiller;

David

Mowers

Edward

and

Wilson;

Frank

Moroney,

Mahnke;

Henry

E.

M.

Sincere;

F. F. Fisher;

Mrs.

Tel.

H.

P.

5505
A

Brambilla;
Iola
W.
Lewis
H.

Jr.;

Service

Sr.

District 14:
Mrs. Jean
William
Vandermeulen;
Hugle;
A. B. Blockhan;
chels,

Immediate

Typewriters, Adding Machines,
Calculators, Registers,
Pick up and delivery
511 Waukegan, Highwood

‘for those who want

Mi-

William

Rectenwald;
Mrs.
Mary
Coleman;
Mrs. Carl Bonson; Mrs. Judith Kerrihard;

Mrs.

Grace

Duffy.

|Hy-Way Hank

To Keep Alive
YOUR

MEMORABLE

GOLD

Moon

-N°- RICH

MOMENTS
@FEATURSS

EE.

2MBLICITY. INC.

28

a

© Distinctive
flavor and tex~ ture in a natural semi-soft
cheese.

H

3

“Poor fellow—he had so much to
live for—just
had
his car com-

pletely

winterized

by

Zagalia’s.”

Zagalia’s Service Station
401 Waukegan

FOODS,

MOON

BLUE

INC. THORP,WIS.

Hie

Ave., Highwood

GAS HEAT AVAILABLE |
HOME

MOVIE EQUIPMENT
FOR EVERYONE

for a limited number of

BELL
&amp;
HOWELL
SPORTSTER—8
mm
movie camera, BGH F:2.5 lens, 4 speeds
ie cate gg aah
EP ea Bae cs boa $102.61
Sheath Case $8.70
Eveready Case $8.15
Combination
Case $18.30

BELL &amp; HOWELL

8MM

Highest
Prompt

Quality Photo Finishing
Gere!
(64 Poa
Reasonable Prices

or

Mail

Orders

CO.

CAMERA
Evanston

Hours 9:30 to 5:30
Open Mon. &amp; Thurs., to 9 p.m.
Store,

Phone:

34
Fra.

N.

Clark

2230-1

We

Have

A

Limited

Number

of

GAS FIRED BOILERS WITH PUMPS
GAS FIRED FURNACES—GRAVITY OR
FORCED AIR
GAS CONVERSION BURNERS
NATIONALLY KNOWN MAKES
AGA

Approved

|

for immediate sale and installation

FREE SURVEY
Oil Heat - Gas Heat - Stoker Heat

AVONDALE AUTOMATIC HEATING CO.

Store

1645 Orrington - Davis 2363

Chicago

customers if you act at once

PROJECTOR—the

only all gear driven projector.
500-watt
lamp.
Including Case ................ $177.45
REVERE
“88’—8mm
movie
camera,
F:2.5 coated Wollensak lens. ........ $77.50
Sheath Case $8.50.
Eveready Case $9.50
Revere “88” with F:1.9 lens .... $104.50
REVERE ‘99’’.—8mm turret movie camera.
With F:2.5 Bausch &amp; Lomb
lens.
ay
:
110.00
WEN Fi
{Ore a ca ea
137.00
Combination Case $16.50
REVERE PROJECTOR—8
mm, 500 watts,
FEU POP os tes ilvs pice eas eget tc $120.00
Carrying Case $14.50
EASTMAN
8MM _ OUTFIT—Cine
kodak,
Model 25 camera, F:2.7 lens
58.33
Kodascope ‘’33”’ Projector
$70.00
PROJECTION
SCREENS—
Dalite $12.75 up ........ Radiant $15.00 up
All Prices Shown. Include Excise Taxes.

FOR

PROMPT
SERVICE
Phone
Highland Park 570

Carey;

Blue

Phone

LOCAL
DELIVERIES

J.

H. G. Pertz;
Charles Bur-

Albert Snyder; Mrs. Fred Gienger;
Mrs. P. B. Garrett and H. E. ane

Frank

clair.

W.

P.

Edward

F. Kuhns;

P. Nellis; Charles E. Alderdice, Jr.;
Gail W. Compton; Barrett K. Mason;
George A. Lloyd; T. Hamil Reidy;
R. W. Flinn; Hugh H. Wilson; Vernon H. Heins and Mrs. L. B. Sin-

Heymann;

Ralph N. Anchueltze;
George F. Glader and

Mrs.
Yager;
M.
F.
Mrs.
Weller:
AlderMrs. W.
J. Mueller;
Frank
man; Mrs. Harold Ryan; Mrs. Harry
Mrs.
Roberts: Mrs. N. S. Andrews;

H. L. Kennicott, Jr.; Mrs. Thomas
Leaming; Frank H. Lennox; Walter
Hiller;

Samuel

Prosser;

J. Glasgow;
Harold Pfis-

Becker;

C.

District 9: Mrs. W. H. Armstrong;
B. K. Perreault; Charles W. Kimbrough; Oliver Hansen; A. J. Bailey;

nett.

Kenneth Tyson.
District 7:
Charles
G.

Dr.

George

-

St.

3912

Belmont Ave., Chicago
Phone

Mundelein,

Mulberry

Illinois, Phone

1090
Mund.

Write or wire during phone

1281

strike

�Takes Charge
Lc

SCATALOG

OFPSICB® )

&gt;)

For thrifty ladies... Lingerie at

At Ft. Sheridan
Relieves Brig. Gen. C. K. Nulsen,
Retiring from Army After 39 Yrs
: Col. Newton G. Bush, former commanding
officer of Camp
McCoy,
Wisconsin,

Special WARD

WEEK

Prices

30 WR 1612, 17....0+.pr- 1.19
\

and a veteran

of the

Paci-

fic theatre of war, Sunday began his
duties as the new commanding officer
of Fort Sheridan:
He relieves Brig.
Gen. C. K. Nulsen, who is retiring
after 39 years in the army.
A native of Georgia, Col. Bush
entered the 2nd Infantry, National
Guard, on July 18, 1916, for service on
the Mexican border. He was commissioned a second lieutenant in the
regular army on November 8, 1917,
serving with the AEF with the 7th
Division in World War I.
At the time of tle Pearl Harbor
attack, Col. Bush was executive officer

of the 35th Infantry, 25th Division at
Schofield. Barracks, Hawaii.
He remained in.the Pacific until May, 1945,
serving as executive officer of the
Combat Training command and as
commanding officer of the 298th Infantry regiment in Hawaii, the New
Hebrides and the British Solomon
Islands.
He was assigned to’ Camp
McCoy on July 12, 1945, and has been
commanding officer of that post since
June, 1946.
Assisting him will be Lt. Col. Donald

Ladies, has your lingerie supply reached an alltime low? Then NOW’s the time to stock UP .es

during our big Catalog Office WARD WEEK sale!

|W.

Here are just a few of the items which are specially
priced for this great event—there are hundreds

talion

of other values in all types of merchandise—

who

has been

named

from

June,

1944,

to

March,

1945, and as executive officer of the
G-4 Section, 14th Anti-Aircraft com-

summer clothing, household helps, auto accessories,

mand

in New

Guinea until

November,

1945, when he returned to the States.
| He has been stationed at Fort Sheri| dan since last November and has been

etc. So take advantage of these price reductions
today ... place your order, either by phone or
in person, at our Catalog Office!

Holmberg,

as post executive officer. Col. Holm-.
berg also saw service in the Pacific
‘as commanding officer of the 395th
‘Coast
Artillery
Anti-Aircraft
bat-

billeting

officer

and

assistant

public

relations officer, as well as a member .
of the Regular Army Officers’
perrening board.
\

_

Appoint Atkinson
Acting Sheriff
Walter
deputy

32 WR 1500... ..ceeeeese I-21

Spun-Lo knit rayon slip. form-fitting
bodice, four-gore skirt. Lt, Tea Rose,
White.

32-40.

.

32 WR 1500......1.21

|

Beau-Dura panties of Spun-Lo rayon.
Brief, Flare or Cuff. Tea Rose.

hip. 32 WR 1301, or 201.

32-44 in.

. .3 for 1.79

Atkinson,
of

Lake

present

county,

is.

the

chief
new

acting sheriff of Lake county and will
serve in that capacity until the 1948
election, when a new sheriff will be’
elected for two years to complete the
term of the late James J. Kennedy.
Announcement of Atkinson’s
appointment
was
made
following
a
meeting of the Lake county board of
supervisors held last week.
~The board also passed a rule prohibiting the sale of fireworks throughout the county this year.

Hold Services for
Mrs. Johanna Hough
32 WR 1301, or 201....3 for 1.79

Mrs. Johanna Hough, 95, died Sun-.
day at her home, 646 Waverly road.
Funeral services were held on Tuesday at the Kelley
chapel with burial _
tin St. Boniface cemetery, Chicago.

She is survived by two sons, Frank
G., of the above address, and Walter

B., serving as a colonel in the U. 5.
army.

ce
pei

:

3-thread, 8/2—10%2 30 WR 1612 1 19
7-thread,9 —10/2 30WRI1617 pr

A

_Full-fashioned pure silk hose. Tanbeige.

a
7.3

�4”

higgh kame prize and 6. Meh
| vetti’s 267 was good for third.

Deerfield

Freeze

game

Monday

Evening

VICTORY

ROLLERS

Individual

high

single

cut

game—Betty

Rich

2283.

High

team

i
standings:

single

game—The

Haven

L.
28
29
34
47
56
56
66
69

The re
eins nines
Beasest s
WE Be cis tisha
eonn Gourley. Gj Cos .\.2.0..
J. cca
40
orvettea 8: Girls 1.15 p2.i40..2.
40
Erie’s D-X Station ....:....... Ra
30
Reliable ‘Garage ’’. 5. \.c&lt;-iecveccsec.-cehe-ae 27
MAJOR
LEAGUE
By C. C. Crovetti
is our final edition of the
This
Our
come
final

took

and
in

I

Individual high series—Betty Rich
High
team
series—The
Haven—

815.
Team

Cro-

Somenzi and Son with 2888 held on to
top series,
and
their
1049
was
high in
team
game.
Paganelli
Bros.
with 2868
finished in second spot and Braun Bros.’
2848
was
good
for third
place.
Frigid

Bowling Academy

—202.
—518.

ee)
4

‘ Rew

¥ tdek.'Y he

how

Duffy

on

hope

the

runner

and

show
this

spot

Duffy

with

you

struggled

a

through

work

the

funny

themselves.

alleys, ‘over,
they

even

We

are

but
had

all

and
better
league
next
portant thing is that
a

HAD

BY

at
a

year,
GOOD

:

FLOORS

=

sctsbesevenveetesactebupertregassenceusmegas

Clavey’s

4

cu.i:....

AND

39

FINISHED

Glenora

40

45

‘SHELBY

and

49
61

101 8.
PROSPECT

wear
and
trying
to

Lauterburg

66

Team

will

idea

it all,

times
for

it

laugh

SANDED

DURA

Johnson
Reagan

good

hoping

haw AND OLD)

4

of

got

or

at

Bank

a bigger

High—3

Heights

High

ILL.

7120-M

Games:
CENTRAL

Seul’s

Single

Game:

I

of

Clavey’s

ALL.

STEWART
PARKWAY
HEIGHTS,

Arlington
Ask

Team

and
the
imTIME
WAS

Phone

WITH

SEAL

have

the

sanded

finest

for

Mrs.
and

homes

5218

Stewart

finished

along

over

the

Shore.

Bank

year.

season,
a
most
successful
one,
to a close.
Before
I give
you
standing
of our
league,
I would

has
the
like

to thank the Captains, the officers and the
bowlers of all the teams for the fine cooperation that they have given me throughout the whole year.
Its been a pleasure
to

work

and

bunch

of

under

one

play

sports
roof.

with

could

them—a

not

Thanks

finer

possibly
a

lot,

gather

fellows!

I wish to thank the Highland Park, Deerfield and Highwood News for printing our
articles,
and
all
the
bowlers
ask
me
to
offer their
thanks
also
You
have
done
a
wonderful job, and I’m sure that the Sponsors will not forget it.
They
enjoyed
seeing
their teams
mentioned
in our
column,
and
the league
wants
to pay our
respects
to them
for sponsoring
us
as
they
are a

swell
As

bunch and helped
for myself,
I’ve

writing

these

articles

us out
had a
and

greatly.
lot of fun

ribbing

most

of

the fellows—I
hope that I did not miss
anyone throughout the league.
We tried to
give

you

all

the

news

as

it

happened,

and

Mrs. Dardene was a great help in getting
our
articles
in the paper.
I hope
that
we'll have the pleasure of reporting to you
again

next

year

and

that

we

get

a

bigger

circulation.
A lot of you do not know me,
but from
your
comments
I’m
sure
that
you have enjoyed these bits of gossip, for
I’ve

had

phone

calls

from

people

I

did

not

know
existed telling me how
much
they
enjoyed
our
column,—especially
the
one
about Gus Klemp throwing his shoe.
We
cannot
give
the
winner
of
our
league as it ended in a tie and the boys
are rolling it off next Monday.
Duffy and
Duffy had to come from behind and beat
the Paganelli Bros. three games
the last
night to account for this tie.
So the fight
for the trophy will really be worth while.
Club
Lorraine
finished
in the third spot
with Somenzi and Son getting the call for
the last place in the first division.
Topping

the

second

division

was

Braun

= SEE

OUR

DEMON STRATION!

THE BENDIX DO THE WASHING
ALL BY ITSELF

Bros.

followed by Rich Seul’s and the 400 Club.
Frigid Freeze took the last rung.
The outstanding bowlers by averages on
each team are as follows:
and
Duffy
and
Duffy—John
Picchietti
Bill Chambers.
Paganelli
Bros.—H.
Engstrom
and
D.
Paganelli.
(Judge)
Carassi
Club
Lorraine—Fete
and F. Carlson.
Somenzi and Son—L. Medeecci and Tony
Crovetti.
Braun Bros.—R. Sheahen and G. Klemp.
R. Seuls’—B.
Walters and G. Mientzer.
400 Club—The Anderson Twins.
Frigid
Freeze—George
Moen
and
W.
Shamaus.
in avérage
were H. Engstrom
. ~~ Leaders
194, followed by J. Picchietti, R. Sheahen,
at
G. Mientzer
and
B. Walters bunched
the 186 and
187.
High
individual
series was taken
over
by J. Castellari
with a 696
followed
by
B. Walters’
669 and J. Picchietti’s
658.
R. Sheahen
and
H.
Engstrom
with
277

HOW THE BENDIX
SAVES CLOTHES
HOW THE BENDIX —
SAVES WATER—SOAP
THE BENDIX END
CLOTHES HOISTING
TRIPLE RINSING
MAKE CLOTHES COME
SWEETER—CLEANER
It’s the most exciting washday performance you ever saw—

the Bendix doing the washing, all by itself! No hard work for you.
No hands in water! Come in for your Bendix demonstration now!

ONAN
PRONE PLUMS

IMMEDIATE

HIGHWOOD

DELIVERY

—

RADIO

&amp; APPLIANCE

917° Waukegan
1%

Blocks

|

L.

1040

1038

good

seem
any
worse
for
the
They
had
a
hard
time

40’S

Tailors

with

all

none
tear.
so

a

ROLLING
standings:

Team

money.

gives

boys

up

Tuesday Vasing

North

Ave.—Highland

of Moraine

TEL.

15 MONTHS

Road,

East

H. P. 4003

TO PAY

Park
of the

Tracks

CO.

1000

North |

�Page

34

Thursday,

North

Nestled
of

Woods—for

Girls

7

to

17

Deerfield

in the pines

Northern

Wiscon-

AMERICAN

Adventure-

building,

tion.

Write

Team

§

trips,
nature
health and char-

acter

Evening

LEGION

L

Wtaberk

riding,

some
lore,

from page 33)

Wednesday

sin, altitude 1750 ft.
above sea level offers

inci

Academy

(Continued

fine

staff, Posture correc- j&amp;
J.

5—F.

Riley.

..............-.-

Team

2—E,

Hurt

................

Pea

PH Or

Klemp

=

43

PLO!

(:-.cendostnseos

ag

Os

ok

eis

Le

46

52

oes

Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team

Northshore Garden of Memories

Very Reasonable

Games:

1
High
1
6
8

Single

Game:

Those

Evening

CROSS
CHURCH
LEAGUE
Killian and crew of sharpshoot-

ers
drew
a bead
on the
Harts
38 bullseyes.
Ernest
Ori
led

and
scored
the
scoring

for

series.

the

Killians

with

his

506

Joe
Wachholder’s
boys
won
two
from
Marsicek’s
and
while
doing
it Father
J.
V.
Murphy
had
a
516
series
‘and
Ray
Frost
stayed
in the
big time
with
a 558
series:
201,
201,
and
156.
Edward
Frost, rolling as a substitute on
Fred
Coleman’s
team,
got
155,
179,
176
for
a
510
series—seems
to
run
in
the

Prices
Phone Maj.

3

Thursday

CEMETERY

Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

High
6
2

HOLY
Charles

A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited
THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN

3

Taem

2411

1067

family.
have

Fred
been

Coleman’s

a

good

529

example

series
to

his

should
mates

but the Dunhams took then for two games.
While Catherine Cunningham
was home
nursing

IT’S SPRING
SPRAY TIME
TREES

a

Anderson

cold

her

as

get-well-token.

&amp; SHRUBS

:

May we figure with you on Spraying, Feeding,
Trimming, Removing or other tree services you

Highland

two

from

Mary

Cun-

L.
84
36

Cunningham
POTTER
a, | ea cceutinee toi a vaeaw Racks
Marsice@le . ciiccssci
aves
celica leg rekon.

42
43
45
47

REAL
nent Ci
Wachholder

48
53

li digs sass

Friday
7

in

Evening

PAUL’S
first

Ti

HOYT TREE EXPERT CO.
S.

copped

RSCRPTIVSE. soci us. dagpwdst cans eee
BMeee Fitts, cele auses

Team

require.

515

squad

ningham
distinguished
herself
by
picking
up the 7-6-10
split,—good
work,
Mary.
Team
standings:

ST.

may

a

a

mother-son

at

LEAGUE

place—57

won.

in charge

of arrangements

535

Newcastle

Brocoll.

Decorating

is

in

charge

Team

5

in

second

place—50

Jack Coleman
had high 3
Hubert
Juhrend
had
high
—219.
Dorothy

had
EH

a
K

Davis

is

coming

441 series.
—
PRESBYTERIAN

won.

right

along—

April 22
LEAGUE
Ww.

Steelers
Redskins

Lion

Team

46

High

3

46
50
50
53
54

eke eaeeee

Games:

Redskins
eae
.0s
A sagen

Dodgers
Team

“505

FIFERS,”’

BETTY BOLT and her FASHION PARADES, every Wednesday and Saturday,
2:30 p.m.
DEL

RENE’S

ORCHESTRA

nightly.

—Featuring—

)

|

MARIANNE

FREE
Rhumba
Lessons

Daily

NORTH

FEDELE

Lyric Soprano

SELDON
Irish

&gt;

REED
Tenor

*

ott KK Te
MICHIGAN

Raa

x

L.
42
43

2520.5

Cardinals
Packers
Giants
....2..
Dodgers
PRB
soto d cae

High

Single

Game:

Redskins
Packers

Dodgers

HAVE ALL THE SOFT WATER YOU NEED
AT THE TURN OF A FAUCET WITH—

by

or

amageets

MEL BRANDT and his
2:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

of

games—558.
single game

4140

Kenilworth

are

Mrs. F. Jones, and Mrs. C. Nichols
and Mrs. J. Zenko are in charge of
publicity. K. Kightly is president of
the Charisma club.

ST. JOHNS AVE., HIGHLAND PARK
6047 N. MENARD, CHICAGO 30

Park

the

Mrs. G. G Kalseim and Mrs. K.
Kightly. The entertainment is being
planned by Norman Christman and B.

ection

ae

vanquet

church on Friday, May 16, at 6:30 p.m.
The dinner is planned this year in
place of the regular mother-daughter
banquet held annually at the church. A
father-daughter banquet will be held at
a later date, it was announced.

44

Team 7—M. Olson. ............-------++Team High 3 Games:
OE i

sponsor

43

............-..

1947

The Charisma club of Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church will

35

6—R.
Dunham
8—W.
Johnston

Team 4—J.

iS

Mors, 228 N. La Salle
St., Chicago 1, II.

Coleman

ream

Team
Team
@

8—F.

24,

Mother-Son Banquet
Planned At Bethany
Church May 16

e

Camp

April

a

366 Central Avenue—Highland Park
Highland Park
2207

oY My

dorian

342

�WELCOME T0 CHURCH
God

should have priority on your time.

April

27,

9:30 a.m. Church school and Bible class.
10:45
a.m.
Morning
worship.
Topic:
“Glory Be to the Father and to the Son.”
4:30 ‘p.m.
Luther
Lasene
Fellowship
service.
FRIDAY,
April 26,
7:30 p.m. Choir practice.
ney? cot
April 28,
8 p.m. Dorcas society.
THURSDAY,

May

2 p.m. Ladies’
ley, hostess.
Remember

1,

Aid.

Mrs.

Gertrude

saving

daylight

Crow-

time

next

Sunday.

All

services

WESLEY

North

METHODIST

avenue

William

and

G.

CHURCH

Lauretta

Overend,

Rev.

place

SUNDAY,
April 27,
9:45 a.m. Sunday school for all departments under direction of Mrs. Ira Breakwell,
superintendent.
and
Ruben
Olson,
assistant.

11 a.m. Morning worship.
Sermon topic:
“The Pain of A Raia tne Sainthood.”
on :30 p.m. The Methodist Youth Fellowship.
ae
oe
May
1,
p.m.

Choir

Lester

H.

The
official board
meets
the
SECOND
MONDAY
of each month,
at the church
8

p.m.

The Woman’s Society of Christian Service meets the THIRD TUESDAY
of each
month, at 8 p.m.
Mrs. L. D. Fuller, president.

FIRST

UNITED EVANGELICAL CHURCH
“A Community Gospel
urch”
South Green Bay road and Laurel avenue
R. S. Wilson,
Pastor
Tel. H.P. 1731
SUNDAY,
9:30

April

a.m.

10:45

27,

Sunday

a.m.

eho!

Hour

of

for

worship.

all

Guither,

pastor

-of

and

7 p.m.
Christian
Endeavor
7:45
p.m.
Evening
Gospel

pastor

will

speak

on

the

the

speak

is

invited.

TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, April 29-30,
The Philathea class will sponsor a rumsale

to

be

held

in

the

church.

Dona-

tions should be brought to the church in
good time.
WEDNESDAY,
April 30
8 p.m. Midweek church fellowship service.

It

will

be

missionary

monthly offering will be
THURSDAY,
May
1,
6:30

p.m.

First

call

church for practice
in Sunset park.
p.m.

Senior

choir

and

the

of

the

the

SUNDAY,
the

the

men

Softball

Columbia

Broadcasting

April

3 p.m.
Arlington

rehearsal.

MASSES

sys-

all

CHURCH

—

‘5

9, 10,

11. and

12

and:
upon

JEHOVAH’S WITNESS
YWCA
274 Laurel avenue
Highland Park, Illinois

|

The Spring Youth
Rally of the
Heights Region will be held at

a

at

request.

27,

ON

you

CONCEPTION

Sundays—6
:30, 7:30,

9:30
a.m.
Sunday
school.
10:45
a.m.
Morning
worship.

team

Cherie’,

noon.
:
Week-days—6 :30, 8:15.
.
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
eves of
first
Friday
Holidays, 4 and 7:30 p.m.
BAPTISMS
Sundays—1:30,
or at other times

ST. JOHNS
EVANGELICAL
REFORMED
Green Bay road and Homewood
avenue
Alvin S. Kniker, Pastor

received.
to

for

night,

over

by ex-G. 5

Deerfield and Green Bay road
Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison, Pastor
Rev. Edmund J. Skoner, S.T.L.
Rev. Jehn P. O’Connell, 'S.T.D.

at

tem on the Centennial of our church,
The
time is 9 a.m. Chicago time.
11:80
a.m.
The
Lutheran
Hour
over
WGN.
SUNDAY, May 4,
8:30 p.m. The Lutheran Valparaiso University
Chorus
will
present
“Four
Centuries of Choral Classics’ at the~Shubert
theater, 22 West
Monroe street, Chicago,

North

Northfield church will be the guest speaker.
“tea”? in honor
of the new
members
we received during the last year will folEveryone

IMMACULATE.
Rt.

Park.
Centennial Sunday, and acceptance
of new members.
The sermon text is John
15:8, ‘‘Fruit-bearers.”’
9 am.
The
Rev.
J. W.
Behnken
will

minister.

historic

rehearsal.

Lake
Forest
in the
American
Legion
hall,
McKinley
and
Wisconsin
avenues.
10:45 a.m. Morning
worship at Highland

depart~

SUNDAY,
April 27,
6:15 p.m. Book study in “Let
True.”
Subject:
‘‘Resurrection,”
XXI.
7:30 p.m. Watchtower
study.
“Reasons
for
the
Resurrection
Text:

“Touching

dead I am
day”—Acts

the

God Be
Chapter
Subject:
Hope.”

resurrection

called in
24:21.

question

of

by

you

the

this

a

s
PHONE H.Pi6/E
FIRST
227 24 NORTH
WEEK END PRICES—THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
ne
be nd
A

~,

HAM

ALL BEEF
FRESH GROUND

pasthe
part

theme,

for Youth.
service.
The

“The

the

Choristers

SUNDAY,
April 27,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school sessions.
9:15
a.m.
Early
morning
worship

time.

by

will be told by pictures

E. Wilson.
THURSDAY,
May
1,
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
A
cordial
welcome
awaits
our services.

38,

Bethany

Plaines.

oe

ee wee

oe

mw wn ene

ages.

@he

tor
will
bring
another
message
on
Epistle to the Romans, using the first

of. the
second
chapter
“Judging Others.”

Saving

Laubenstein,

practice.

trustees.

Daylight

a.m.

Des

WEDNESDAY,
April 30,
7:45 p.m. “The Fall of a Nation,” an Be
fall,
eye-witness
account
of
Germany’s

REDEEMER EVAN. LUTHERAN CHURCH
587 West Central avenue
H. K. Platrer, Pastor
Tel. H.P. 950

27,

SATURDAY.
April
26,
3 p.m.
Dr.
Bradburn
and
the district
board
of church
location,
meet with the

at

10:80

Friends will be received into church membership. The Mission Band will meet under
the leadership of Mary Behrens.
4:80 p.m. Vesper Service.
Rev. Francis

mage

Minister

on

April

9:30 a.m. Sunday school in all
ments.
11 a.m. Divine worship; sermon

low.

THE

or the
Pastor.
SATURDAY,
May

Spend some hours in church

SUNDAY,

Christ’s Church,

FRIDAY, May 2,
The
District
Brotherhood
banquet will
be held at Elgin: tickets may be secured
from President Nichols, Chairman Schlung,

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical ere
Brethren)
Laurel avenue and
ern street
Lester H. Laubenstein, Minister
24 McGevern street—Phene H.P. 3522

ZION LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Oakridge and High street
Highweod
Herbert W. Linden, Pastor
SUNDAY,

Ry

Amusement

}

Fresh

Birdseye
Frozen Sliced

. Frying
'

16 oz. pkg.59.

Birdseye
Frozen

Birdseye
Frozen

Strawberries | PEACHES
c|P be:

Birdseye ero
Frozen

| SPINACH

es:
29¢ | pkg

Rib

: ie

21c

R

t

BEEF

OiaimaSse Beans
35c

:

Question.”

WEDNESDAY,
8

p.m.

April

Mid-week

FRIDAY, May 2,
7:30 p.m. Choir
under direction of

FIRST

CHURCH
387

30,
prayer

rehearsal at the
Ed Sherry, choir

OF

CHRIST,

Hazel

°

service.

church
leader.

The
at
11
ning

Boston,

Mass.

Sunday
o’clock

meeting

morning
and
the

which

and

for

man’s

this

services
is
Wednesday

includes

oneness

we

ib. 39%

Pitewa)

1

;

;

o¥toaen,

6th

an

GREEN PEAS | CORN W.K. | Applesauce

BROCCOLI

|

&amp; 7th

Rib

Ib. di

pkg. ........ 29c | pkg. ........ 19¢ | pkg. ........ 23c | kg. ....... 356

SCIENTIST

held
eve-

testimonies

of Christian Science healing is at 8 o’clock.
The subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all
Church
of
Christ,
Scientist,
on.
Sunday,
April 20, was:
“DOCTRINE
OF
ATONEMENT”
The Golden Text was:
“The
Redeemer
shall come
to Zion,
and
unto
them
that turn
from
transgression in Jacob, saith the Lord’’ (Isa.
59:20).
Among
the
citations
which
comprised
the Lesson-Sermon was the following from
the Bible:
*
“Then
said
Jesus
unto. them
again,
Verily, verily, I say unto you, I am the
door of the sheep . .
by me if any
man
enter in, he shall be saved, and
shall go in and out, and find pasture
.... I and my Father are one...
If
I do not the works of my Father, believe me not.
But if I do, though ye
believe ‘not me, believe the works; that
ye
may
know,
and
believe,
that
the
Father is in me, and I in him”
(John
10:7, 9, 30, 87, 38).
The
Lesson-Sermon
also
included
the
following
passages
from
the
Christian
Science
textbook,
“Science
and
Health
with
Key
to
the
Scriptures”
by
Mary
pare Eddy:
“Atonement
is the exemplification of
man’s
unity
with
God,
whereby
man
reflects
divine
Truth,
Life,
and
Love.
Jesus
of Nazareth
taught
and
demonstrated

Bird

Frozen.

avenue

This church is a branch of The Mother
Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist,

Bird

Chickens

owe

with

him

the

endless

Father,

hom-

age
...
We
acknowledge
Jesus’
atonement
as
the
evidence
of divine,
efficacious.
Love,
unfolding
man’s
unity
with

God
through
Jesus
Christ
the
Wayshower; and we acknowledge that man
is saved through Christ, through Truth,
Life, and Love as demonstrated by the
Galilean: Prophet in healing the
sick and
- overcoming sin and death’ (pp.
18, 497).

CHICKEN

BREASTS

CHICKEN

DAN DOWIE ib cick engespsice

89c

SHOULDER

"|

LEGS

THIGHS
Ib.

AND

....................

CHICKEN
89c

| NEC

Ra 1

WINGS

&amp;

cia

a

EVISCERATED

9c

bas

LAMB CHOPS». 29c'| DUCKLINGS !. 59¢ |Frankfurters '- 49c
)

RIB ROAST

_ LEG O°
LAMB

BEEF

|

eee

|

48

Wicetabien |

see

:

|

Ib. AQvze |

- 47 ¢
:

i

MILK

Whole

Grade A

oe

‘Fromn

arene

ae

HAMS

ist to 5th | PKs... 25¢ | BACON
ibs

3

| Ib. 5Qe | tb. FQ

|

| Gal. 6c

DEB: :---~ 23¢

IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 25th SUMMER IN HIGHLAND PARK
WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING SUPER BARGAINS
SAVOY

YACHT

CLUB,

GOOD

APRICOTS
MONARCH

VEGETABLES
SAVOY

No. 2 tin 29c Value

SAUCE

APPLE

KIND

No. 212

FOR

UNSWEETENED

GRAPEFRUIT

Limit

JUICE No. 2

2

While

Cans

Supply Lasts.

for 25¢

|

Limit 2 Cans While Supply Lasts -

or RAITERS

Tin, 49c value

SALAD

2 Cans

‘oe. 2 tin, 27c value

the Can 29¢

Limit 2 Cans While Supply Lasts
the Can 5c
Limit 2 Cans While Supply Lasts

tins, 19¢ value .................... cos latest the Can 5c

—

�Page

36

Thursday,

INDIAN

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED

On

THE
|

M.

Shermer

4

Girls 8-16 yrs.

a delightful

program

of

&amp; 8 week periods.
June 30 — Aug. 26

4 weeks $210.00,.8 weeks $400.00,
inclusive fee.
Will make personal
interview.
Write for folder.
Morris and Dorothy Shaw, Directors

715

B. AUSTIN

Rd.

Post-war Program of Expansion

Traverse

Basketball,
Dramatics
and
Crafts.
Resident Registered Nurse.

Drilling
®
Tapping
@ ‘Assembly Operations
Northbrook

1947

activities—Riding, Canoeing, Swimming, Archery, Tennis, Volleyball,

construction.

Phone

girls

24,

Singer Printing Company Announces

CAMP

Famous
Bay

Northport, Michigan
Offers

No Experience Necessary
To fabricate essential electrical
equipment ( required
in home
&amp;

BEACH

Michigan’s

April

CO.

Northbrook

Lena, Illinois

=

EXCAVATING
AND TRENCH WORK
BLACK DIRT
FILLING
DRIVEWAYS BUILT

LOUIS
DAY

AND
“A

DIRT

TAZIOLI
NIGHT

Veteran

of

PHONE

H.

Foreign

Wars”

P. 4662

Bay

(rd laa
NO

—&lt;——

LIMIT—AIl

soho

Orders

DEPT.

THE

WEST.

MIDDLE

.14

Over

OMT Nae

and

The

another

Park customers.
pected from the
Holsinger to the

932

Linden

the

on
North

Side

Sunday Dinner
served from |2 noon

is in process

at

printer,

of

set printing.
He formerly was plant
superintendent for the Regensteiner

Ave.,

fect

cae

to

cent.

The

is

being

in the

of

for

plant operations.

Confined to Home
Paul Phelps of’ Paul Phelps, Inc.
Real Estate, has been confined to his

Winnetka

during the past two weeks with

foot

infection.

ae
eT
ee

Witte fC e Ee
Why ea

ORLANDS#
FRANKLIN.

39 South ey

Fame

. Pe

te
41

=o

reine ae

should trade at DeLuxe—just like
the defendant!”
Pick Up and Delivery Service
Phone Highland Park 455

ae ae pare ce

DeLuxe

eI)

|

454 Waukegan

Cleaners
Ave.

Highwood

SE
RAE
I

ANOTHER NORTH SHORE OFFICE
To Serve You Better With
Roof Repairs — New Roofs
Siding and Home Insulation
Free
Inspection and Estimates

EXCELLENT
FOOD

QUICKLY

@

DINNERS
SPECIALS

LINCOLN and TOUHY

FURNISHED

BECKER ROOFING CO.

MODERATE
PRICES

¢

HS.

Noble,

Mgr.

Ph.,

a

“Our verdict is 13-0 that everyone

es thapitdi tae a

Cli

LuTK
LX

a Pere

Abang tat

From 9 P. M. Until
Closing

SERVIN

floor

developed

TET.

Te OL

LUNCH
SUPPER

second

Ny

HAMMOND

eee

of Radio

in off-

GREENEBAUM

change.

qo}

35 per

building

home

gestsubTiger Prices
carton.

Years

tion

the

a

3 CARTONS

well versed

expansion, and other new equipment
and angers
are being incorporated

MINIMUM

Insured

especially

Printing company, printers of Esquire
magazine.
According to Mr. Singer, addition
of the offset presses increases the
firm’s potential job printing produc-

(290 Cigarettes)

The Smartest
Restaurant
and

Lounge

sev-

Carton of 10 Pkgs.

OPEN

Cocktail

of

Much
too
is
exaddition of Chester
organization as vice

TEL

NOW

first

is in operation

Phone Winnetka 4166

$1.21

25

presses

installation, offering a revolutionary
new printing
method
to Highland

ney bale RRR MB mag

Est.

program.

important

in its post-war

1” and 2’’—All Sizes
Murphy and Miller, Inc.

eo tmeey aaaee
Suis chek
LARGEST CIGARETTE MAIL “ORDER COMPANY
IN

expansion
plant

two

taken

HOLSINGER

president and general manager. Eugene
Singer,
founder
of the
company, continues in
his capacity
as
president.
Mr. Holsinger
is
an
experienced

AIR FILTERS

LUCKIES
*
PALL MALL
CHESTERFIELD
e
RALEIGHS
OLD GOLD
*
KOOL
PHILIP MORRIS
e
REGENTS
CAMELS
carton

announced

eral offset
the

All Standard Brands ¢

Wings,

road,

steps have been

‘Order by Mail

Marvels,

CHESTER

EUGENE SINGER
This week the Singer Printing and
Publishing company, 7 South Green

970 LINDEN AVE.
HUBBARD WOODS
WINNETKA 742; Night Ph., GREENLEAF

“SERVING

THE

NORTH. SHORE

FOR

40

4585

YEARS

�Thursday,

April

24,

Page

1947

Squadron

SCOUTING WITH TROOP 52
By Star Scout Gregory Armstrong
It was decided by vote, two Mondays ago, to have the Indian Lore
series planned by
Scoutmaster Rob-

pronto

’cause

ings

out on

tumes,

there'll be so darn

May

10, too, so work

hard, gang. We can’t let a “little”
thing like a town circus keep us from
badges and arrows ... No sirree!
Den News
Den No. 1—Geoffrey Armstrong’s
mom surprized this
bunch
by
demanding their cub books before crediting them
with
achievement
steps
. ..

Boy,

oh

boy!

were

there

ever

a

flock of red faces! . . . Watch your
steps, cubs, or you might cheat yourself out of a nice award.
Billy Winters was absent last week
so he lost out on some mighty nice
“Black Cows.” When Johnny Wolter
brought me the weekly news he was
still smacking his lips.

study

of

Indian

Armstrong,

Robert

Hinchsliff,

Cole, and Joseph Kilcoyne.
boys,

we

the

Scouts

Welcome,

of Troop

meet

held

over

for officials.

52, wish

a

month

ago,

except

All the patrols qualified

for both meets.
The ratings were
known in time for the printing of this
column but it is probable that one or
more patrols are eligible for the council meet, the rating of which is 90
per

cent

or

over.

tacular or novelty flying.
A list of safety rules
up by the Deerfield Air
will

Air
By

bobcat

now.

Come

Special Notice
on, gang, where are

major

event

field
by

Air

.. . How

about

some

another one

“The Clowns,” Jan?
Just write them out

and

of

put

like

them

51

WINTERS

sponsored

by

the

Deer-

Scouts.

The prizes have been
various organizations

put

in

force

at this

meet.

A

contributed
and hobby

handle must be
load factor, and

are

in proportion to the
eyelets and thimbles

recommended

for

supporting

the

LINER)

No

whipping

contests,
or
disqualified!

Patty

is allowed

the

in

contestant

Peterson

speed
will

be

Chosen

shops in the Chicago area and suburb.

For Youth

At the present time there are thirteen
model plane kits, two motors, and a
handicraft kit complete with gouging

Miss
Patricia . (Patty)
Peterson,
daughter of the Karl E. Petersons of

tools. There will be three classes of
speed events consistingof Class A,
Class B, and Class C. The first place
in

A

Class

speed

has

his

choice

of

a “Bug
Controliner
Kit”,
“Butch
Control line Trainer”, or an Xacto
Wood Carving Set. First place in the
Class B speed event has the choice
of a P-47 Thunderbolt, P-51 Mustang,

or a “Cyclone” Control line set. Class
C speed winner has the choice of a
Meteor
Speed Ship Kit, Grumman
Scale

Kit,

that is not yet on
Congratulations
having his scale
bolt on display at

and

another

prize

the lists.
to Bob Newell for
Republic Thunderthe Hobby Hub of

Evanston.
Bob has put many
of work on this model, and it

hours
surely

is a swell job of model making.
The contest is limited to Boy Scouts
and Senior Scouts. The entry fee is
twenty-five

promised?
Holmquist

Squadron
BILL

be

was drawn
Scouts and

few of these rules are: all planes are
required to go through a Safety Inspection by a special committee, all
lines leading from
the plane and

Does anyone know how things are
in Gloccomorra? Everyone has heard
about the big air show being put on
at New Trier High School on April
27 at one o'clock. This is the second

Hellcat

ticket to the big three-ring circus in
Chicago. He’s decided to pick up any
new ideas and apply them to his act.
Billy Darling celebrated his birthday with the den last Sunday.
A
hike, games, and hot dogs were on
the agenda for the day.
Congratulations, Billy, you’re a full fledged

lately

surprise party

Robert

you many pleasant years in this troop.
The
district first aid meet was
held last Monday.
As troop 52 is
the only troop in the district it was
very similar to the troop first aid

and both a gold and silver arrow.
Something tells me this boy has been
busy of late. . . Nice going, David!
Den No. 2—
Well, what do you know. ..!A
and

and

nature.
At the end of the aforesaid
series there will be an all Indian hike
using wigwams, costumes, foods, and
knowledge of nature.
There have been several new boys
entering Boy Scout troop 52 from Cub
Scouts.
These
boys
are Geoffrey

those original poems you
I haven’t heard from Jan

meeting

overs, loops, inverted flight and loop,
starting engine, workmanship, finish,
normal school maneauvers, and spec-

: IZ

to

foods

David Kelley can
hardly wait
to
collect his wolf badge, bear badge,

den

«

devoted

the study of wigwams, Indian cos-

much to do at the last minute that
there won’t be time for costume hunts
or special fittings. Why not set May
first as your deadline date for the
Ores fs
et
Once they’re complete tuck them
away so everything will be spic an’
span for the big day. We all want
to look our best in that parade, remember. .. Boy, is this ever going to
be sumpin’!
And don’t forget that awards will
be passed

be given in the appearance of the
model, smooth flying technique, wing

ert
Ranier.
The
series will consist
of
several
meet-

Well, our globe-trotting Cubs are all
back from their grand vacations so
the dens really got down to business
last week. Prizes for the circus concessions came rolling in plus dozens
of new ideas for acts ... Golly, my
head is still spinning!!
Now, how about those costumes,
fellows? You want to get started on
them

News

37

prizes
two

will

places

cents

be
in

per

ship,

awarded
each

event.

to

and

the

the

first

Points

will

in the mail or hand them to the
reporters.
We've had requests
more so get going now!

den
for

Orchestra

Brierhill road, has been selected
member of the 112-piece Youth

as a
Or-

chestta of Greater Chicago.
Patty,
flutist, is a junior at. Highland Park
High

school.

Temporary
orchestra

is

director
Harold

of

the

Finch,

Youth

music

di-

rector at Highland Park High school.
Finch also conducted the numerous
auditions every Saturday. Dr. O’Neil
said he will be assisted in sectional
rehearsals until a permanent director
is selected.
The youth orchestra, composed of
students of 88 high schools, has been
organized by prominent music lovers
in the area, to give high school students an opportunity to play good orchestra music
together
their own
age,
under

with others
professional

guidance.
Also, it is

a movement

to encourage

young talent in music careers.
The
orchestra is incorporated not for profit.
Weekly rehearsals for their first
appearance
ducted each
to 12 noon.

this
summer
are
conSaturday from 9:30 a.m.

in one

afternoon ... Yep! Russell Zartler’s
mother was really on the “go” when
the den celebrated Bobby Rudolph’s
birthday. David Rudolph and Bobby
Cole were included in the party, but
barred from the secret session. (You
see David is too young to be a cub
while Bobby belongs to No. 5.)
The affair was a huge success!...
How

does

it

feel

to

be

ten,

Bobby?

Den 3—
Due to the phone strike we failed to
contact

but
were
their

this

the

den

gang

to

at

undoubtedly
share of the

are really
gestions

on the

and

if I’m

keep

Mel

up

on

news,

Steed’s

house

hard at work on
circus. These boys

allert for new
not

mistaken

sugtheir

concession is going
to be quite a
money maker.
Den 4—
Gordon Rollman assisted Den Chief
Jack Frabel, but plans for the circus
at No. 4 are strictly hush-hush.
That trip. to Portage Park was a
wow! Kenneth George’s dad instructted the boys in swimming, and then

Photo

by

James

Kilcoyne

after a swell lunch the boys wore
themselves out in the gym. Needless
to say, there isn’t a cub in Deerfield
who isn’t longing for a similar trip

VICTORY ROLLERS BOWLING LEAGUE
At the Deerfield Bowling academy, left to right, first row, sitting: Hazel Coleman, Edith Kratzeor,
Ann Swanson, Peg Simmers, Lillian Mitchell, Ruth Kageorge, Ruth Cameron, Irene Hyland, Matt Hehner,
Ruth Schmidt, Clara Bernardi, June Scott, Diana Bertachini, Velma
Vander Bloomen, Mary Welch,

soon.

Second row, sitting, Vera Vanderbloomen, Arline Mentzer, and Ebba Carlson; standing, Juanita
McChesney, Ruth Ludlow, Evelyn Dobner, Betty Rich, Iva Henderson, Frieda Moore, Emma
Geist,
Minnie Korenin, Mary Spannraft, Elizabeth Cameron, Mary Bubbett, Florence Miller, Loretta Suel, Rae
Murrie, and Blanche Dunbar.
Back row, Doris Willman, Clara Vickery, Virginia Golita, Thed. Hamill, Elda Klemp, and Lorraine Lee.

.. Stick

around,

plenty of fun on
each of you.
Den No. 5—
Tommy Salyards

the

fellows,

there’s

calendar

is waiting

for

for his

and

Minnie

Meintzer.

�i

LL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)

ee

(Highland

REAL

Park).

5 rooms each, frame house
car garage, H.W. heat.
Lot
centrally located. For quick sale.

Write

Box

818,

H.P.

No
money
down
needed
if G.I.. Loan
approved.
Get a Buddy to go in with you

and

___MOVING

ONLY

1

TO,NEW

hour

ride

YORK???

from

Grand

Central

Station.
In picturesque Connecticut.
I
have 8-acres with Modern White Colonial
&gt;»

bedrms.

Home

with

att.

garage,

_ horse stalls, exercise track.
children.
or
details write:
ard

Gunzer,

Catamount

Connecticut.

2-

Ideal for
C. Rich-

Road,

buy

room

at

50-50.

Brick bldg., containing 1—6
room apt.,
1—3
room,
1—2
room,
all with private
bath;
also large store.
Good
basement,
hot water heat
stoker; large lot; 4 car
garage.
Price
$20,000,
$60.60
each
per
month
on _ loan.
Present
monthly
income $145.

JOHN

Westport,

F, LEONARDI

51 Highwood
Ave.,
Highwood
80 Hickory St., Highland Park

OFFERED FOR: FIRST TIME
Six

Park)

VETERANS SPECIAL

‘WO FLATS,
in H. P., 2

200x50
_ $11,500.

FOR SALE (Improved)

(Highland

i

_

ee

ESTATE

RED
BRICK
COLONIAL—Situated
in
garage, large wooded one of the finest sections of homes—Conlot, early possession.
For particulars, see sists of a gracious hall centrally located,
off one side of which is a spacious living
room
with
fireplace;
also
pleasant
sun
8 N. Sheridan Rd.
Tel. H.P. 2542
| room, attractive dining room, workable kitchen and powder room on Ist floor; 4 bedrooms, 2 tiled baths on 2nd floor.
‘Third
floor has possibilities for expansion.
Stee]
1918
Greenwood—White
clapboard.
6 construction
throughout.
Hot Water
Oil
_ rooms, 1 bath, screened porch, oil heat.
heat.
Priced at $32,000.
;
$28,500.
Partly furnished.
OPEN
FOR
INSPECTION
—
SUNDAY,
6 rooms,
2419 Old Briar—English brick.

(A

heat.

house,

choice

Attached

_ MARGARET

east

location.

baths,

attached

3
.

, wood

heat.’

_ 2418

baths,

615 Kimball
.6 bedrms,
oil

S.

oil

:

French
Provinbaths,
oil
heat.

$40,000.

Sheridan

_ French

8

kitchen,

Rd.: English stone and brick.
314 baths, fireproof construcheat.

Rd.
Vacant.
4 bedrms, 4%
‘room,
Oil

Provincial.

Beautiful
$48,000.

8
rm
baths,
heat.

recreation

English country
house.
5
bedrms,
4: baths,
2 acres.
Tennis
court.
Oil heat...
$58,500:
vs
;
, 123 Michigan Ave.
41% acre estate.
9 rm
brick,
stone and timber house, 5 baths.
Oil heat.
$60,000.

-EARHART, LLOYD &amp; RINGER
Exclusive

878

Central

____

room

cottage

on

tiful Lake Geneva

big

lot

in Williams

_ tile community.
Write
Highland Park’ News.

CAPE

COD

near

colonial

5 rms.,

Gen-

E-5,

brick

¢/o

veneer.

_ Beautifully
landscaped.
2 car garage
_
wired.
Lot 65x161.
Price $18,000.
Gall
_
between 3 and 5 p.m. Sat., 4 and 5 p.m.
Sunday,
at 1248 Sunnyside Lane, H. P.

S. St. Johns

acreage.
Exceptionally
with beaut beach, bluff

&amp; ravine.
Brk home of moderate size in
excel cond.
Gas ht.
Convenient
secluded
loein fine suburb.
Will
consider
other
i
. Mr. Clow

:

522

THIS
and

&amp; WARNER

Davis

St., Ev.

SPACIOUS

dining

rm.

Ist

own

butler’s

flr,

4

bath,

flr.

Study,

pantry

family

1

Detached

&amp;

this

maid’s

gar.

house

powder

rm.,

kitchen,

bedrms.,
room.

powder

rm.,

with

4

on

with

bath

rm.

ade-

its

on

apt.

tion—See

‘MARGARET E. BYRN

__ 8 N, Sheridan Rd.

|,

Tel. H.P. 2542

NURSERY
&amp;
GREENHOUSES.
5. room
bungalow,
well
decorated.
2. garages,
20x20 with basements, hot water heated.
One panel truck, two tractors
&amp; tools
eomplete.
2% acrés or ten lots in black
_ soil all planted in perrenials, good irrigation system.
One block to transporta_ tion N.S.L. &amp; C.N.W. RR.
27 yrs well
established business.
Owner leaving for
California for his health.
1409 Pleasant
“Tél. HP. 8622.0"
;
ry waAveL:

~ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

Nestling
amid
towering
Oak,
Hickory
and Elms on 4 acres.
fain
he
es
CHARMING
3 BEDROOM;
-2 BATH
ALMOST
NEW
RAMBLING
LANNON
STONE
&amp; BRICK
RESIDENCE.

Offers

the

freedom:

and

seclusion

of

a

country estate coupled: with low taxes and
the advantagesof every city convenience;
se
to
excellent;
schools
and
express
‘ransportation; random width hand pegged
oak plank flooring throughout.
Attached
2 ear brick garage; large screened dining
porch; forced circulating hot water heat;
copper pipes; charming,
well planned kit-

chen.
which

Cannot be. duplicated
it is being offered. |

R.S. HAMBLY

at

price

&amp; COMPANY

for

d

- 1551 S. St. Johns ‘or'Clavey @ Ridge Rd.
LP.
1491, 4866 or 1484

ample

Sheridan

&amp; Ridge Rd.

guest’

|

closet

15

on

on

Tel.

FOR

H.P.

$25.00

house

country

To

est,

18

Remodel,

cement

block,

8 rm

frame

W.

6rm

house

&amp;

H.

mi

north....

etc.

central

42,500

|

loc.

....

11,000

Pk., close trans....

cottage

same

Business

lot

Bldgs.

E. T. SKIDMORE

12,500
“18,750

&amp;

Vacant.

&amp; SON

832 N. St. Johns Ave.
Tel. H.P. 577
————_———————————E——————E
REAL
ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(Vacant)
TWO
LOTS in Woodland Park, Deerfield:
75x200 ft on Woodbine
&amp; North Ave.;
90x182 ft on Linden Ave., east of Stratford Rd.
Tel. Sheldrake 9323.
W. J.
Dee, 6480 N. Bell Ave., Chicago 45, Ill.

VACANT
Real buy, lot
75x192 lot S.
Beaut

Lots

882,

St.

SALE

100x277, S. Linden...
Linden, nr beach

Iscpd

Vacant

FOR

lg

country

for

lots.

homes—For

E. T. SKIDMORE
N.

and

or

up.

—

Johns

51

Business.

&amp; SON

Tel.

H.P.

BUY VACANT.
terms.

JOHN

80

Ave.

5

$10

front

577

foot

\

F..-LEONARDI

Highwood
Hickory

REAL

per

Ave.,
St.,

Highwood

Highland

ESTATE

Fark

SERVICE

SEVERAL LOTS AND HOUSES
in
Ravinia,
Braeside and
Sunset Subdivisions
in Highland
Park
at. reasonable
prices.
‘
ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
AGENCY
16 N. Sheridan Rd.,'H. P.
Tél. “EP.
93)
Res.
H.P.
37

HOUSE

TO

to

rent

house

for

summer

REWARD

or

3-5

leading

room

to rental

apt.in H.

of small

F.

area.

APT. or house wanted:
2%
to 4 rooms,
furn.
or unfurn.;
by gov’t
employee,
1 small child; Lutheran, don’t drink or
smoke.
Rockney.
Tel. Wabash 1346 or
write Deerfield Review. °
YEAR’S
rent in advance,
plus
bonus.
Reliable family
needs
5-7 room
house
or apartment.
el, Briargate
1823
or
address Box E-15, c/o H. P. News.
VACATIONING
EARLY
Quiet couple familiar with nice surroundings will rent your house for 2 mos. or
longer.
No
children.
Excellent .North

Shore

ref.

Tel.

Franklin

6386,

Ext.

RENT

SEFT.
ist to June
Ist,
1948, furnished
house,
three
bedrooms,
two
baths,
oil
heat.
East
central
location.
$200
a
month.
Financial and housekeeping references required.
Write Box D-25, c/o
H. P. News.
;

t

of 2 adults with housekeeper of

25 years service, desire home, for summer rental. Tel. State 0600 (collect).
4

i ere

.
ate

Experienced,

Current
wages.
Forest 2552.

’

white.

Volney

Also

maid.

Foster.

Lake

GARDENER:
Two days each week.
rent wages. Volney Foster.
Lake
est 2552.
feet

CurFor-

5.

WANTED:
A coupleor cook, second maid
&amp; general man, white, for place in Lake
Forest; 2 in family.
Unusually pleasant
rooms &amp; bath, current wages.
Tel. H.P.
Ah
or write c/o H. P. News, Box DGENERAL
housework &amp; cooking.
Exp., 2
adults.
Laundry
out.
Pleasant
room,
bath,
radio.
Current
wages;
ref. req.
Tel. H.P. 584 or 349 Lake Ave., H. P.

GARDENER’S
HELPER:
Experienced.
Also, to assist in house,
Apply Garde‘ner’s Cottage, 954 N. Green Bay
Road,
eet
Forest or Telephone Lake Forest
.

HOUSEMAN:
Experienced,
white, single.
Permanent position in Lake Bluff.
For
interview, Howard Linn, Lake Bluff 1570
week ends.
ay
;

WANTED:

Upstairs maid,

No Sundays.
2002
or 162

WANTED:

*

9 until 8 p.m. —

Liberal salary.
Laurel Ave., H.

Excellent

cook.

Tel.
P.

HP.

All or part

time.
Must go home at night.
Tel.
P. 5674 or write Box E-45, c/o H.

H.
P.

News...

WOMAN
TO DO IRONING,
1 DAY
A
WEEK.
CLOSE
TO
TRANSPORTATION.
TEL. H.P. 756 OR 746 BRAESIDE. RD., H. P.

20.

COOKING
&amp; general
housework.
Small
modern home.
RENT or buy 5 or 6 room home in
No laundry.
Maid’s room
Lake Forest or vicinity.
Near all trans-}
&amp; bath, $30 to $35.
Ref. req.
852 N.
portation
to loop.
Will
exchange
3%
Sheridan Rd., H. P.
J
room
apartment.
$42.50.
B.
J. Bitter,
1152 W. 80th St., Chicago, Ill., or Tel.
WANTED:
White girl for general houseVincennes
2924.
:
work.
No laundry.
Current wages.
Tel.
H.P.
3886
or 925 Lincoln Ave., H. P.
WANTED
TO
RENT:
Well
furnished
home on North Shore, June to or through
RELIABLE
white girl to help with houseSeptember. Recommendations exchanged.
Reply Box O-77, c/o Kake Forester.
work &amp; child, 11%, or cooking. Two room
&amp; bath apt., salary.
Husband may stay.
Tel. H.P, 3968 or write Box D-55, c/o
‘
ROOMS
TO RENT
Highland
Park News.
LARGE
furnished
room
for couple,
near
transportation.
813 Ridgewood Dr.
Tel.
CHAMBERMAID:
Laundress
for
sal
Pi.
1668:
family and house.
Reply Box 0-67, ¢/o
Lake Forester or Lake Forest 1846,
ROOM,
bath and breakfast for employed
?
girl or student in exchange for sitting.
COUPLE:
Permanent position.
Experience
Apply
Mrs.
Charles
Limberg,
1165
N.
and references required.
Woman to cook
Sheridan Rd., Lake Forest.
and help with three children.
Man
to
drive,
take
care
of
lawn
and do general
ROOM
available until June 15 to woman
housework.
Two comfortable rooms and
6r girl in exchange for being sitter and
bath.
Current salary. Reply Box O-47,
mother’s
helper,
few
hours
each
day.
c/o Lake Forester.
Apply in person.
Mrs. A. C. Bell, 685
i.
E. Northmoor Rd., Lake Forest.
COOK:
and
second maid.
Experienced,
SINGLE
room.
Convenient
location.
120
white.
Small
adult family.
References
Woodland
Rd., Lake Forest.
required.
Mrs. R. Douglas
Stuart, 528
W. Mayflower Rd., Lake Forest or Lak
Forest 1024.
HELP WANTED
(Clerical)
’

WANTED:

Stenographer.

Per-

manent position.
First National Bank, Highland Park.
STENOGRAPHER -- EXPERIENCED
Permanent position—Some knowledge of
bookkeeping required.
Salary $165
and
up.
Apply, George B. Caskey, Winnetka
Park
District,
Village
Hall, Winnetka,
Illinois.
Office hours 8:30 a.m. to 12:00
noon; 1.00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 8:80
a.m.
to
12:00
noon
Saturdays.
Telephone Winnetka 2160..
‘
STENOGRAPHERS,
TYPISTS,
OFFICE.
personnel.
Permanent
position
with
a
future
proportionate
to
your
ability.
Growing
national
concern.
State
age,
experience,
references
and
salary desired.
Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

OPENING
FOR
PERMANENT
POSITION
FOR
EXPERIENCED
UNMARRIED
WOMAN.
DICTATION, TYPING, SOME
BOOKKEEPING
KNOWLEDGE
NECESHOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)
SARY. EXCELLENT SALARY.
PLEASE
GIVE
EXPERIENCE
&amp; REFERENCES
WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
IN APPLICATION.
WRITE BOX E-85,
summer
months
by responsible family. |
c/o H. P. NEWS.
Will
furnish
finest
references.
Tel.
STENOGRAPHER:
For
general
office
Central 5309.
work with some bookkeeping experience;
5%
days
per
week,
steady
employment
REFINED
young
couple,
both
employed,
with
annuual
paid
vacation.
Apply
desire four or five room apartment, unJames
Anderson
Company,
Engineers
furnished.
Excellent.
references.
Reply
and Surveyors,
290
E. Deerpath,
Lake
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.
Forest.
&amp;
SUITABLE
quarters for mother and son
both
employed—Un—partly—or
fur- i
HELP WANTED (Domestic)
nished.
Highland Park References.
TelExperienced, white.
For
ephone
1839
evenings
or address
Box | SECOND MAID:
6 weeks or permanent, starting April 1st.
D-85, c/o Highland Park News.

FAMILY

COOK:

TO

SALE

Paint,

like

‘WANTED:
Summer
rental.
Responsible
adult couple.
Will care for your dog if
desired. Smal] house near lake.
References gladly furnished.
Apt. One, 5527
Cornell, Chicago.
Tel. Butterfield 4155.

1st

6 rm brk Braeside sect. ........ $25,000
brk country home) nr tran .... 20,000
brk Ravinia sec, ex cond
15,000

acre

HELP WANTED (Domestic)

Young
business man
&amp; wf desperately
need a place to live; no children or pets.
Will furnish best of references.
Box E65, c/o H. P. News.

2nd
‘Early

.2542

WANTED

FAMILY
of
four
adults desire apt.
or
small house, by May lst.
Residents of
H. P. for 22 yrs.
I. R. Sals, 12 N. Sheridan Rd., H. P. before 5:30 p.m. &amp; 1012
N. Green Bay after 5:30.
%

E. BYRN

Rd.

HOUSES
New
7 rm
5 rm

2nd

proximately
2 acres
&amp;
beautifully
land-Seaped
in secluded
location.
For inspec-

~

and

MARGARET

8 N.

Cash

ideal

porch

each

&amp;

RM.

or Clavey

floor.
8 large bedrooms
&amp; bath
flr. 2 car gar.
Owner
occupied.
possession.
For particulars
see

Hol. 1855

LIVING

makes

for entertaining.
quate

Gre. 1855

LINDEN.

&amp; APARTMENTS

months
in
north
suburbs—3
bedroom
minimum.
Tel. Superior 5759 (Chicago)
or write D. J. Gradman, 20 East Cedar
St., Chicago
11.

Well built house.
Large living rm. with
bookshelves
and
wood-burning
fireplace,
large dining rm. with bay window, model
kitchen, screen porch overlooking garden,

FINE LAKE FRONT

Residence
with
fine piece of land

S.

SEE THIS MODERN
UNUSUALLY

beau-

Bay.

Box

5—955

Highland Park 1484, 2355 or 1491

Downtown

» FOUR
:

Tel. -HF.; 880

to

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; COMPANY

1551

6rm

Agents

Ave.

27th—2

rooms,
rm, oil

Colonial,

G.E.

Rd.—Vacant.
bedrms,
4%

$40,000.
tion,

brick

new

$88,500.

Brittany
cial.
5

1900

panelled

Briar—White

heat.

_

$26,500.

- 7
recreation

$32,500.

Old

rooms,
2%

1
-

gar., oil heat.

APRIL

8
frame.
white
Onwentsia—Vacant,
Garage bldg.
1 bath, coal heat.

54

WOULD

E. BYRN

GOOD HOUSES -- FAIR PRICES

2

HOUSES

RESPONSIBLE
party will pay maximum
rent, year in advance for 8 or 4 bedroom house.
Will consider buying suitable home on terms.
Write c/o H. P.
News, Box D-75.

References required.
Mrs. W. P. MeBrida. Lake Forest 36. |
j
a
LAUNDRESS for adult\family, one day a
week.
828 N. Linden Ave. Tel. H.P. 2.
es.

‘i

COOK:
Experienced.
Temporary
position
for last. week in May, first week in June.

May

go home

batt,

245

nights.

Vine

Mrs.

Aveé.,

R. H. Marb-

Lake

Forest.

GARDENER:
apartment
part

87,

Experienced.
Four
room
furnished.
Wife
may
give
References.
Reply Box OLake Forester.

service.

c/o

GARDENER’S

HELPERS:

time. Apply Mr.
estate,
Highway
Ave., Libertyville
ville 348.

GENERAL:
Experienced,
stairs work.
References

to

Rd.,

Mrs. W.’R:
Lake

Carney,

Forest

Two

for

full

Maver,
John D. Allen
59-A
and
Milwaukee
or telephone Liberty-

or

white,
for- uprequired.
Apply

35 N.

Lake

Green

Forest

Bay

1632.

GENERAL:
Experienced, white.
To cook
and help; with care of child, 4%.
Own
room, bath and radio; near transportation. Reply Box 0-97, c/o Lake Forester.
LAUNDRESS:
day a week.
Lake
Forest

Experienced,
white,
one
Apply 1241 Edgewood Rd.,
or telephone Lake
Forest

1985. \¢

:

PARLOR MAID:
Experienced, white. Ref-erences required, current wages.
rast
Box 582, Lake Forest or Lake Forest 42
SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white. Family of three adults.
References required.
Highest wages.
Apply to Mrs. Alfred T.
Barton, 6 E. Laurel Ave., Lake Forest.
SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white. Family of two adults, father and son. Easy.
_ place, middle-aged woman preferred. Reply Box 0-57, c/o Lake Forester or Lake

Forest

i

228.

—

©

�189

N.

WANTED:

Lawn,
cutting, garden, care
th
References required.
740
- grounds.
Tel. H.P.
3727.
Green
Bay Rd.

Second St.,.

Lathe

operators

&amp;

other

chine
shop
employees.
Modern
neering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd.,
Tel.‘ H.P.
1057.

maEngiH. P.

* EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Young woman, between the age of 21 and
35 years to train for Soda Fountain and
lunch counter management.
WE TEACH
YOU
fundamentals
of cooking,
baking,
buying and menu
planning.
Learn a staple, growing business. Previous experience preferred, but not a requirement.
Uniforms
and
meals
furnished.
Good salary while learning.
No
Sunday or holiday work.
Write, ¢/o H.
P. News, Box A-55.

Apply
full time or part time, top wages.
1409 Pleasant Ave.,
at Orrico Gardens,
BF;

Work

30 More Men

Spot Welders
Hand Truckers
.

: Exeserionce

Male and Female
HELP TO WORK IN
3
HIGHLAND PARK’S
MOST MODERN FOOD STORE

Hours

8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Mon-

Pacific

small.

well

a

|

lighted

plant,

5 day week. Vacation with pay.
Free insurance, Apply Store
Manager

varied.
how

Come in and learn

you

can

help

shipping room.
Cleaners,
Ermine
H.P. 3712.
for

Hubbard eon
Woods
Ave.,

Woods.

H.P.

Gardener, 2 days a week,

4558

DRIVING to
ern Route.

share

or

186

Vine

Ave.,

H.

236

ee

WANTED

OFFICE

Forest

(Domestic)

buffet,

ta

&amp; STORE FIXTURES
FOR SALE
rie

POR SALE
So:
All Store Fixtures
Showcase, Sweater Cabinets, etc,
THE SPORT SHOP
x
265
E. Market
Square
Lake
Forest,
Illinois —
Ge

’

CELUANROUS

ton

Ga

MICELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

LAWN
lawn

&amp; garden supplies.
roller

for hire.

MARTIN

“60”

Rotary titles” -

Borchardt

Tel. H.P. 67.

greatest

tte

Fu

# “

Out Board

Motor

Experienced,
for
evening
POE. 0-107, c/o Lake For-

Freezer’’

(Miscel.)

CATERING
teas, dinner parties,

Tel. Glencoe

1594.

large

or

P. C. McCul-

in % day work,
Bookkeeping and
Box
E-75,
¢/o

desires office cleaning, exp.
H. P. News, Box E-50.

GOODS

FOR

Write

SALE

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post.
We sell furniture, bric-abrac &amp; clothing.
47 S. St. Johns.
Tel.
H.P.. 2744.
84-B120-In-tf

GAS STOVE, with side oven (right), good
condition.
Cheap.
Riedeman, 865 Osterman Ave., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 739.

North Chicago

BEING
‘size
set;
This
new.

EVICTED:
Must sell 8 piece Jr.
Duncan
Phyffe mah.
dining
room
also
twin
lamp tables
&amp;
lamps.
furniture is just 2 yrs. old, like
148 S. Green Bay Rd.
Tel. H.P.

5318.

DICK

TRACY’S

Tel.

RCA-Victor
radio-phonograph
combination,
console
model,
2 record
cabinets,
300
records.
Will sell complete for $250 or

will sell
H.P.

EXPERIENCED
mechanic to work
makes
of cars.
Tune-up,
brake
etc.
No
heavy work.
Sun test
ment—Barrett
brake equipment.
antee $60 per week.
Ravinia Auto

ice,

1600

WOMAN’S

Burton

Ave.,

LINGERIE &amp;
SHOP

Highland

326 —
on all
work,
equipGuarServ-

Park.

ACCESSORIES

Desires:
i 504

Ave.,

WANTED

FULL
SIZE deluxe spring &amp; innerspring
mattress, in good condition, $20.
House
in rear, 135 S. Second St., H. P.

DIVISION
Davis St.

Dante
Forest

WALNUT
bedroom set, complete, in good
condition.
Call at the
Ravinia . Fix-It
Shop.
Tel. H.P.
19.

-_DEEPFREEZE

2301

White, experienced in green-

HOUSEHOLD

‘DEEPFREEZE

Tel.

P.

West Coast May Ist. SouthWant passenger. help drive,

expenses.

Lake

MIDDLE-AGED
lady wishes position with
adult family or semi-invalid.
Excellent
cook.
Can drive.
Will stay.
Mrs. Vincent,
1116
Fark
Ave.,
North
Chicago,
Ill.
Tel. Maj. 3528.

LADY
c/o

build.

HELP!
HELP!
HELP!
Fountain Help Needed
Good Wages

steady
position.
Ermine
EAMSTRESS,
Tel. H.P. 3712.
. Cleaners, Highwood, Ill.

“WANTED:

Avenue,

YOUNG
LADY interested
5 days a week in H. P.
sales
exp.;
references.
H. P. News.

work here is interesting and

Clerks.

Attractive starting pay

WANTED:
WAITRESS
Cafe,
897%
Linden

SITUATION

conditions

BROS.

Western

love seat, old (ishobeu

DINING ROOM SET: Walnut,
and six chairs, a ‘“Conlan’”’
gle, apartment size.
é
Bluff or Lake Bluff 1510.

tough.

Motor Products Corp.

or young man
GIRL
employment.
Steady
Highwood, Ill.
Tel.

N.

SITUATIONS

DEEPFREEZE

“The Pioneer Home

St.

Bakery

672

Weddings,

Men.

Clerks,

Produce

working

HAHN

Victorinn

china cabinet; 12x15 oriental rug,
‘Orn ;
Thor mangle,
Other househoold. pee
547 S. St. Johns.
Tel. H.P. 2864.
a

GARDENER:
\White, experienced in landscaping,
greenhouse
and
outside
work
for 1 or 1% days per week. Steady position
with
living
quarters
for
family.
References.
Reply
Box
O-7,
c/o Lake
Forester.
;

day through Friday.

Dairy Clerks,

Stock

EARLY

Forest

house and outdoor work.
Reply
Amidei, 954 N. Green Bay, Lake
or Lake Forest 2097.

required.

rate while learning.

Clean,

Want Checkers,

not

Has

First

Excellent

GARDENER:
work.
Reply:

We train and pay you full

Wanted

N.

Lake

DRIVER
For
Delivering Groceries

GARDENER:

two
and
5 months,
baby,
For
NURSE:
little girls, ages 6 &amp; 9, starting April
wages.
top
employed,
help
ther
23.
Fred W. Fairman, Lake Forest 2798
Mrs.

56

Lane,

‘

ester.

stands copy, production, merchandising.
State
future for right man.
Unusual
exsalary
experience,
education,
age,
Til.
Co., Deerfield,
Duraclean
pected.

Atlantic and

Bank

2842.

of all times.
Get your order in while
our
allotment
lasts.
P.
Juh
COUPLE
well euiebhinkad:
The
husband
Salesman, 666 Waukegan Rd., ‘Deerfield. —
chief cook and we do love children. Wife
serves.
We both do cleaning.
Husband
is excellent driver. Charles Dunkin, 1550 ‘TEN tube Grunow cabinet radio. Facotung ‘
condition, broadcast &amp; short wave, $25.
Tower Rd., Winnetka.
Tel. Win. 2172.
Warm
Morning
Magazine
hot
wat
heater, used, low price coal, with therHOUSEMAN:
Experienced,
colored. Refmostat, $15.
Tel. LP,
1668 or ey
erences
furnished.
Home
maintenance.
Ridge Ray H.-P
Reply Box O-17, c/o Lake Forester.

Cleaners

who under-

MANAGER

W.

GIRL,
white,
desires
general housework,
$35.
No
heavy
cleaning or ‘laundry.
Gentiles only.
Write, c/o H. P. News,
Box EB-55.

Assemblers

In

MAN
with car rst service or production
Must have good personality and|
work.
be capable of selling or making
estimates.
Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired. Address
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

ADV.

560

H.P.

TEXACO SERVICE
STATION

EMPLOYED girl will help at dinner hour
in exchange for board and room.
Beulah
Roberts,
168 Central Ave., H. P.
Tel.
H.P. 679.
:
‘

NEEDS

‘\Clavaler -- Plymouth
Agency
Best working conditions
Modern equipment
Better than union guarantee
Flat rate basis
GOLDEN MOTORS
106 S. First Street
Tel. LP.
2500

NATIONAL

Service Station

acs: ca red rug é

stair and hall carpeting, ‘27-in.;a
paasIng.
843 Lanesin aig i oer

vhs

WANTED:
38 days
cleaning in Highland
Park or Ft. Sheridan.
Write Box D-95,
c/o H. P. News.
:

DEEPFREEZE

MECHANICS

ror

Par

JOHNSON

work,

garden

light

for

WANTED:

MAN

YOU like golf here is ‘an opportunity
to learn the business while working in
a golf shop.
Playing einen
Good
wages and meals.
Write c/o H. P. News,
Box D-45,

To

r

WOMEN:
Middle-aged, neat appearing for
sales work, H. P. or suburbs.
Earnings
$50 to $75 per week. Car helpful but not
required.
397 North Ave., H

NURSE TO TAKE CHARGE oe 2 cane
DREN,
2 YRS.
‘
POSITION.
WAGES.
i
“THAN EXPERIENCE.
TEL. H.P. 3964
OR 1622 S. GREEN BAY RD,
IF

of
S.

NURSE, white, care for 8 months old girl.
Highest wages.
Mrs. John Wyle,
1441
Dean Ave., H. P. or Tel. H.P. 4930 (collect).

ASSISTANT cook &amp; dietary maid. Straight
hours. Tel. H.P. 2550.
Ask for Cook,
_ Highland Park Hospital.
;

.

ATTENDANT .

EXPERIENCED tao Sisue days Sank ae

be Me
ener ae
eat
or
Highland Ten ae

Sales Help — Full time.
TOWN SHOP
Central Ave. —
Highland Park

PRACTICAL NURSE: For infant care for
three weeks, beginning May Ist. Reply
an

0-87,

is 3 Lake Forester.

e

S

y

MOTD ik sai Sat foot
ants

Fe

ie eth

wk

er

separate.

Paul

Thompson,

Wil-

mot &amp; Rosewood
Deerfield 536. —

Rds.,

Deerfield.
;
vy

Tel.

STUDIO
couch,
four
burner
gas_
range,
with side oven;
four burner table top
gas range.
Tel. H.P. e482 or 1225 Burton Ave., H. P.

WHITE wood kitchen utility cabinet, 60-in
wide,
86-in
high;
solid
maple
cutting
board top, $25.
Excellent condition.
713
Central, Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 21-J.

LAMP, AND GOGGLES, USED
3 HOURS. PRICE $37.50. WILL
SELL FOR $30.
.
THREE
PIECE GRAY
PIN
STRIPE SPRING SUIT

J
:

TION. PRICE $85. WILL SELL
FOR $35. ALSO, OFF WHITE
BEIGE, LIGHT WEIGHT, WOOL
DRESS, SIZE 12 TO 14, WORN
6 TIMES, $8. TEL. HP. 4484,
or oe RIDGEWOOD DRIVE,

:
~

—
:

Zi

GONDREDS

OF

BARGAINS

i

FRIDAY &amp; SAT., 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. ONLY
Credenza sideboard, $125; exe. cond. stove
Vac. cleaner, $15;
&amp; refrig.—best offer.
good
mangle,
$12;
chairs:
good
springs
and best Sealy mattress,
$40.
All kinds
baby furniture, equipment, toys; $30 swing
set $10, $15 swing set, $3.50: low bookcases,
coffee
table,
dress.
table,
lamps,
carpeting,
cot,
trunks,
lamps,
porch
velvet ‘hall draperies,
rug and 5 shades;
sun lamp, $2.50; electric heater, $1; new
Cory coffee maker, $1: antique china and | *
vases,
CONDITION |
QUALITY, PERFECT
BEST
fiv
to
infants
clothing,
CHILDREN’S
Gall at 52
most a few cents each,
iy
Rte
HY
. Linden.
SEIMENS 16 mms, spec di loading, movCe picture camera with frame speeds o
, 16, 24 and 64 per second, lenses F1:5
. :3 and 3:8 Telephoto Schneider Kenon. |
Complete
fingertip.
by
controlled
all
_
Agfa
with carrying case &amp; lens caps.
Super 16 motion picture projector, both
Tel. A.
pieces of equipment like new.
P. 316 or 1000 Wade St.
DRESSES
&amp;
Suits, both
wool
&amp; rayon, ie
size 12- 20; lady’s shoes, 8% to 9% A
B;
men’s’ shoes,
10-18,
almost
new.
Roller skates; children’s clothing; lady
golf clubs; bookcase; men’s suit 38-40

Tel. H.P. 3518

UNIVERSAL

or 233 Laurel Ave., H. P

House

trailer,

good

as

21-ft. long. Tel. H.P. 5968 erenines
Sheldon

new,

&lt;7

Lane.

WILTON
rug, 9x15, gray &amp; rose; occas
ional chair; cabinet
Edison
&amp; records
A. BE. Decker, 829 Waukegan Rae Deer
field.
Tel. Deerfield 283.
SHERATON
dining room table, $50,
ood
condition; baby buggy,
1 yr. old, $18;
white ice box, 100 Ibs., $10; basinette,

$2..

Tel.

H.P.

4613 or

327

S.. Gree

Bay Rd., H. -P.
5
§
FOUR
cu.
ft. Crosley
refrigerator,
new
motor! recently installed, A-1
eee
FOR SALE: Gravely garden tractor,
throughout.
Best offer takes.
May be
vator, plow, extra wheels, $200.
seen at 440 Elm Sei: ‘Caras Bander}
Apt 28, after 6 p.m. C. Vv. oe
| Washington, Skokie.
2
to 5 Pees

—

ee
for

a

cul

+

c%

�“_ ELECTRIC
i

portable

sewing

machine

in TWO

‘perfect
condition;
new . electric
iron;
comptometer; man’s»new tan shoes, size
about 8-D,
May be seen at 908 Fair
- Oaks Ave., Deerfield,

NEW
tank-type
Royal
vacuum
cleaner,
cost $64, will sell for $45; new Gladiron
mangle, cost $79, will sell for $50; used
Combustionier coal stoker with controls,
$100.
Paul Thompson, Wilmot &amp; Rosewood Rds., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 536.

_

RUMMAGE

SALE:

Wednesday

$25.
Ave.,

bicycles, one 18-in., $15;
Can be seen any time.
H. P. in garage.

BIRDS,

streets,

SEAL
$20

ee
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
FOR

more

Pl.,

TRAP

DRUM

eases,
143 S.

outfit,

complete

with

home’ &amp;

fiber

condition.
finish, excellent
Bay Rd. or Tel. H.P. 5318.

pearl
Green

GRAND
PIANO:
May: be seen at Iredale,
$74
Central Ave., H. P.
Write Mrs. A.
_H. Hagerty, Box 109, Libertyville or Tel.
Libertyville 1305-W.

International,

PIANO-ACCORDION,
never

used,

cost

$900.

Will

new,

sacrifice

&amp;

take other musical instrument in trade.
Faul
Thompson,
Wilmot
&amp;
Rosewood
Rds., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 536.
‘SAXOPHONE:
A real buy.
Lake Forest

E flat alto, like new, $70.
337 E. Wisconsin Avenue,
“or Lake Forest 2730.

LOST

AND

FOUND

Black Scottie with Bramer
: LOST:
tal tag on collar.
Tel. H.P. 6127
Vine Ave., H. P.

Hospior 657

LOST:

Gold ‘choker, Sunday morning in
$10.
Reward.
northwest
section H. P.
225° McDaniel Ave., H. P.
USED

AUTOMOBILES

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern
Ave,
Lake Forest, Ill,
Tel. L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new ae
cars.
1941 Pontiac 8 Club coupe.
Tel.
or 505 Waverly Rd.,
P.
1947 FACKARD:
Brand new,
senger custom-super sedan.
O-27,-c/o Lake Forester.

H.P..
seven
Reply

970
pasBox

1934 FORD:
Rebuilt motor, installed year
ago;
five new tires and tubes, upholstery perfect and low mileage. In garage,
$350
cash.
3840
Sheridan
Road,
Lake
Bluff or Lake Bluff 1152.

AUTOS

WANTED

WANTED

FOR CASH

Good
’87 to '47 Used
Cars.
A. G. McPHERSON,
Inc.
887 E. Park Ave., H. P.

RAVINIA MOTORS.
Inc.
22

South

First

:

Specializing in
pictures of
T.P. 3199

RAVINIA

MOTORS,
Inc.
Packard Dealer
ANTIQUES

arge Quantity of
AMARICAM
cP
FURNITURE
And
ENGLISH
18th CENTURY
ANTIQUES,
,
LAMPS,
ETC.
Owner going to England for the Summer.
No Reasonable Offer Refused.
COURT
ANTIQUE
SHOP
918 Linden Avenue
Hubbard
Woods
Winnetka 4085
EARLY

‘i

c/o

This

H.

is

a

real

P. News

Box

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park, IN.
29-S-3-In-t#

SEWING
MACHINE
SERVICE
Singer &amp; other makes repaired, bought &amp;
sold; also vacuum cleaners. Will call for
and
deliver.
Phone
Robt.
W.
Arends,
1247 Church St.
Tel. Northbrook
624-W
TREE TRIMMING
&amp; LANDSCAPING
Removing. Dead Trees, Hauling Away
Cement
Work
Light Hauling — Wood
ROBERT L. WHITE
1002 N. Elmwood,
Waukegan
Telephone
Ont.
7530
CRAFTSMAN
FURNITURE
REPAIR
“For Work
of Quality”
Upholstering,
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.
88rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Zion, Ill.
Tel. Zion 3496
BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel. L.F.
Our service department,
has the
modern
equipment to serve your
Stop in today.
Now open for busiC. T. Bartlett.

PARKWAY CURTAIN
LAUNDRY
Ruffled
curtains,
panels,
drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 5804
PREPARE
FOR
SPRING!
Storms
removed,
Screen
cleaned, painted
&amp;
hung.
Gutters
cleaned
&amp;- painted.
Vet’s
Maintenance.
Tel.
Skokie
5071.

Forest

2764

~DAN’S
PAINTING

&amp; DECORATING

Fully Insured
Interior and Exterior
Residential and
Commercial
Immediate Service
Phone Highland Park 6012

BLACK

SOIL

Wholesale
and
Retail.
CLEAN
PRODUCTION
TOP
SOIL
Tested
&amp; approved
by Pitts. Lab.
Sypply Field: Co. Line &amp; Waukegan
Rd.,
Deerfield
Ay Fo VOLTZ Box
1738, R.R.
1, Glenview,
Ill.
Fhone
Glenview
734
PICK

UP &amp; DELIVERY
SERVICE
Also car radio repair.
WICK’S RADIO
SERVICE
1151
PARK»
AVE.,
DEERFIELD
Tel.
Deerfield 525

EXP. RADIO
repair man.
Good
very convenient.
Write c/o H.
Box E-95

they

could,

upon

arriving

in

POrS.

p.m.

Unfortunately,
a little matter of
war, accompanied by an acute housing
problem, has thrown the luckless student to the mercy of landlords. Many
of them must put up with sub-standard conditions of comfort and hygiene. The situation is not without
humor, however, at least for those
who are entrenched in comfortable
rooms.
For instance, the unsuspecting football

fan

might

be

surprised

to

find

under his seat in Memorial stadium,
several hundred male students. Literally speaking they are under his
seat, for the university has converted

hours &amp;
P. News

empty

locker

rooms,

store

rooms,

and

shower rooms beneath the stands into living quarters to drain off part of
noon,
1 p.m.
to 4:30
p.m.
the student overflow.
These men claim their quarters to
CASHIERS
&amp; checkers
wanted:
40
hr.
week.
Good
starting
salary,
for food
be the best in the university, mainly
store.
See Mr. George Miller, 500 Cenbecause of the convenient gate crashtral Ave., H. P.
Wednesday
afternoon,
1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.'
ing opportunities. However convenient it may be for the sly gate crashYOUNG
men wanted for training, in food
business.
48 hour week.
Good starting
ers, it is doubtful that the earnest
wages.
See Mr. George Miller, 500 Censtudent finds the stadium annex to
tral Ave., H. P.
Wednesday afternoon,
1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
his liking. It would be interesting to
1946 DESOTO deluxe, 4 door sedan. Like observe a student reading “Applied
new, radio &amp; heater.
At Fure Oil StaUses of the Differential and Integral
tion, Waukegan
Ave., Highwood.
Calculus,” with 60,000
noisy fans
CAN
use
several
women
for
part
time cheering the Orange and Blue up and
work.
Pleasant working conditions, good
down the gridiron.
wages.
See Bob Hastings, bindery foreAnother and still stranger housing
man,
SINGER
FRINTING
CO.,
Green
Bay Rd., just South of Central Ave.
predicament
involves
two students
who pitched a tent in the universitv
quadrangle, a two-block long park at
Adjustments, or corrections of error,
the center of campus.
on Advertiser’s written copy, not the
BUTCHERS
WANTED:
apprentices.
See Mr.
Central
Ave., H. P.

Journeymen
and
George Miller, 500
Wednesday
after-

fault of the advertiser will be made by
correct publication without charge, only
if we are notified immediately following
publication.
Cancellations
must be made
before
38 p.m.
Tuesday
for
Highland
Park
News
to be effective the same
week,
On
Telephone
ads
adjustment
is
made
only
on
errors
in
address
or
phone number reported immediately.
Copy is accepted only with the understanding that this paper assumes no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical or mechanical
error.
Reply to Real Estate and Situations
Wanted may be made by phone as well
as by letter.
To reply to such advertisements
phone
H.P.
4500,
4501
or
4502
Ad
Dept.
Your. name,
address
and
phone
number
will be placed
at
once in the box of the advertiser.
The
Wanted
Ads
with
BOX
NUMBERS
identity of any Box Number advertiser
or

any

want

ads
the

information

will

not

protection

be

not

contained

disclosed.

of

our

in

advertisers

to blind ads
will not be deunless the release card is preReplies
will be mailed
upon

request.

LAKE FOREST FLOWER FARM
Lake

7-8

___________________}

DECORATING

700 LATE TO CLASSIFY

replies
livered
sented.

GARDENS — LAWNS
Hauling Dirt and Manure
Annual and Perennial Plants
Pansies

Highway

between

&amp;

fact,

Champaign, shop around and have
some freedom in choosing living quar-

WALL
WASHING
Window Washing
Storms and. Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
R.F.D. No. 1, Box 246-A
Libertyville, [linois
Grayslake 5414

For

LANDSCAPING

Skokie

or

of

HENNING O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North
Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, Ill.
Tel. Longbeach 2404.
Fully insured

Jr.

FLAGSTONE.
TOP
SOIL,
HUMUS,
CINders,
screenings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
down, power saw for hire; general hauling
and
welding.
Tel.
H.P.
3981
or
8785.
John Tazioli.

North

a.m.

PAINTING

SERVICE

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More
=
Vine
Ave., Highland
Park
M. Pre
E. O. Inman
Tel. i "P. 5676
Tel. H. P. 89
186-J-19-tf

966
606.
most
cars.
ness.

7-8

fe

MODERNE DECORATING
SERVICE

$

ACT QUICKLY
LIMITED SUPPLY

Write

Tel.

Street

SIZES
BATTERIES
FOR ALL
CARS

freezer.

PERCY: H.. PRIOR,
Photographer

Packard Dealer
SAVE $ -- SAVE $
SAVE

farm

BUSINESS

reasonable.
Park.

i

Between

CHANCES

Not too long ago, students enrolled
in University of Illinois could look
forward to four years of almost decent housing facilities. As a matter

WINDOWS, FLOORS, WOODWORK
Windows
and woodwork
washed.
Floors
waxed.
Storm
Windows
taken
down.
Screen Put up
ERIC
STURTZ
-- JOE "BENSON
Lake
Forest
2051

P.

WANTED
retail outlet to accept dealCLASS
A
consumer
rated

opportunity.
E-35.

UPRIGHT
Adam
Schaff piano, good condition;
coffee
table;
occ.
table.
1917
Northmoor Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.P. 1514.

COMPLETE
Trap drum outfit,
21 McGovern Ave., Highland

H.

BUSINESS
Progressive
ership
for

SALE

DOGS-

POINT
Siamese
kittens, registered
and $30. Tel. H.P. 336 or 120 Syca-

evening,

Glencoe.

“Grane CHAIN TINE
pile
Delivered and Erected ©
*
For Estimates
Tim Stodder
804 Central Ave.
Tel. H.P. 3415

DACHSUND
PUPFIES:
Three
brown,
female.
514 S. Genesee, Waukegan.

April 30, all day Thursday, May 1. North
Shore Methodist
Church,
Greenleaf and

- Hazel

CATS,

one 26- in.
211 Vine

Right is reserved to revise or accept
copy
subject
to publication
rules,
.
To place your ad, phone H. P. 4500,
4501, or 4502.
The office is open Tuesday until 5:30
p.m.
Ads forwarded by mail should be
addressed
to
59
S. St.
Johns
Ave.,
Highland Park.
Tuesday,
5:00
p.m.
Deadline on all Classified Ads
RATES:
Minimum
Charge $1.10 for
20 words or less.
Additional words up
to 55 words will be 5 cents each.
All
words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All
classified
display
ads
1 inch
or
more are charged at the agate line rate.

ae

Deerfield-Bannockburn
‘Deerfield-Bannockburn
department

answered

this

past

one

Brick

Silence is the safest respondent for
all the contradiction that arises from
impertinence, vulgarity, or envy.
—Zimmermann

week,

Co.

on

the wrong
rail truck

at

two

the

Wednesday,

other, at the C.
Chestnut street,
William Hertel
intendent of the
narrowly escaped
when freight cars

e

volunteer

fire

calls

National
and

the

J. Killian home, 705
on Friday.
Sr., assistant superNational Brick Co.,
injury, Wednesday,
were switched onto

tracks,
which

hitting a converted
he was operating.

Hertel
jumped
clear,
leaving
his
glove caught in the controls, ‘which
burned when the gasoline from the
truck

was

ignited.

At the C. J. Killian home an overheated
refrigerator
motor,
caused
sparks

and

damage,

smoke,

on

but

no appreciable

Friday.

Albert Krause

Taken by Death
Word has reached Deerfield of the
death of Albert Krause last week
in Chicago. The Krause family and
their six children, Betty, Ruth, Jane,
Marian,

Look upon each day as the whole of
life, not merely a section; and enjoy
and improve the present without wishing through haste to rush on to another.
—Ruskin

Fire

Department Answers 2 Calls

1014
in

the

and

Gail,

and

Deerfield
home

Mrs.

R.

road
now

M.

Richard,

for

lived

many

occupied

at

years,
by

Mr.

of

Dr. .

Harvey. \

Tonsilectomy

Sharon

Spriggs,

daughter

and Mrs. V. W. Spriggs of Warrington road, underwent a tonsillectomy
on Saturday at the Highland Park

hospital.

j

�| Deerfield

YOU SAVE PORE EVERYDAY

Church News

AT JEWEL’S NEW LOW
(REGULAR PRICES!

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
Rev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.

Sunday
Masses:
7, 8:30,
10,
11:30.
Daily
Masses:
6:30
and
8:15
a.m.
Saturday,
7:30
p.m.
Confessions.
eae
April
25—
p.m. Card party at parish
hall.

May

4—

First
Communion
class.
SUNDAY,
May
11—
Holy
Name
breakfast
for

PURE GRAPE JAM.... * 29°“
SPAGHETTI with meat halls....-EDWARD'S

mothers.

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Boezlter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace
SUNDAY,

April.

27—

9:45
a.m.
Church
school.
Classes
for
age
groups.
:
10:55
a.m.
Morning
worship
service.
The
Bethlehem
choir
will
sing
under
the
direction
of Mrs.
Ambrose
Cox.
The
pastor
will
preach
on
the
theme—‘Stars
in
the Night
of Suffering.”
all

7

p.m.

The

meet.
Mr.
in charge.

Church

Arthur,

WEDNESDAY,
7:30
tice.

p.m.

THURSDAY.

will

9:45

11

choir

will

league

MARY

for

from
8 to 5 years
of age.
11 a.m.
Morning
worship.
7 p.m,
Tuxis
society.

April

Girl
and
scheduled.

28—

Boy

Scout

meet

troops

ST.

EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH
638 Waukegan Road
Phone
Deerfield
858
Rev. Hugo Leinberger, Pastor

ing

9:30
at

April

24—

a.m. Regional
Woman’s
Guild meetSt. Feter’s
church
in Northbrook.

7 p.m. Chamber of
the church.
FRIDAY, April 25—

Commerce

dinner

7 p.m. Youth
Fellowship
travels
hurst
College
to see
the
Theatre
tion
of “‘The Royal
Family.”

SATURDAY,
8

p.m.

church.
and

April

Phil

lecture

9:30

club

Johnson

on

his

April

a.m.

to ElmProduc-

28—

Fellowship

SUNDAY,

at

meets

will

recent

at

show

trip

the

movies

to

Europe.

27—

Sunday

school.

A

new

pro-

gram
of visual education will be inaugurated with a film entitled, ‘““West of the
Date Line” telling of missionary activity
in the Pacific.
10:45

weekly
adult
2

a.m.

Morning

children’s

sermon.
p.m.
Young

Plaines

for

worship

message

Spring

People

Youth

as

7:30

p.m.

THURSDAY,
1:15

p.m.

April

Choir

Miss

the
Des
Nor-

Meyer,
Miss
Berning
will

at

the

church.

1—

Woman’s

Going Away

the

30—

rehearsal

May

as

travel
to
Rally.
Mr.

bitt
Devine,
Miss
Helene
Mertha
Bock,
and
Miss
June
conduct
the
worship
service.

WEDNESDAY,

with

well

Guild.

to School

Jane

daughter

of
at
at-

tend
next

Stephens

college

in

Missouri

George,

daughter

year.

Miss
of

Gauntlett,

the

Peggy

Jo

William

D..Georges,

is

en-

rolled for the University of Colorado
at Boulder and will probably enter
the

summer

LLB. 49°

,

CAN

term.

Home From Hawaii
James Hook
came
in from Oahu,
Hawaii, last week and expects to be

released from the army very soon.
He is a grandson of the Carl Horenbergers of Wilmot road and a son
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Hook
(Catherine Horenberger), now living
in Rockton, Ill.

LAST DROP
HOUSE

DRIP OR

REG. GRIND
STRAINED

BEECHNUT

Baby Foods..3 srr; 20°

CARNATION, ?ET, BORDEN

Evap.

Milk.

ASSORTED

POWDERS

2cans 25°

exes, 19°
LIBBY STRAINED

Baby Foods..3 jars 20°

OVEN-READY—BALLARD

Biscuits____..... 2 PKGS. 23°

a

MULLIN'S BARBECUE

wm

Cee.

DEMARTINI ASSORTED

Mixed Nuts...‘crx 29°
FOR SALADS AND

DESSERTS

} Grays Lake Gelatin

540°
THE SOAP

the
Ward
J. Gauntletts,
senior
Highland Park High school, will

60°

OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN

Camay _....
FOR

WASHING

Sofwash
BETTER

THAN

BARS

DISHES

___..... exe, 21°

ESOAP

POWDER

Gold Dust. io aa

Cc.

C

i

; 46-07.
e

*

@

YOUR CHOICE OF
TWO PATTERNS

JEWEL

EXTRA-VALUE
ait h

EXCESS FAT AND BONE REMOVED BEFORE WEIGHING
FLAT BONE—ROUND BONE—BOSTON CUT

BEEF POT ROAST

Central

Ave.

Roger Williams
Ave.

*-:
PRICE

QUALITY GUARANTEED

LB.

gp,

Cc

Round or Swiss STEAK. . .. 59°

ARMOUR

STAR

SLAB BACON. .*1.37"... .. 59°
PURE BEEF, NOTHING

ADDED

Hamburger

READY TO SEASON

2 .;.65¢

§ JEWEL

OSCAR MAYER OR ARMOUR STAR

Braunschweiger

,, 49¢ $ 2485.

SUNSHINE

Krispy Crackers

AMERICA'S

AND SERVE

MEAT

LOAF

;

$493

69°

3 LBS.

Ke. BS

.....

FINEST

Swift's Cleanser

.

9

C/

I 1S

93

Fleecy White Bleach. . 2 .3:; 25°
Wallpaper Cleaner .. . 2 ca; 25°
DEWKIST

TASTY ALLGREEN

Broecoli __
2

DELICIOUS

519

445

©

©

©

FROZEN FRESH FOODS

EVER

Lifebuoy_....
Fl.

®

DECORATED

,

p

©

NO. 2i/| 79°

@

OR FLORIDAGOLD

COFFEE

|}

PAUL’S

THURSDAY,

DUNBAR

GOOD TO THE
MAXWELL

;

as

i

THURSDAY,
May 1—
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

sccaciliniaiietilhcitlan tution: &lt;etajeeretienciiageationctntlaniganitiieae entail nttyatitnel tiemtasaninanlanaitayinaliie satel cp

MONDAY,

@

Cc

eee

TENDER YOUNG

FULL OF FLAVOR®

SUGAR ADDED
VITAMIN RICH

children

©

"3

JARS

PATCH

BEAUTIFULLY

school.

kindergarten

,

©

¢

16-OZ.

VALLEY

GARDEN
bowling

15-OZ.
JARS

e

e

e

«

THEY'RE DELICIOUS

FRUIT COCKTAIL
SWEET GREEN PEAS
ORANGE JUICE
GLASS TUMBLERS

prac-

27—

Church

Sunday

BEETS

IN SUGAR SYRUP

Bethlehem

April

a.m.

a.m.

NELLIE'S

DICED MIXED FRUITS

FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ev. B. E. Vanderbeek,
Minister
Manse:
1024
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
SUNDAY,

AUNT

CHERRY

be

1—

The

BOY-AR-DEE

SLICED

will

30—

Bethlehem

May

6:45 p.m.
will meet.

Board

superintendent,

April

The

School

CHEF

a)
—

SUNDAY.

a&gt;

HOLY

MIXED

XC" 23°

10-OZ.

Vegetables... hxc 20°
TENDER FLAVORFUL

12-OZ.

-

10-OZ.

GARDEN FRESH

12-02.

px.

23°

Sweet

pic.

23°

Cauliflower.
Peas.

FOOD

JEWEL

TABLE

READY

DESSERTS &amp; SALADS
CRUSHED

PINEAPPLE &amp; SLICED BANANAS
IN LEMON GELATIN

SLICED ees

. eo

IN LIME

Peach-Pear
Delight
Oz.
9

12-

CTNS.

99°

é

STORES

�“ALCYON |=
Highland Park

TELEPHONE

J, THU.,

H.

P.

Officials

2400

April 24-25-26

FRI, SAT.
Double

Feature

“The

Program

Waukegan

Verd ict’
;

SUN., MON., TUE., WED., April 27-30
Deanna Durbin, Tom Drake,
Bendix

.

“Ill Be Yours”
News

ond

Selected

FRI.,

Gene

“Take it easy, Milkwagon—you’re
way out in front—just like, the
Tower Casino.”
Spaghetti
- Ravioli
- Steak

TOWERenwors
CASINO

Shorts

:
THURS.,

}

May 1-2-3 |

SAT.

Tierney,

News

and

Selected

Short

Subjects

HIGHWOOD,

|

ILLINOIS

LAST DAY THURSDAY
Dennis Morgan, Jack
Janis

Deerpath
FOREST,

ILLINOIS

Ken

\

| LOVE”

Lupino,

Robt.

Vickers

SUN.,

San Quentin

Added:Color
TUES.,

WICKED LADY”
James Mason
Margaret Lockwood

Opening
Taken

April 25-26
MacLane

Robert

King,

Bruce

Man

I Love”

Cartoon

&amp;

News

Events

Park

Your

P\CEECRAEACMH

Carney

“LOVE

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN
Continuous

TUES., WED.,

ANDY

Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone,
Lina Romay, Bonita Granville
in new Hardy Family Fun

“Love Laughs at
Andy Hardy”

April 27-30

“THE RAZOR'S EDGE”

Tyrone Power, Gene
FRI.,

SAT.

May

Ist-3rd

“LAST OF THE MOHICANS”
Randolph

Scott, Binnie

Barnes

SATURDAY

May

SPECIAL KIDDIES MATINEE
One

Showing

Only—At

3rd

PARTY
2

p.m.

“Five Little Peppers and How
They Grew”
3 CARTOONS &amp; COMEDY
4

Advance tickets now on sale
NOTE: Regular performance starts
.
'
.
. — :30¢
to 6:30

at

SP
ats

Sida

WS Nie

teaviek

nt

&gt;

aia is

the

circuit

the names

the

local

hl

nike

AS

court

and

of all delin-

papers

and

the

Eea - quality:

ln te Sub il

other

townships

in solving

this prob-

until

taken,

participated

THANK

YOU!

cere

ICE

appreciation

and

CREAM

Henry

BEST

BY

ANY

Bly Side

for
.

ROBERT

SUNDAY

4 Days
MITCHUM

(He’s a New Favorite)
TERESA WRIGHT
in thrill packed romance of the
wild west.
—

P. O. Box 215.

TEST

“PURSUED”

THE JUKE BOX
961

thanks

for the splendid support given
to me in my re-election to the
office of Police Magistrate in
the recent election.

Tierney,

Baxter
STARTS

THURS.,

in

action

have
lem.

NOW thru SATURDAY

April 24, 25, 26

Ann

1:30

in

I wish to express to the electors of Highland Park my sin-

Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone

=

from

or

red

605

LAUGHS AT
HARDY”

5UN., MON.,

Entertainment

GENESEE

Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun.,, 1:30
THURS., FRI., SAT.

Best

eater

EAL

1

“Genius At Work”

Highland

6025

Oh, 80 delicious!

of Divorce’

PLUS
Brown, Alan

Photos

in Home

BSE

Alda,

Bennett

tried

amounts they owe.
4—Send an explanation of the distribution of taxes in each personal property bill, just as real estate bills explain
it.
5—Educate the public through the
local newspapers, editorials and news,
of the advisability of paying these delinquent personal property taxes before
prosecution steps begin. Explain the
huge costs added to their bills, if
brought into the circuit court, of which
the filing fee, just the beginning step
is $15. All costs are added to the delinquents’ tax bills.
6—Insist on a receipt for current
personal. property tax before vehicle
tags are issued to automobile owners.
(This would not help Lake Forest, as
it has no vehicle tax.)
7Insist that taxing bodies, such as
school boards, get lists of delinquents
from the county office and by personal
calls and telephone, start a campaign
in each and every district.
These and other suggestions were
made, but no resolutions were passed

'

Events

being

judgments are being entered against
many delinquents.
Because of the length of time involved in these collections, the states
attorney’s office has suggested that the
public be informed that these taxes will
be collected. To speed up the delinquent
tax collections, these suggestions were
made from! the audience:
1—Continue to ,prosecute and get
judgments against” all delinquent personal property tax payers.
2—Set up a special office in connection with the states’ attorney’s office, to file the cases in circuit court,
and to prosecute; also to answer all
inquiries concerning personal property
3—Advertise

Special

P.

tax cannot
_
refused to
for years
to pay it.
completely -

erroneous, explained the states attorney’s office. Collection cases are now

quents

No deposits are Required
Until Proofs Are Shown
H.

Rumor tells many that this
be collected; that many have
pay personal property taxes
and that they do not have
That is a false rumor,

taxation.

397 North Ave.
Highland Park

Children’s

WED., THURS. Apr. 29-30-May
Sharyn Moffett, Regis Toomey

Wally

IGLENCOE

purpose

doz. 5x7 for $16.95

‘April 27-28

“Child

- In Technicolor
Yvonne DeCarlo, Brian Donlevy
Jean Pierre Aumont

the

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

THU., FRI, SAT.,
May 1-2-3
‘SONG OF SCHEHERAZADE’
ica

for

Members of the tax collecting body
told of the increasing number of people

Anderson

News

Lupino,

Andrea

“THE

PLUS
Dusty

Curtiss,

MON.

Ida

27-30

Barton

Added—Latest

Alda

Apr.

Martha

Tierney,

“The

| SUN. thru WED.,

10,

Singing on the Trail”

SAT., Apr. 24-25-26

“THE MAN
Ida

April

participate.

In Technicolor
Selected Short Subjects

FRI., SAT.
Lawrence

TEL. L. F. 2106
THU., FRL,

Paige,

APRIL 24
Carson,

‘'The Time, The Place, and
the Girl”
Also

LAKE

township

THE
HIGHLAND PARK
STUDIO

BARTLETT
THEATRE

Tyrone Power

“The Razor's Edge”’

Late

Deerfield

of discussing the problem of delinuent taxes.
Representatives
of all
taxing bodies in the five townships
bordering the lakefront
and West
Deerfield township were invited to

Betty “Co-Ed”

io”

William

of

and trustees of the Highland Park
Mosquito Abatement district attended
a meeting called by the Delinquent
Tax committee of Lake county
in

|

: | Added: Latest’ News Events, “Lady Said

sonal property taxes.

JF ee Delinquents at
Waukegan Meeting

Waukegan

Ave.,

NOW

Highland

Park

OPEN
SANDWICHES
PIES

SUNDAES
SODAS
Phone

1508

A.

Hansen

�PERFECT

Buschs diamond and watch sale features exceptional values,
especially priced for YOU. In our large stocks you will find
lasting and excellent gifts at the price you want to pay.
Lowest

cash

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on

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$

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ONG

ER
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HS

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ORY

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5

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wigan

Ab)

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3B

7

75¢ Weekly
Ladies’ or Gents’ 17-jewel Bulova
watch.
Neatly
designed
small size 10-k natural rolled

gold

SEE SPECIALS

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plate

u
3=—_ sz

IN OUR WINDOWS

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i

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Immediate Delivery—No Carrying Charge

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e

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Sparkling perfect center
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matching engagement and wedding rings—you find this three

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diamond
engagement and five
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in all respects.
18-k white or
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No. 911.
Diamonds

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to

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Bring

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Choice

75¢ Weekly
Ladies’ or
Gents’
shockproof
Benrus watch. Small size 10-k
natural rolled gold plate cases,

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Also

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37

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St.

Stores

25¢ Weekly

�BRIGHT homes

make LIGHT work!

S wing is more fun when your light is
right! All the tiny details of eye-tiring
needlework become sharp and clear with
adequate light. Get a supply of bright
new light bulbs today . . fill every empty
socket and replace all the wrong-sized
and burned-out bulbs lying around your
house. Then see if threading a needle

homemaker needs the best light possible
for the hours spent in food preparation,

cooking, and dishwashing . .. a kitchen
that is well lighted is a ‘must’ in the
modern

home.

Check through your house for empty
sockets, wrong-sized and burned-out light

bulbs. Fill every socket with the proper-

isn’t easier!
Proper light helps you do a better job
on all your housework. Let 2 corner be
a shadow-catcher and it will be a dustcatcher too. Dusting isn’t hard work
wh2n you can see shining results as you
go! Crisp, neat ironing is done morc

sized bulb today and make yours a brighter.

quickly under a good, bright light. Every

hange service
there is no charge for
replacing ad
izes of
standard, burned-out
bulbs marked PS i of NI”
or “Renew

cheerier home for the whole family!

TAKE ADVANTAG
E
LIBERAL
RENEWAL
e all customers on light
bulb exc
al Service”.

OF
Policy

�</text>
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                    <text>Wilmot
In

the

front

row,

1947-1948

officers,

Mothers’
taken

by

Club

James

Officers, Past and Present

Kilcoyne,

are

left to right,

Mrs.

Harry

Thomson,

Mrs.

Eldon

Holmquist,

Mrs.

John
W.

Silence, Mrs. Fred Baarsch, and Mrs. Harry Williams.
In the back row, 1946-1947 officers, taken by Ezra Smith, are, Mrs.
John
C. Darling, Mrs. Harry Williams.
Mrs. R. D. Newell, retiring president, was

Thursday, April

17, 1947

‘

Silence,
Mrs.
not present.

Arthur

Wolter,

5c

Mrs.

Edward

per Copy

Reagan,

Mrs.

�Re

Tongea Na
ea
:

¥

eneec enna ee enven

Shaan

ee

PCR

tier otic aie Cats

PG

é

Cy

Giant Sale! $1.19 PERFECTION

OLD CREAM —

aI

ie ae Ae

ae

ea

pound &amp;

“DRUGS wits a REPUTATION”
URSDAY

FRIDAY and
SATURDAY
Age

|

c

t
en

jar.

TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES

ve.

|

Extra-rich .. . it cleanses,
softens and refines DRY
skin in one application.

RESERVED

A

Cc.

es

Look to Walgreen’s for Better Values

cesta.

50c

BRUSH
Coupon

‘1 LUCKY

PHILLIPS’
75° MILK of @
MAGNESIA

Bottle

MENNEN
SKIN
BALM

VEGETABLE

i

4

rd

‘0c

| ‘
|

5 O1

mae

TIGER
|
HAIR TONIC

55° LADY
| ESTHER
4 Face Powder G2

43°

6c

Baie

|
Pint

35¢ Lb.

Bottle

WITCH
HAZEL

At-Home HAIR

19°

BORIC

CARE

TON] HOME
Creme Cold

GILLETTE
BLUE
BLADES

25

Wave Kit...

yourself
It takes
a cold
beauty

right
but 2
wave
salon.

Deluxe, with

Ton! Ps

[ie
Hi

$9

Plastic Curlers

HALO

A

as

hj Fj

j

|

sad
va

(Limit 1).

:

oeTT)
cal

Mt WEEE}

Thrifty

PORTRAIT

Carton

50 BOOK
MATCHES

SHAMPOO

2:25°

No dulling film! 3%-ounce bottle . .

10: 49°

19°

wy

a

&amp;

CRYSTALS

PERMANENT

The creme cold wave you give
at home... so quick and easy!
to 3 hours and looks smart as
permanent from your favorite

ACID

POWDER
or

(Limit 1)

a

KIT

(Limit

2)

Home cold wave permanent set....

RAYVE

Try Kay Daumit

MAGNESIA
TOOTH
PASTE

LUSTRE
CREME
Shampoo.

20%

Cold wave you give at home. Kit.

Federal

Excise

Tax

on

Toiletries,

and

Wearever

(12)

Machine

in7)

Jar Rubbers
Pullman

(14)

Asbestos

(30)

Whisk

Aluminum

Oil Can

Cleaner

75¢ Value
2

15c

for
2

10¢ Package _

for

Brooms

«Spe

*

Yee.

|.

16°

(Limit 1)

SALE
(Slightly

Creams

10¢

(43)

Ladonna

15¢

(28)

Solitair Makeup

5¢

(6)

Barbara

Gould

Soiled

Packages)

2 for Sic

50c

49¢

89c
Cream

$150.

$2.00

75¢
75¢

39¢

(14)

Lentheric Liq. Make-up Base $1.00

Se

(28)

Tweed

-49c

(10)

Peggy Sage Fast Set Nail Polish $1.00 7Qc

Slippers %¢ Value _
Pot Holders

.

Billfolds

(Amt.)

| Amt.

| (6)

Luggage

Quarter-grain

SACCHARIN
TABLETS

CLEARANCE

SPRING
(12)

100

GLORY

CROWNING

+4

4-oz. jar.

29°

SHAMPOO

Creme ... not soap, nor oil! 6-oz. jar

|...

e¥chandise selling in Illinois for 15c
“To thé prices’ oft all’
to 2% because of the Illinois Retailers Occupation Expense.”

and

over . there

Face

will be added

Powder $1.00

an amount

_

approximately

equivalent

|

gs

�ie
oe

Volume

22,

Number

‘Thursday, April 17, 1947

3

Wilmot School Bond Issue for
Larger Building Up for Vote

- Begin Suits On
All Delinquent
Personal Taxes
Representing
the
Mosquito Abatement
’

linquent

last

tax

Highland Park
district at a de-

discussion

in

Waukegan

Thursday evening were Mrs. Wil-

liam Stupple of Highland Park and
Mrs. Carl T. Anderson of Deerfield,
the latter being secretary of this district. Also in attendance was West
Deerfield township’s supervisor, Arthur
M. Baker.
The Delinquent Tax committee of
Lake County, Ill., issued invitations to

all taxing bodies in the five townships
‘bordering
Deerfield

the

lake

township

front

and

West

(ours),

to

attend

this meeting in the Circuit court room
of the court house in Waukegan on
April 10 at 8 p.m.
Dan

Hentges,

Lake

Forest, supervisor

of Shields township, acted as chairman.
Members of the tax collecting body
told of the increasing number of people
who are evading the payment of personal property taxes.
Rumor tells many that this tax cannot
be collected; that many have refused to
pay personal property taxes for years
and that they do not have to pay it.
That is a false rumor, completely
erroneous, explained the states attorney’s office. Collection cases are now
being tried in the circuit court and
judgments are being entered against
many delinquents.
Because of the length of time involved in these collections, the states
attorney’s office has suggested that the
- public be informed that these taxes will
be collected. To speed up the delinquent
tax collections, these suggestions were

made

from) the audience:

1—Continue
to
judgments against

prosecute and get
all delinquent per-

sonal

payers.

property

2—Set
nection

up
with

tax

a

special

the

office

states’

in

attorney’s

conof-

fice, to file the cases in circuit court,
and to prosecute ; also to answer all
inquiries concerning P rsonal property
taxation.

3—Advertise the names of all delinquents in the local
_ amounts they owe.

papers

and

the

4—Send an explanation of the distribution of taxes in each personal property bill, just as real estate bills explain
it.

§

Educate

the

public

through

the

local newspapers, editorials and news,
of the advisability of paying these delinquent personal property taxes before
prosecution steps begin. Explain the
huge costs added to their bills, if
brought into the circuit court, of which
the filing fee, just the beginning step
is $15. All costs are added to the delinquents’ tax bills.
6—Insist on a receipt for current
personal property tax before vehicle
tags are issued to automobile owners.

(This would not help Lake Forest, as
it has no vehicle tax.)
7—Insist that taxing bodies, such as
school boards, get lists of delinquents
from the county office and by personal
ne, ane a ee

A special election will
Saturday, April 19, from

7 p.m. in the

Wilmot

be held on
12 noon to

school, District

110, for the purpose of authorizing
the school board to construct an addition to the present building and the
issuing of bonds of cover the cost.

ELECTION ©
_ RETURNS ©
School and village elections werk:
reported to have no opposition, but

C. C. Livingston New
President, DeerfieldNorthbrook Rotarians

Deerfield’s
exception.

Charles C. Livingston was elected
president
of
the
Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary club and will take over
his duties on July 1, with the following staff: William E. Sheehan, vice
president; Robert Corrado, treasurer;

A

village

election

was

Deerfield Village
write-in campaign staged

last moment

gave

the

the

at the

Deerfield vil-

This bond issue is necessary to inlage election a surprise upset, Tuescrease the size of the building to
day, with the result that Homer G.
meet certain state requirements in
Cazel, incumbent, was defeated for
regard to physical education. The
re-election by Harold Peterson, the
gymnasium will also serve as a much
write-in candidate. 509 voters turned
and Dr. Edward Munro, secretary.
needed auditorium.
Retiring president will be Walter out.
More classroom space is needed and |
Unofficial results are:
:
ee,
O’Neill of Northbrook, who becomes
the toilet facilities are to be increased.
a director with Lewis Russell, and
For
trustees:
James
King,
437
©
Sketches of the plans have been
Harold R. Vant.
votes; Eric Banfield, 429 votes; Har-made by the architect, Stanley AnMr. Livingston, president of Liv- old Peterson, 243 votes; Homer Cazel, —
derson, of Lake Forest, but no coningston Plastics corporation, plastics 184 yotes.
The three highest were
©
tracts have been let until after the
molders and playing card manufac- elected.
bond issue is put to a vote on Saturturers of Northbrook, has been a
For police magistrate, Dan Hunt,
day.
Rotarian for many years.
He was a unopposed, received 370 votes.
Who Can Vote?
member of Rotary Club No. 1 for
Bannockburn Village
Warren C. Darling, secretary of the over eight years and served there as
With no opposition the customary
board of directors, states that all president of his group and chairman
citizens of Schoo] District 110 may of the International Service commit- quiet election was held with the following
slate
elected:
Edwin
M. |
vote if they have lived in Illinois for tee.
White, village president; clerk, V. T.
|
one year; in Lake county for 90 days;
Mertz; magistrate, M. M. Dunbar; |
and the school district for 30 days.
trustees, Kenneth F. Towler, Frank
Renters, as well as property owners
M. Conley, and R. C. Farquhar.
are qualified to vote, provided they After Brief liiness
)
Deerfield Grammar School
are citizens of the United States and
Fred W. Kersten, 74, of Chicago,
For Deerfield Grammar school, dis- —
have established the necessary length
formerly of Deerfield, passed away trict 109, board of education, 42 votes
of residence.
on Monday eveningat his home in were
cast thus:
Vernon
J. Giss,
School Is Crowded
Chicago, following an illness of flu. president, l-year, 42 votes;
George 2
At present there is no place for
Funeral services will be held Friday Jacobs, member,
3-year, 39 votes;
physical
education,
a state requirein Chicago with burial in Graceland. Margaret
(Mrs.
James). Tibbetts,
|ment ; no
space large enough for
He is survived by his wife, and two member, 3-year term, 38 votes; J. B.
plays,
graduation
exercises,
music
children, Mrs.
G.
F. Thomas
Jr. Carson, member, 2-year, 39 votes;
department;
not enough
toilets and
(Louise Kersten)
of Crystal Lake, William Jacob, 2-year term, 38 votes. a
last,
but
not least,
an
insufficient
Ill., and Charles of California, and
This is a 7-member board.
Mrs. |
number of classrooms.
four grandchildren. Mrs. Thomas and R. G. Heupel and C. E. Morgan are |
Last week’s Review published the Charles Kersten are children of his
the other members.
mt
legal notice, which describes the elecfirst wife, the late Susan Pettis KerHigh School
tion in detail.
sten.
The proposition to increase taxes
The board of directors: Mrs. Marfor an additional $40,000. for raising —
tha Marx, president; W. C. Darling,
teachers’ salaries, was approved in —
secretary; and L. G. Hurlburt, mem- Final Report of Red Cross
Roll Call Lists $2,749.21
"
all districts (Lake Bluff, Lake Forest,
ber.
f
From Deerfield-Bannockburn
Highwood, Highland Park, Deerfield

Fred Kersten, 74, Dies

Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture Is
Lake County Federation of
Women’s Clubs’ President
Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture, president of the Deerfield Woman’s club,
has had a signal honor bestowed upon
her. She was elected president of the
Lake County Federation of Women’s
clubs on April 2, when that group
met at the Libertyville Methodist
church, with the Libertyville Woman’s
club as hostesses.
Matt

Hoffmann

Back

at Work

Matt Hoffmann has returned from
Presbyterian hospital, Chicago, where
he was a patient for two weeks and
is now back at his work.
Mr. Hoffmani is in his 51st year as a barber.

The Deerfield-Bannockburn ‘annual
Red Cross roll call, directed by Mrs.
John Vieregg, received a quota of
$1,500 for 1947. This was topped by
184.20 per cent with a total of $2,749.21 collected.

Fund headquarters. are now moved

to 529 S. Wabash avenue, and further contributions should be sent to
this Chicago address.

Homer

lem.
oY aFU
Aasadis

school board of education.
AO

Township School Trustee
Samuel Rosenthal was elected to —
succeed Herbert Lautmann and received 71 votes. V. William Briddle,
a write-in candidate, received 5 votes

for

1-2-3

G. Cazel, road and bridge

commissioner,

announces

the

an-

nual “CLEAN UP WEEK” with
the dates of pick-up as follows:
_ Tuesday,

April
April

29—Northeast
30—Southeast

mswelday;
May
2—Northwest
Saturday, May 8—Woodland

secsec-

section.
Park.

Deerfield road and the railroad
tracks are the dividing lines for

the four section, excluding Woodland Park. ¢

by a vote of 707

Highwood.

Polling

places

om

were

open in Highwood, Highland Park,
and Deerfield. Deerfield cast 15 votes

CLEAN-UP WEEK
April 29-30, May

Bannockburn)

to 100. Deerfield’s 42 voters gave 32
“ves,” 9 “no,” and 1 not voting.
&amp;
Philip Speidel was reelected, without opposition, a member of the high

in

Wednesday,

in-each and every district.
These and other suggestions were
made, but no resolutions were passed
or action taken, until other townships
have menor
in oe
this prob--

and

Mr.

Rosenthal,

for

township ©

school trustee.
Wilmot School
he
Pe
Mrs. Fred Marx was reelected to ©
succeed herself as a director of the

three-member

school

board.

Other —

directors are Warren C. Darling and —
L. G. Hurlburt.
:
Bannockburn Grammar School
At the Bannockburn grade school,
district 106, election on Saturday eve-

ning Mrs. J. B. Cleaver was reelected
a director and clerk. The vote was
the largest cast in the district in many

�DEERFIELD |
REVIEW
Thursday,

April

17,

1947.

Vol.

22,

MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS
THE GERALD F. CLAMPITT FAMILY

Deerfield Forum
Gift to Fire Department

No.

Fire Chief Russell Batt received the
following letter with a substantial gic
check:
Deerfield Fire Department
Deerfield, Illinois
Gentlemen:
We wish to take this opportunity to
‘thank you again for the marvelous
work you all did in fighting the fire
at our factory recently. H it had not
been for the remarkabYe way in which
you men cooperated, we are sure we
would have suffered a much greater
loss. We are greatly impressed by your
ef ficiency.
We also wish to extend an extra
thank you to the men that stayed at
the factory all night of the fire.
We are enclosing this check as a
token of appreciation.

3

%

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
Chestnut St., Deerfield,
Illinois
_
Ruth Pettis, Editor
~
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday
745

Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate
— $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone H.P. 4500

year

MEMBER National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press
Association
‘Entered as second-class matter Novem
ber 27, 1944, at the post office at Deer‘ware Illinois,
under
the
Act
of. March
76,°°

Wilmot School, 1847-1947
100 Years Old, Will Celebrate
This is the centennial year of Wilmot
school. How many buildings have risen
on this same site? How many have
saved pictures of these otd school days?
May
we
borrow.
those
pictures?
Bring them to the Deerfield Review
office.’
The
compiete
history of Wilmot
grade school from 1847 to 1928 is
found in “History of Deerfield”. Best
historic accounts of the full 100 years,
written by Wilmot school children, will
appear in later issues of the Deerfield
Review.

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

in

Masonic

TUESDAY, April 22—
1 p.m. Woman’s club annual
eon.
{

Left to right: Mr. Clampitt, Julie Ann, age 4, and
holding their new son, James Brian, age 3 months.
The Gerald F. Clampitt residence
is at 1133 Cherry street, in the northwest section of the village.
It is a
small white cottage,
with
a. welltended yard and garden,—gardening
being one of Mr. Clampitt’s hobbies.
They have lived here for six years.
Mrs. Clampitt is the former Naomi
Smith of Highland Park and an alumof

Highland

activities,

Park

High

and

WEDNESDAY, April 23—
9 a.m. Presbyterian rummage sale
in church.
.
6:30 p.m. Annual Presbyterian congregation meeting.
THURSDAY, April 24—
9 a.m. Presbyterian rummage sale.
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce ladies’
night dinner at St. Paul’s church.
FRIDAY, April 25—
9 a.m. Presbyterian rummage sale.
8 p.m. Holy Cross card party in
parish hall.
8 p.m. Stagers Play (2 nights).
Future Events
May 3—High school spring concert.
May 6—Wilmot
Mothers’
club
luncheon-bridge party.
May 10—Cubs Circus:
1:30 p.m. Parade.
2 p.m. “Big Top” in school gym.
8 p.m. Firemen-Amvets dance at
Briergate clubhouse.
July 11-12-13—Firemen-Amvets carnival.
August 15-16-17—-Legion carnival.

one

of

the

of

Mr.
in

Mrs.

a month

young

Ezra

Smith

Clampitt,

before

the

ar-

James.

Clampitt

grew

Hancock

up

county

on

a

and

farm

attended

schools in Bowen,
Ill, graduating
from high school there in 1929.
He

has

Singer
Park,

been

employed

Printing
for

the

Co.,

past

in

9 years

by

the

Highland
as

a lino-

newspapers,

which

are

printed

here,

are part of his work.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Clampitt have
helped in the bond drives, the Community Chest drives and the Red
Cross roll call.

key

——-

Parents to Assist

Julie Evers, Teen-Ager,
Budding Artist, to Be

The

Cub

Scout
met

.

Cub Scouts Stage
Circus on May 10
the Frank

lunch-

was

commission,
rival

by

type machinist-operator.
The Deerfield Review and the other Pioneer
Publishing Co.’s neighboring weekly

school,

speakers in favor of the DeerfieldHighland Park bus line, at the first
hearing before the Illinois Commerce

rangements

MONDAY, April 21—
8 p.m. Legion auxiliary.

Co.,

Inc.

President

| THE CHURCH PAGE
Photo

class of 1935.
She also attended the
University
of
Chicago.
Although
very busy with her homemaking right
now, Mrs. Clampitt is aware of civic

Temple.

April 18—
Amyets- Post

J. A. Hugh,

na

THURSDAY, April 17—
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
1 p.m. Presbyterian Woman’s association.
2:30 p.m. Deerfield school PTA.
Sam Campbell’s lecture.
8 p.m. Amvets Auxiliary in school.
8 p.m. Eastern
Star
in
Masonic
FRIDAY,
8 p.m.
Temple.

Yours very truly,
Deerfield Woodcraft

committee
Monday

Zartler

home

on

evening

on

arat

Wilmot

road to discuss the big event of the
year,—the circus.
Plans were completed that evening and the date set
for Saturday, May 10.
The circus will open with a parade
at 1:30 p.m., Saturday, May 10, beginning at the Masonic Temple, and
ending
at thé Deerfield
Grammar
schooi,

where

the

“BIG

TOP”

events

will be staged in the gymnasium.
Under the leadership of Harold
Nelson Sr., cubmaster, and Horace W.
Neill, program chairman, the circus
committee will include Mrs. Frank

Zartler, and Mrs. William P. Carroll

Jr., co-managers of the affair; John
Silence, publicity; William Hinchsliff
and Irwin Dasso, decorations; Joseph
King, grounds; Mrs. Warren C. Darling and Mrs. Carroll, concessions; and
Arthur Wolter, parade.
All parents of Cub Scouts will be

working

and

assisting

in the varied

events.

All proceeds will go toward purchase of handicraft matérials for Cubs
and entertainment next season. There
will be no admission fee, but nominal
charges will be made

and games.

for refreshments

On WMAQ
Miss
road,

Julie

Evers

will be one

interview
Hobby

Saturday

Betty
Horse

of

700

Deerfield

of the girls who

Cavanna
Presents

will

on - The

program

at

8:45 a.m. on WMAQ on April 19. In
Miss Cavanna’s book, “Going on Sixteen” the heroine is named Julie and
is a young, aspiring artist, so it
seemed most appropriate to choose
Julie Evers as one of the girls to
interview the popular young author.
“Spurs for Susanna,’ Miss Cavanna’s most

recent

book,

will be the one

from which dramatic excerpts will be
taken for the broadcast
Saturday
morning.
Julie is a student at Highland Park High school.
Betty Cavanna will autogarph
copies of her books in the Hobby
Horse Book Shop at 2 in the afternoon.
Julie Evers is a graduate of the
Deerfield Grammar school and a student at Chicago’s Art Institute.

Holy Cross Mothers’ Club
To Give Card Party April 25
The Mothers’ club’ of Holy
school is planning another card
to take place on Friday, April
8 p.m. in the Holy Cross church
ment.

Cross
party
25, at
base-

To

the Editor:
I wish to express to you my sincerest thanks for the excellent news
coverage you gave to the churches
of Deerfield in that most significant of
seasons,

Holy

Week.

In an age when many think that
“Freedom of Worship” means ‘“Freedom

from

Worship,”

it

is

indeed

refreshing to see such attention being given the work of the church.
With every good wish for the continued success of the Deerfield Review, I remain,
Very Sincerely yours,
Bernard E. Vanderbeek,
Minister,
First Presbyterian Church
Deerfield, Illinois.

Memorial

Services

Held

Sunday for Harold Huhn

Memorial services were held Sunday
afternoon in the Deerfield Presbyterian
church for Harold Huhn, 33, who died
March 27 in Tucson, Ariz. Burial was
ir Union cemetery, North Northfield.
Surviving are his widow, the former
Frances

Jenkins,

his

Priscilla, 10, Donald,
7; his father, John
Deerfield road, and
of Racine, Wis.

three

children,

8, and Richard,
Huhn of West

a brother,

Andrew,
\

Marriage License
A marriage license was issued in Chicago last week to Armyn L. Ballard of
Deerfield and Antoinette Maenz of
Chicago. The Ballards live at Orphans
of the Storm on Saunders road.
In Waukegan last week the following license was issued: Armin Frank
Linden,

Von

Der

Miss

Laura

M.

22,

Deerfield;

and

Butzow, 24, Glenview.

Mrs. Yuh-Tsung Zee New
Visits at Irl Marshall

Home

Mrs. Yuh-Tsung Zee New of Nanking, China, was a guest last week at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Irl H.
Marshall, 1100 Waukegan road. Her
husband and Madam Chiang Kai-shek
are cousins. Mrs. New is a commit- —
tee member of United Nations and is
en

route

to

China.

Peter Kong Ming New, her son, is
a “friend of Irl Marshall Jr. at Dart}mouth

college.

�KNOW
YOUR SCHOOL

“Laplony Ausallary
Receives Thanks for

A series of informative -talks by
the teachers of the Deerfield Grammar school, District 109, very briefly

Gift of Records
At the March meeting of the Deerfield unit of the American Legion

auxiliary,

the

president,

Mrs.

Leslie

Behrens, asked Mrs. Carl Scheer for
suggestions
for gifts to Veteran’s
hospital, Downey, and she told of the
need for albums of phonograph records.
Mrs. Behrens states, “It gives me
great pleasure to have this thank
you letter published.”
Dear Mrs. Behrens:
We
are very grateful for your
generous gift of an album of Strauss
records. No doubt Mrs. Carl Scheer
explained to you the need for this
type of music. The doctor in charge
of our acute section requested that
Strauss waltzes be played for his
patients and our aide was eager to
comply with this request.
She states that the patients seem
to enjoy them and the doctor and
nurse were pleased with their response.
Your kindness is appreciated and
we should also like to take this occasion to express our gratitude for
the splendid service rendered by your
volunteer, Mrs. Carl Scheer, at this
office every Monday evening.
Yours truly
S. M. Amy, Director
Recreation,

Entertainment,

and Special

Services.

Gay Time Promised
At “Fashions &amp; Fun”

Grammar

school

PTA

be

presented

in

months.

These

articles,

have

been

condensed from their talks before the
Deerfield board of education given
earlier
This
series.

in the school year.
is the fourth article

in.

the

_ Third Grade
By

Mrs.

Elizabeth

In the third grade

sary

to teach

Turner

it is still neces-

the. child on

his own

level of development, encouraging
his progress rather
than trying to
pour each individual

into

a

singie

mold.
Reading, where
the individual approach is very
necessary, encompasses the use of
textbooks, as well
as

several

sets

of

library

Elizabeth

newspaper,
and
books, a specially

Turner

prepared

paper, and oral reports
have been read.

on

news-

books

that

In third grade social studies
child is guided in thinking of
wider influences that affect living.

the
the
He

becomes

the

aware

is inviting all
comFun”

There will be a fashion show, down
to earth and gorgeous, too, reports a

PTA member. A real live royal pair
is to be selected (just like “Queen
for a Day” program) with scads of
wonderful gifts.

indirect

of

the

state,

method

of

project

work is used to give the child understanding of the many complexities of
modern civilization.
This year the
third grade began its social studies
activities by the study of birds. The
exploration of migration and making
of migratory maps became a springboard to the study of the world as a
whole; the similarities, common problems, and interdependencies of all
peoples.
There is close correlation
between this program and the language

The

arts.

transition

from

manuscript

to

Interesting prizes of all kinds will longhand writing is made late in third

a
'

be for the audience, too, and there grade.
Spelling is taught with the help
will be hot sandwiches and coffee,
especially attractive to the male half ‘of a work book, by the introduction
of words that havé come up in other
of the family.
“This is no PTA meetin’, but just studies and those most often misplain fun for the moms and pops, so spelled.
get on the band wagon and save
Arithmetic includes a review of the
May 3. Hire a baby sitter and apolo- simple processes already begun; that
gize to the youths, ‘Not for young- is, addition, subtraction, telling time,
sters this time.
—it’s just for us and adds the recognition of fractional
grown-ups,” writes the PTA pub- terms,—halves, quarters, etc. Simple
licity chairman.
forms of measurement, multiplication,
and division are also presented.
Language
entails the writing of
complete sentences, beginning punctuation, some grammar, letter writing,
and both written and oral reports.

Deerfield Unit of
Legion Auxiliary to
Meet at Kapschull's

The April meeting of the Deerfield
unit of the American Legion auxiliary will be held Monday at 8 p.m.
in the home of Mrs. C. C. Kapschull
Sr., 814 Spruce street.
Mrs. Leslie Behrens, president, announces that each Tuesday afternoon

is
©

set

aside

as

“Legion

Auxiliary

Day” at Downey hospital.
Anyone
desiring to help is asked to get in

touch with Mrs. Behrens or Mrs. Carl

Handkerchief

ae

Presbyterian Women 4

Duis

Renneth

Tdi ates |

Shower

Meet Today in Newly ©
Remodeled Basement
Presbyterian

e

re

Engaged

Mrs.

Charles

E. Sugden

of Deer-

field road announces the engagement
of her daughter, Dr. Dorothy Sugden
Davis, to Kenneth Paul Hunter, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Hunter of
Westgate road.
The date for the
wedding will not be set until after
Mrs. Sugden’s return from Florida
the latter part of this month.
Dr. Davis, a practicing physician,
has morning hours in the office of her
brother,
Dr.
C.
R.
Sugden.
Mr.
Hunter, a graduate
of
the
local
schools, is employed in Chicago.
Both the bridegroom-to-be and his
flancee
are interested
in amateur
“Little Theater”
dramatics
of the
Deerfield Stagers.

F. W. Nolde, program chair-

Magician”

to

entertain

the

guests.

The annual business meeting will be
brief with the election of new officers.
The
nominating
committee
includes Mrs. W. J. Loarie, Mrs.
Ward
Gauntlétt,
and
Mrs.
C. EPiper.
Officers to be selected are
president, first vice president, corresponding

secretary,

and

treasurer.

The H. G. Cazels Celebrate
Wedding Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Homer K. Cazel of
Fair Oaks avenue celebrated their 34th
wedding anniversary last Sunday. The
Cazels have two sons, Captain Maurice
Cazel and Edward E. Cazet.
:
Captain‘and Mrs. Maurice Cazel, who
were home for 12 days following their
return from Italy, are now in Atlanta,
Ga., where Capt. Cazel is stationed
with the 3rd army.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Cazel and
their two children live on Springfield
avenue.
Annual

Meeting

The annual meeting of the congregation of the Deerfield Presbyterian
church will be held Wednesday, April
23, beginning with a pot luck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by annual reports of all church departments.

The Past Worth Matrons’ club of the
Deerfield chapter of the Eastern Star
honored Mrs. Edward Klug of Northbrook at a handkerchief shower last
Luncheon-500 Club
Monday evening in the tome of Mrs.
James Wilson of Deerfield road. Mr.
Mrs. John Klemp of Ridge road,
entertain
the
will
and Mrs. Klug have sold their North- ‘Highland Park,
brook home and are moving to Cali- members of her 500-luncheon club on
Wednesday, April 30, at her home.
fornia,
ioe
Be oe |

president, will preside.

The luncheon

is being served by Circle 1, of which
Mrs. Charles Johns is chairman.
ae
Devotional part of the program is
under the auspices of Circle 2, Mrs. |
Frank E. Glotfelty, chairman.
Mrs.
Chester Wolf, program chairman, will
introduce the Rey. Mr. William O.

McGill of the Marlboro Presbyterian

church,

Chicago,

“Cooperative

who

will

speak

on

Christianity.”

RUMMAGE SALE
Presbyterian

women

are

planning

a

sale in the basement of the

entz is chairman of arrangements and —

man.
§
Mrs. Paul Pagett, chairman of the
art and literature department, has
arranged the program.
Miss Frances
Ireland of Chicago is billed as “The

Lady

association

newly remodeled church parlors on
Wednesday,
Thursday,
and
Friday,
April 23, 24, and 25. Mrs. Albert Ar- —

The Deerfield Woman’s club annual luncheon will be held in the
Hearthstone, Winnetka, on Tuesday,
April 22, at 1 p.m.
Since the telephone strike is interfering with reservations being made,
cards were sent out to all members,
who must make a reply in person, or
by mail, before Saturday, to either
Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture, president,

or Mrs.

Woman’s

is holding a luncheon today at
o’clock in the newly remodeled church
basement.
Women will have an op
portunity to view the ultra-modern
kitchen which has replaced the two
small old-fashioned cubicles.
Mrs. Walter Lige, newly elected

rummage

Woman's Club
Annual Luncheon
Tuesday, April 22

supplementary
readers,

, Dorothy

the

Deerfield Review for the next several

The

Now the secret about the “King
and Queen” is out.
The Deerfield
the adult population
of the
munity to their “Fashion and
on Saturday, May 3, at.8 p.m.

will

nation, the world, and how peoples
all over the globe have similar desires, fears, problems, etc.

This is it!
We must admit
Our king and queen
Will be a hit.
We'll choose them
both
On May the third
When “Fun and Fashion”
Is the world!

¥

summarized,

a

will be assisted by circle chairmen and
members.
:

Wilmot Mothers’ Club
Elects New Officers
_
The Wilmot
Mothers’ club
held
its annual election of officers last
Tuesday at the school.
The executive board met Thursday evening in
the home of the new president, Mrs.

Harry

L.

Thomson,

to

plans for the year’s work.

_

formulate

It is cen-

tennial year for Wilmot
Grammar ©
school, founded in 1847.
*
Mrs. H. L. ThomOfficers are:
son, president; Mrs. Fred Baarsch,
vice president; Mrs. Arthur Wolter, —
recording secretary; Mrs.
Eldon
Holmquist, corresponding secretary;
Mrs. Harry Williams, treasurer; and
Mrs. John Silence, publicity.
Mrs. —
Robert Newell is the retiring president.
Pictured on today’s cover of the
Review are the old and new officers”
of the club.

4 Sisters Have 4 Aunts
As Their Sponsors Sunday
The four daughters of Mr. and Mrs. |
Richard Kress (Gertrude Martin) were ©
confirmed
Sunday afternoon in the ©
Catholic church in Dunaee, Ill. Their

sponsors were Mr. Kress’ four sisters,
Mrs. Elmer L. Clavey and Mrs. George.
Hessler of Highland Parx, Mrs. Alex Willman and Mrs. Robert Greenslade
of Deerfield.
BY
Mrs.
Clavey
(Marie Kress)
was

sponsor for Mary Kay Kress, age 15; .
Mrs. Willman
(Loretta Kress) was
sponsor for Nancy Kress, age 14; Mrs. »
Greenslade (Ruth Kress) was sponsor —
for Janet Kress, age 12; and Mrs.
Hessler (Margaret Kress) was sponsor
for her namesake,

Margaret

Kress,

age uate

10.

Mrs. L. G. Hurlburt Elected
To Head Girl Scout Council
A meeting of the Girl Scout counci! —
of the Deerficld-Bannockburn area was
held Thursday evening in the Wilmot
school. Mrs. L. G. Hurlburt was elected
president, and Mrs. Lewis Stryker, hae
president. —
j
er

ade

| eae

tah eS

—

�+

itn

Pearce-Davis Vo ws

For

Exchanged Saturday
At Methodist Church
Miss

-There’s

a big wedding

coming

of

the

Garage

Ford

_ Frank
to

twin

boys

Rd.

up

at

on

the

Wesley

of

Overend

read

Central

Green

big stars

School
and

blue

shirts,

to

sox,

Bay

A

Auditorium

George

Prince

and

Oxford

Western

cotton

cloth

jeans

$3.95.

.

Park

_-very
-

cago

Schultz,

was

Daily

shirts

recently

News

..

given

a

write up by ChiWriter

attracted

nation-

Once again we would like to mention. the fact that we rent tuxedos

f

and full dress suits for weddings and
dances.
Highland

Parker

Art

Em-

--erson visited friends and family here
last week ... Art, one of the cities
outstanding amateur golfers, is now
living in Cedar Rapids, Iowa . .'. He

is in the diary machinery business.
Jim VanOrnum of S. Green Bay
_ Rd. is another Highland Parker at

_ DePauw

College,

Greencastle,

Ind.

Just arrived ... Button down white

oxford
Picmaoy

cloth
ericed

shirts

. . . Sizes

14-15

at $3.95.

Bill Jones, who is a Sears salesman,

pilots

a plane

hours

. . . Bill, whose

_is well known

during

his

off

father,

duty
Arch,

in these parts, was

-. gunner during the war.
_

In

our

children’s

department

a

Mrs.

Joseph

the

are

Retzinger

of Christian

Science

Mr.

and.

Mrs.

of Northbrook.

CHRISTIAN

SCIENCE

avenue, Highwood,

is

son

was

avenue,

YOU

the parents

tas

for

the

ARE

memories,

memory

of a childhood

:

bubbling

today.

GIFT SUGGESTIONS
High Grade Glassware—High Ball, Cocktail, Old Fashion
and Pilsner styles.
3 designs to choose from—Geese, Wheat

and

Palm.

California China — Cigarette Boxes — Ash Trays — Sugar
&amp; Creamers — Salt &amp; Pepper — Vases — Bon Bon Dishes
Jam Jars, etc.
Water

Ware — Trays — Bowls

Pitcher —

Be

sure

to drop

beautiful

Ash

in our store

assortment

of

525 Central Ave:

Wednesday,

Park hospital.

bornjat

wee

are

April

of 444

the

North

parents

of

a

hos- °

Park

hospital

on

Friday,

:

Llewellyn

avenue,

Highwood.

Legion Post Honors
Carnival Workers

At Dinner Saturday

Highland Park American’ Legion,
Post No. 145° honored a large group
of its members and ladies on Saturday, April 12, with
a dinner
and

dance.
The honored group was composed of members from the post and

post auxiliary who worked fast year
jto make the, annual Fourth of July
carnival a great success.
It was reported that preparations
are now being made for the forthcoming carnival with a 1947 Buick deluxe sedan as the grand award.

Kiwanians

to Attend

Dinner

In lieu of the regular Kiwanis meeting Monday night, members of the
club will attend a Division 17 Kiwanis
Fellowship night dinner at The Parkway in Waukegan.
Dinner
will be
served at 6:30 o'clock.

Tray Sets, etc.

and

GIFTS

Wittens

Highland

sday,

A daughter was born at Highland
Park hospital on Friday, April 11, to.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hensley of 237

SALE.

see our
tdday.

Special

RED

Chandler's

on

avenue,

April tie

Mothers Day Cards priced 5c to $1.00

Hand Forged Aluminum

on

Mrs.

{

Mom.

For such priceless memories,
remember to send your Mother a card

and

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Raymond
Bartlett,
131 Pleasant avenue, Highwood, are
the parents of a daughter born
At

WELCOME

for the

par-

Waukegan.

daughter born at Highland Park
pital on Wednesday, April 9.

with laughter, of hurts you soothed with song.
Thanks for your deep understanding of me.

Ice Buckets —

of a son

hospital

The: James
Cavell

ROOM

| Mother's Day May 11th
Thanks

Mr.

504

SCIENCE text-

READING

the

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schwitzer of
543 Centrai avenue, Highwood, are

“DON'T FORGET MOTHER”
Thanks

to

Kildeu,

Highwood,

Highland

DAILY'--

born

W.

April 9, at Highland

43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN

are

ents of a son born at Highland Park
hospital on Wednesday, April 9.
A

healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at

The

wood

Edna Edwards has a red hot special

on
tap for this weekend ... All wool
ski pants, regular $7.00 value, reduced
to $5.00.

oe

| grandparents

Charles

book and periodicals containing testimonies of

.

_ Phil Hanna. . Versatile Whitt has invented an all purpose can and bottle

Former

study

Bible gained

Highland

Financial

opener which has
wide attention.

the

of The

are terrific...

popular

complimentary

understanding

BIBLE, the CHRISTIAN

sweat

|

scribe,

Waukegan.

Christian Science at no cost to yourself. The

chambray

Zipper fly, narrow legs, gold riveted
- and sanforized and priced at only
Whitt

street,

tresses to many thousands. You may investigate

shirts and hundreds of Wilson Broth-

ers

Jackson

style—T

non-shrinkable

flannelette

_ The

East

bringing release from disease and other dis-

loaded

jeans—western

new

through

Grover

becoming

MERE

Ine.
Tel. H. P. 3100

ROSE

Prices

on

PLANTS

Double Red Poppies, Very hardy
no winter protection, and Canadian Giant Pansies and other
Perennials.
Plant early for better results.
e

_

rapidly

Adler

490

of the

ce baseball team for whipping New Trier
_ Monday.

_

at 4:30 p.m.

New Understanding of ‘The Bible

and his Highland Patk High School

with

the service

PERE

‘Mr. and Mrs. F. Gianelli, 234 High

Wednesday.

A bg ‘ Congratulations

are

in

7

_ Joe DePalma, Al and Dom Pigati
and
Dom
Monfardini were among
the many locals attending the Cubs
opener Tuesday.

We

church

Mechanic

South

of the

Tuesday

of

The Rev. William G.

at

Shore
Congregation
Israel’s
Club Revue, Hip Hips Hooray,

next

daughter

~ Hhlly, Well! |

ios

light grey suit with matching accessories and a corsage of gardenias.
Miss. Marilyn
Sobey
of Highland
Park was maid of honor. She was attired in pink jersey and wore a corsage of pink carnations.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo J. Hemesath of
1834 Burton
avenue
announce
the
Remo Crovetti was best man.
Both Mr. and
Mrs.
Davis
were birth of a daughter, Beverly Ann, on
graduated from Highland Park High Easter Monday, April 7, at St. Franschool. Mr. Davis is employed at the cis hospital, Evanston. The baby girl
telephone
company
in. Waukegan. has a sister, Joan, and two brothers,
The couple will make their home at William and James Robert. Maternal

Jr.’s wife gave birth

Shapiro

the

Pearce,

Methodist

Highland Park.

last week.

is one

_ ‘North
_ Men’s

going

.. . Ace

Lawrence

Jack

-

excitement

E.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pearce of 133
Prairie avenue,
Highwood,
became
the bride of John S. Davis, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Davis, 331 Euclid avenue, Highwood, Saturday at

ee Saturday, May Bi
Bill Dever of
Waukegan Ave. is going to marry
Miss Betty Hayes of Chicago.
ce Plenty

June

|

her wedding the bride wore a

_ORRICO GARDENS
1409 FRAVININ she

ae:

}
eo

�AtVilage House
B
aphore2
Parents Will Have Opportunity
To Meet New Board Members

Dorsey Husenetter
Elected President
Of Rotary Club

All
parents
of
Highland
Park
school children are cordially invited
to the Ravinia Village house Tuesday
evening, April 22, at 8 o’clock, to hear

Vernon

L.

Nickell,

Illinois

state

Dorsey
president

Husenetter
was elected
of the Highland Park Ro-

tary

at the

club

organization’s

annual

superintendent of public instruction election of officers held at the week’s
in an address entitled “Current Prob- meeting Monday at the Moraine holems of Illinois Education.”
Parents tel. Mr. Husenetter takes the place
also will have their first opportunity of A. E. Wolters, retiring president.
to meet members of the newly elected
Other officers elected were E. C.
school board.
Reichert, vice-president; V. C. MusMr.
Nickell,
who
formerly
was ser, treasurer, and Rex Andrews, secsuperintendent of schools in Cham- retary.
.
paign, Ill., is well known throughout
The
newly-elected
president
and
the state as an excellent Rpraker and vice-president are to attend the 147th
a noted educator.
Rotary district convention to be held
Following his talk, the Ravinis PTA at the Fort Armstrong hotel in Rock
will give an informal reception in Island,
Ill, Friday
and
Saturday,
his honor and also in honor of Ray April 25 and 26.
Wible, who is retiring as president of
Before the natural gas is. actually
the school board.
New board president is J. M. Max- turned into this district, special nowell, who will be assisted in his duties tices will be mailed to each customer
by
Mrs.
Emil
Cedarborg,
Russell affected. Gas company officials have
Clark, David Levinson, B: K.° Per- set up very elaborate plans to make
with
the
greatest
reault, Maurice Pollak and Hamilton this conversion
safety and the least possible inconWinton.
venience to gas users.
sien
Rene
ae

Believe Conversion.
To Natural Gas Will

Get A Trusted

Be Effected in May
Heavy
tion work

which

on

the

will soon

new

natural

gas line’

serve this area. Pres-

ent indications are that the line will
_ be completed and natural gas will be
turned on
sometime
during
May.

‘Manager Clark of North Shore Gas
company has announced that a large
‘crew of men will come within the
next
tory

week to do some
work necessary

of the preparabefore making

the actual conversion to natural gas.
It is necessary to adjust customer’s
gas appliances to properly burn the
new gas.
The first in this territory to be prepared will.be

Bannockburn

and

Deer-

field, after which the conversion
will work

south

through

crew

the west

side

of Glencoe and Winnetka, continuing
north through the east side of Winnétka and Glencoe. All of this work
will be done.at the gas company’s expense.
The men who will visit your home
during the next two weeks are trained
technicians of Conversions and Sur_ veys,

Incorporated.

It

is.a

to

show

A conscientious pharmacist
will be glad to inform you of
what is known of any medicine
you are tempted to purchase
without a doctor’s prescription.

While the pharmacist knows
there is no substitute for the
doctor’s diagnosis, and his prescription for any illness, nevertheless the pharmacist’s knowledge and training make it possible for him to interpret all
types of drugs and their degree
of potency.

Make

sure the medicine

contemplate purchasing
least safe, by consulting
liable pharmacist before
ing your purchase.

Earl W. Gsell

company

devoted entirely to this type of work.
Mr. Clark reminds his customers that
they should feel perfectly free to ask
workmen

Pharmacist’s Advice

rains have delayed construc-

credentials

you
is at
a remak-

&amp; Co.

—Pharmacists—

Highland Park
Phone

Ravinia

2600

Phone

2300

before

allowing them to enter your premises.

JOSEPH GIALLANZA
Operatic

Baritone

Teacher of perfect vocal development, vocal
volume extension, true, purely natural singing system and Solfeggio, Italian language.
Telephone Highland Park 3174 after 5 p.m.
Free Audition—Will

Teach at Your Home

FOR AUDITION WRITE
_ 37 N. GREEN BAY ROAD, HIGHLAND

if Desired

PARK

.

They're by Saybury!
They’re crush-resistant
Expertly
material
dream.

tailored in rayon
that packs like a
Perfect

for

travel

or at home... come see
them
today. In
blue
or
brown checks, or solid colors.

12.95

Garnett ¢ Co.

�x

We, Whe Young

i Boy! oh boy! Whatta week of ex-citement! The villagers are now well
aware

one

of

can

fellows

the

coming

understand

circus,

how

but

no

a group

of

_

Did

School,

for

the

holidays

with

their

Charles

M.

S.

ages 9-12 can possibly under-

take such an assignment... Hah!
Just wait till we show ’em! . . . What
others can do we cubs will do better.
Mows
about. it gang? ..\Ah!
That’s the spirit.

-

Frank Sturtevant has been pledged
to Alpha Sigma Kappa at Lake Forest college. He is the son of the F.

Margot Reed was home from Kemper Hall, Kenosha, Wis., and Charles
Reed III, from Woodstock’s Todd
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Reed Jr. of Landis lane.

you

know

that

the handicraft

contest
originally scheduled for the
big day has been post-poned until
the
following
pack
meeting? ...
Yessir, when the plans for the circus
became so elaborate your den mothers decided to put aside the contest
for a later date!
If we try to do too much
that

Saturday

afternoon

our

customers

might have to forget about evening.
meals, and we wouldn’t want that to
happen. Even though we’ll sell them
homemade fudge, popcorn, and various other delicacies, meat and veg- etables should be added toitheir diets.
_ So be sure to tell our public that
_ the cub activities on MAY 10 will last
just
two hours... (Boy, wait till
they find out what we can cram into
this period!) . . . Sh-h-h, not a word,
now!
?

Den

News

DEN 1—
A
regular
meeting
at Geoffrey
Armstrong’s house was postponed last
week due to various vacations in the
tribe. With
Timothy Silence’s trip
_ south

delayed

at

the

last

minute,

Robert Hinchsliff off to see the president
in Washington,
D. C., and
Johnny Wolter in Wisconsin, it was
decided that a week’s delay was in
order.
Come to think of it wasn’t yesterday
Billy
Winter’s
birthday? . .
Don’t be so bashful, Billy. Congratu-

lations!

DEN 2—
Phone strike or no! Paul Dasso
appeared
with his weekly news at
the appointed hour. Besides being a
reposted he’s a darn ‘ood
critic,
When I take the liberty of changing
Russell Zartler’s name to .“Paul’” I
should be called to task. I’m very
sorry, Russell, and I assure you it
won’t happen again.
'
Bob Rudolph celebrates his tenth
birthday, April 19, so best wishes,
Bobby!

Though
baseball

Have

fun.

these fellows
practice

due

had
to

to cancel
the

bad

weather last Thursday, the meeting
on Wilmot Road was a huge success.
“Business” was followed by a steaming plate of hot dogs, and what fellow, could resist such an offer!
DEN 3~—
_ John Robertson has already brought
something for this den’s circus concession,

but

it

will

take

William

J.

Starr

of

Denver,

Colo.,

who attends Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, N. Y.,,
was a guest this past week at the
home of his fiancee, Miss Constance
Koebelin, also a student at Eastman
School of Music.
Miss Helene
Meyer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Meyer of Hazel
avenue, a senior at Highland
Park
High

school,

college

will

next

Ned

attend

who

went

is

now

at

Salina,

“C”

Kas.

This

is

a

team.

Scouting With Troop 52

heavy rain, but Friday the crowd held
their weekly meeting in the car en
George

Kenneth

park.

the

to

route

said that Richard Pagel had to miss
out since he was vacationing in Iowa,
,Vanderbeek

Randall

‘ut

hack

from

Michigan

had

come

just in time..An

basketball,
swimming,
of
-‘ternoon
-d hoseball was on the calendar for
the trin. Let’s hear about it, gang.

DEN
Den

5—
visitor,

Darling,

Billy

becomes

a Bob Cat on April 20, so he’s already
hard at work on law, oath, and street
safety problems... Study hard,
Billy.
You know, Den 5 has something to
really boast
I hoped to

circus
bound

about today, but though
keep it secret until the

I’m afraid such good news
to leak out ... Well; here

is, everyone.

You

all

know

about

is
it
the

the highest
elos badge... Yessir,
honor in cub scouting will be awarded
this boy for his wonderful work and
diligent study during the past five
months ... All Deerfield salutes Joe
Kilcoyne!

Another
prospective
member
has
been reported to me... Sam Bradt

Air

formerly

Jr.

returned

to

By

Dart-

the

Irl

Marshalls

of

Wau-

kegan road. He wired from Hartford, Conn., that the trip was “rough
from high winds.”

Deerfield
Bowling Academy
MONDAY

EVENING

Victory Rollers
. Theo
Hamill—High
individual
series—
527.
Theo Hamill—High
individual game
—224.
D.B.A.
High
team
series—2188.
D.B.A.—High team game—787.
Team
standings:
Ww.
L.
Ie
IRAE
Oe
ee
ee
66
27

Greetings readers, this column is
PP
atiliauhiS cas Nias ols.c tac
ae
66
27
coming to you.to keep you informed PRPIOLS
Be. iaccseivsclictc
ae 60
33
es taut Seutcrec icicles Shae wick 46
47
on the activities of the future citizens WO
Lorette’s
Girls (2... Scccs.
39
54
of Deerfield.
This column will tell John Gournley &amp; Co. 2..22.....2-20.-.- 38
55
%0
30
63
of the hikes, swimming, trips, and Erice’s.: D=X Station. 20.5405
Reliable
Garage’ | -s.cs..c2..-ccisccccccsees 26
67
other activities of the troop.
Last weekend the boys went to
TUESDAY EVENING
Rolling 40’s
Camp Henry Fowler with their scoutTeam standings:
master, Bob Ranier. One of the new
L.
circular tents was used and proved DOME
i
nae
eis
29
PME
ee
Lye
dc
30
very successful.
The cooking was Clavey’s
37
individual or with a buddy.
Tailor’s
......
39
»Glenora
44
The five boys who went were Gre Johnson’s
46
gory Armstrong, James Reagan, Jerry PROB ts ric UE i
aah
ee
59
238
64
Jordan, Wendell Savage, and Eugene Lauterburg
Tailor’s—2422;
Seul’s—2407; Bank—2361.
Nelson.
Individual
High
38 Games—Helen
MceMany boys have been going to the Laughlin—553;
Ruth Schmidt—549; Irene
Glenview Naval air station for swim- Clavey—544.
Team
High
Single Game:
Seul’s—873;
ming instruction. The troop has also Clavey’s—-852;
Bank—847.
Individual High Single Game: I. Clavey
been going swimming at Great Lakes.
Star Scout Gregory Armstrong. east M. F. Anderson—222; M. Welch—

... Know him? .. .Well he'll be a
cub very soon so you'd better get
acquainted.
DEN 4—
That
scheduled
trip to Portage
Park was postponed because of the

of

Marshall

parents,

to

progress Joe Kilcoyne has been making ‘cause your editor couldn’t stop
bragging about him,—but last week
he surprized even me when he sailed
through his Tenderfoot requirements
after fulfilling all other duties. Joe

bunch

Irl

Dyersburg, Tenn., for spring training in the Phillies farm training camp,
Class

of Evanston,

mouth, via United Air Lines, after
spending a week’s vacation with his

Elmhurst

it is.
back
ever
top!

a

detectives to find out what
Den Chief Eugene Nelson was
with his flock and are they
brimming with ideas for the big

Sturtevants

of Deerfield. Frank Jr., home from
army service in Europe last December, re-entered Lake Forest college
this: semester.

fall.

Wickersham,

A School

eople Away

is

now

anxiously

awaiting

his

Web-

WEDNESDAY
American

EVENING
Legion

Team standings:
The
Team
No.
8—F.
Coleman,
leads
the American Legion League with 49 games
won
and
35 games
lost, with the Commander
E.
Hurt
Team
No.
2 following
with 44 games won and 40 lost.
There is a tie of 43 games Won and 41
lost between three teams: Team No. 6—R.
Dunham, Team No. 5—F. Riley, and Team
No. 4—J. Klemp.
Team No. 8—W. Johnson, has.42 won and 42 lost.
What will
the next session bring?
Team
No.
1—O.
Trute,
has
88 games
won and 46 games
lost, while Team
No.
oe
Olson, chalked
up
34 won
to 50
ost.
Team
High
8 Games:
Team
No.
8—
2411; Team No. 1—2348; Team No. 8—
2344,

Team High Single Game:
Team No. 8—
887; Team No. 1—879; Team No. 3—860.
Individual
High .G
Games:
N.
Harere
R. . Dunham—600;
J. Klemp—
Individual High Single Game:
ee
M. Anderson—246; L.

F. StupGeorge—

Amvets
Team
PRM

standings:
NOG

S@

antes chctak cic

aad Soa

Ww.

L.

51

33

Squadron
BILL

51

WINTERS

Control tower to Squadron
51; runway
clear.
Take off.
Monday morning at 3:20, the following
Air Scouts: Jim Diener, Karl Hout, Tom
Kerrihard,
John
Mennenoh,
Ed
Nichols,
Bill Notz, Bob Spahr, Don Ubl, Bill Winters,
George
Pope,
Mr.
Diener,
and last
but
not
least, Bob Newell
left for the
much
planned
and_
greatly
anticipated
Mississippi
River
trip.
Bob Newell took the trailer, loaned to
the
Squadron
by
A.
J.
Johnson;
the
trailer was
packed
with the majority
of
the individual’s gear, and on top of this
a boat.
Mr. Diener took five of the scouts,
and Mr. Spahr took five boys and a boat.
Mr.
Spahr
volunteered
to drive out
on
Monday and back on Saturday but could
not
stay
for
thé
camping
for
he
had
important business to attend to.
The Air Scouts express their thanks to
Dr. C. R. Sugden
for donating his time
in giving the boys physical check-ups.
Each boy had a few turns at the cooking and a few turns at dishwashing.
Bob Newell was the best man we had
for frying fish.
Approximately fifty fish
(bullheads)
were caught during the trip.
Also Bob
ate so much
corn
meal
mush
that it almost came out of his ears.
Here is a warning to anyone who attempts to go fishing with Don Ubl.
When
Don
pulls
a fish out of the water,
he
pulls so hard that he has to climb a tree
to get the fishy down.
Bob
Spahr
donated
his motor
for the
trip and on the second day it got tempermental and wouldn’t start.
There was
a suspicion of a bad magneto but all the
motor really needed was a new set of spark
plugs
and about a pint of water blown
out of the carbureator.
The weather on the whole was unfavorable but on Wednesday night and Thursday morning
it rained cats and dogs.
I
know ’cause I stepped in a big puddle.
We
were
fortunate
because
the
ninety
mile
an hour wind which was predicted to hit
the islands did not arrive but a fair size
breeze did and blew a few shelters away.
Movies
were taken of the whole trip,
and
Karl
Hout
had
better
leave
town
when they are developed and shown,
John
Mennenoh
is quite a wolf.
We
could
hardly
keep
him
in camp
for he
wanted
to see his girl in the ice cream
parlor.
She must havé had quite a crush’
on him for she gave him four dips of ice
cream instead of three for seven cents.
About twenty miles from Dundee on the
return trip, the trailer tire blew out and
after very
slow driving
was
brought
to
stop in a gas station in Dundee.
The tire
can be seen on exhibit in the Air Squadron
Headquarters.
When
the
last
bill
had
been paid on Saturday morning there was
thirteen
dollars
to the
good,
but
after
paying for a new tire and tube we were
five dollars in the hole.
Ed Nichols
has added a new plane to
the Squadron and will fly it at the New
Trier Air Meet on April 27 at one o’clock.
Only scouts can enter this meet and prizes
will be awarded in each event.
Keep nose down—do
not fly nose high
and when power is off, keep nose below
usual glide angle to avoid
stall.
(Pilot
Safety Rule No. 4.)

THURSDAY

EVENING

Bethlehem Bowling League
Tom
Sloot
was
surely
going
strong
Thursday
night with a high single game
of 227
and a 8-game
series of 630, so
quite naturally his team, The Hawks, had
a high single game of 810.
Standings of teams:
ere
EPR
de Gee
ee tag tease
32
Hawks...
32
Robins
40
i
eras a oka aiees inp cons tx os SLoOM RAS
40
Sparrows
40
Eagles
42
Orioles
44
Crows
52

FRIDAY
EVENING
35
387
St. Paul’s League
41
oe
No. 7 in first place won 56—lost
43
46
For the evening:
High 83 Games—Eddie
46 *| Johnson—5
88.
High
Single
Game—H.
47
Pantle—246.
Jerry Juhrend had a 225.
6—
Presbyterian
League
1—
Team
standings:
Ww.
Team High Single Game:
Team No. 1—
aecinsg NG
Be Sl aiekg doen 51
931; Team No. 6;—925 Team No. 8—922.
BL Oelern (NGO
ki
ev a edatenincas 51
Individual High 3 Games: M. Mailfald—
SHOR ING, OR
eat
keels
48
Cardinals: No. 805)
isi ka veecceses 47
at
P. Scully Jr.—640; E. Horenberger—
5.
;
-eackera: NO. 2 ea ee
46
Individual High Single Game: M. MailGilanté NOt
occ
seas
46
fald—246; G. Cameron—245; W. Schmauss
Beats NO: 6 eo
a ara
ee 41
—245; P. Scully Jr.—245.
Dodecrs Nor 4 ee

SE OMMY IN ns FE,
WORM INGs Me
ROM
INOS, BA
CRO
NOL EO
EEA. INO Ae
SPORT NGG, Prick
eam: NOs ok
Team
High
avaa? Team

Ook chu a ssae penile ae eae 49
oie
te
pea a 47
Noe
tle ekneve 43
ce
a ee
41
eck
ie Ee
38
GN hae ee
ae 38
ea
oid as NL 37
3 Games:
Team
No.
No. 2—2609; Team
No.

�cece. Seams
t

Highland
Member

Park

Daily Given National

..:.
Telephone

News

Excellence Ratings
Kenneth

H.P. 4500

place

of Operetta Stage Crew

H. Kraft of 225 Lakewood

is half

owner

Miss Ora Dale
Puckett, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Puckett,
679 Pleasant court, returned April 4
from a two
weeks’ rest in Hawaii,

following a junket with a USO entertainment troupe through the Pacific

by

the

National

area that
lasted
months. In May

at

its

annual

Celebrate

Worth,

Plays

Role

James
portray

in “Lost

Allen of
the role

Horizon”

Highland Park will
of Henry
Barnard

in the
forthcoming
production
of
“Lost Horizon”, to be staged by the
Garrick Players of Lake Forest college

April

30

and

May

1.

Hoermann

By

Beta

Phi

to

Kappa

Be

Initiated

Mr.

infant

senior

H.

Beta

Kappa,

fraternity,

the

May

national

according

1

schol-

to the re-

cent announcement of Prof. Frederic
A. Ogg, president of the state university chapter.
Graduates

from

Aviation

avenue,

School

graduated

from

Highwood,
the

has

Aviation

Clark, who

been

Funda-

April

was

of

the

maternal

to

Honor

has

been

born

Phi

national honorary scholastic
nity at University of Iowa.

frater-

Benefit Games
Women’s

Italian

Party

been

engaged

business

in

together

the

5th $399

pub-

for

many

FOUR ROSES
Whiskey—95.5

5th $425

installation

services

and

Blended

Training

center,

Jacksonville,

Fla., a dispatch from the Ninth

Naval

district office stated this week. Cameron
entered
the Naval
service in
September, 1946 and received recruit

training

at Great

Lakes.

GIVE YOUR
WONDERFUL

BOY A
SUMMER

AT

CAMP

GREENWOOD

Ellison Bay in Door
Wisconsin
26th

County,

Year

A six weeks’ experience he will
love. He will benefit from companionship with a fine group of
boys and enjoy the advantages
of real outdoor life under able
guidance.
Greenwood
is ideally situated
with
all. the
facilities
which
woods, waterfront, and natural

beauty can offer.
A camp
Phone

dinner

MAIL YOUR
ORDERS
For Prompt Delivery

KILCOYNE,
Pictures

TEL.

|

Photographer

Taken
H.

in

Your

Phone Strike

Home

P. 4470

;

Deerfield 678

WALKER

Bree

Dog Owners....
SPRING
CLEAN
UP
00
SPECIAL $ complete
Teeth Cleaned
Toe Nails Cut
Coat Treated
Dog Dipped ---Ears Cleaned --

the

$190
$190
$190
$1&gt;°
$190

ae ae hn

MILLER’S
BEER,

HIGH

Case

of

VAN
Case

........

BEER

$350
$300

of 24

BUDWEISER
Case

$335

LIFE

24

MEISTERBRAU
Case

$309

S GIN

BEER

$370

of 24

MERRIT

BEER

$4.40

of 24

SCHENLEY
RESERVE

Americat Largesh

Selling Whishey

$390 Fifth

FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY

of 25 boys, ages 7 to 14.
or

write

for

the

camp folder giving detailed
formation and pictures.
Camp

Whiskey

5th $339

mentals school at the Naval Air Technical

Proof

Walker's Imperial

During

Prosperity

club will sponsor a games party on
Saturday, April 19, at the Labor hall.
Games will start at 8 p.m. Proceeds
will go to John Donati who is confined for hospital treatment at the
present time.

award.

of the Highland Park Emblem club,
to be held Wednesday, April 23, at the
Moraine hotel. Members of the Milwaukee and Waukegan clubs also are
to be present.
Those wishing reservations for the
dinner are asked to contact Mrs. R.
Sheahen, 435 South St. Johns avenue.

of the
avenue,
Kappa,

Selected whiskies,
expressly set aside,
make this blend light,
full flavored.
86.8 Proof-60% grain
neutral spirits

the

Mrs.
Madeline
Parker,
supreme
president of the Emblem club, and her
staff will be installing officers at the

Society

to

of

newspaper,

Services April 23

P. Clark

Beta

Sponsor

elected

owner

in the

Emblem Club Plans
Formal Installation

grandpar-

Miss Joan Holt daughter
E. Holts of 1330 Judson

The

Robert
C. Cameron
Jr., seaman
second class, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
C.
Cameron
of 424
North

Central

Boilini

formal

will

Phi

L.

Sunday,

have

lishing
years.

the christening of their

son, Louis

home

and

into

Henry

the

Dean,

Fort

evening,

Mr. Kraft and Mr. Dean purchased
the newspaper early in 1946. The two

Wednesday, March 19. An open house
for relatives and close friends was
held in the afternoon and evening at

who

astic

Mrs.

at a dinner

6, celebrating

school

at

and

W.

made

in

Saturday

men

accepted

was

association

convention

Texas

Henry Boilinis Entertain in
Celebration of Christening

junior

initiated

Editorial

Edwin

Elected

students

for the honors

half interest

Roland Hoermann
of 835 Forest
avenue, Highland Park, a junior at
University of Wisconsin, is among 58
be

seven
plans

award

other

ents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
of 426 Oakwood avenue.

at Wisconsin

The

when

the
Roland

more
than
Miss Puckett

class published in the United States in
1946, and was rated second in the
country for general excellence.

to return to Japan with a_ similar
troupe for another USO tour expected
to last six months.

entertained

Inglewood

of the best daily newspaper for general excellence in typography in its

Adele Mason of 1813 Kincaid avenue is a member of the stage crew
for the Illini Theatre guild production
of the Gilbert and Sullivan Opera,
“Patience”, to be presented at University of Illinois April 18 and 19.

Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Nichols of 47
Elm place celebrated their thirtieth
wedding anniversary Monday, April
14,

the

Daily
News, Inglewood, California,
which has just been awarded the title

“O.D.” Puckett Returns from
USO Tour in Pacific Area

Anniversary

of

LIQUOR SERVICE Co.
Daily Free Delivery
PHONE H. P. 1500

Greenwood,
1885

H.

Groveland

Highland

in-

337 Waukegan
Highwood .. Phone

P. 1782

Ave.

Park

Liquor Service Co.

1947

6 NO. SHERIDAN RD.

DAILY

FREE

Ave.
H. P.

1500

DELIVERY

7

Kraft’s California

OF
APPENINGS
IGHLAND
PARKERS

�Page

10

Thursday,

April

17,

1947

Boy's Boxing Club Is Crowned
Champion of Tenth District:
Boys Win

Laurels

at Fox

Lake;

Banquet Saturday Ends Season
Climaxing
son

in

its

the greatest
two

years

of

boxing

sea-

competition,

the Highland Park Boy’s Boxing club
has added another trophy to its display after being crowned 10th District
American
Legion
conference
champions by Weldon Graham, district conferencé
director,
Saturday
night at Grant Township High school,
Fox

Lake,

III.

In addition to this laurel, the
warriors of the squared arena
led the field of boxers in the
vidual championship
finals at
Lake when they captured seven
and nine runner-up places for

local
also
indiFox
titles
their

team.

The following boys were
champions in their weight
divisions :

crowned
and age

George

Winkler

Age

Wt.

9

58

........

WS PROF Ags Sire
es
ed CAPIGOR
22 bo oe eG
Tom Pilati oiiicy
ek eek
Bob Winkler
..........:
Dick Roberts ...........

9
9
12
12
oe:

Charles

14

Schramm

.......

75
81
71
87
77

101

Highland Park is justified in taking pride in this group of boys who
have made the city nationally known
in the amateur boxing field, and who
during their time with the local club
have learned sportsmanship in junior
boxing.
The directors and coaches
have
planned their annual banquet at the
community
center
Saturday,
when
awards to the boxers will be made.
A program of movies and_ special
entertainment, with an outstanding
sportsman as guest speaker, also are
scheduled to add a finishing touch
to

the

boys’

worthwhile

season

in

ring competition.

FILMS

8m @ 16m PROJECTORS
COMPLETE LIBRARY

RAVINIA MoToRS,

PACKARD SALES

INC.

and

ENTER

i

NOW

SERVICE

CONTEST

PHOTO

00 in PRIZE
re ee ar

BUYS USED CARS
FOR CASH

Community CAMERA EXCHANGE
6 NO. SHERIDAN

RD.

Legion Post 145
Initiates Ten
Members Thursday
Ten new Legionnaires were initiated by Highland Park Post 145 at
a combination business meeting and
initiation

Legion

H. P. 206

Factory Trained Mechanics
Work on All Makes
of Cars

son,

held

James

NOTICE

Special

Our store will be open all day Wednesday and Sunday.
Our market will not sell any fresh meat on Wednesday afternoon or Sunday, but we will sell all kinds of cold meats and
bacon.

—

Polishing

Tune

Up

RAVINIA Motors, INC.

DU)
SEBAM oreere
PORTERHOUSE STEAK...
A
PAA
aloe
ae
RIB ROAST OF BEEF _...__.......................
ROUNG GEEP
36 boa ee
LEG OF SPRINGLAMB.__......
LOIN LAMB. CHOP...)
te ees
RASS
PORN 605 5000 eee

Ib.
Ib.
Ib.
Ib.
Ib.
Ib.
Ib.
Ib.

PRP

Ib. 63c

BAGON
MENTS.

oe

a

Fruits
EXTRA

Motor

Departments

Call for Appointment

Meats

Cale.

Washing

FANCY

Ib. 55¢

&amp; Vegetables

STRAWBERRIES

&amp;

22

South

SALES-SERVICE
First

Street

RETTIG

doz.
Ib.
2 for
2 Ibs.
bchs.

MARKET

|

ROGER WILLIAMS AVE., RAVINIA
Highland Park 6585
;

Harold

B.

Fritz,

Harold

E.

CA

oe
Ke

a

V.

social

affair

Thursday,

April

24,

starting at 8 p.m. The main feature
of the evening will be movies of the
Chicago Bears’in action during the
1946 schedule.
Veterans are invited to attend and
become acquainted with the members
and the numerous Legion activities.
Members are reminded not to forget
to bring along a package of cigarettes
for patients at Downey hospital.

BROS.

CLEANED

noun

the

Henry,

CLEANERS.
SY A
OW

GREAT-NORTHERN
GROCERY

PACKARD

Jacobs,

at

A. Ben-

Edward L.. Lloyd and Ellery H. Harvey Jr.
Next meeting of the post will be

@® Rugs
© Carpets

.___ per box 37c

FLORIDA ORANGES
GREEN ASPARAGUS ..
MEAD LETTUCE 0.0...
ee
WASHED SPINACH
CALIFORNIA CARROTS ............... 2

375

65c
89c
39c
59c¢
39c
59c
89c
59c

A.

Thursday

are Grant

Montecchi, Charles A. Parsons, Warren K. Wilner Sr., John M. Kelly,
Sebastian

SPECIAL

last

hall. They

35c
25c
19¢
17¢
15c

@

Furniture

MOTHPROOFING
“The

P.

Time to Buy
Is Before They Fly”

676

�Softball Teams

| dard Medals to Ping Pans and
t
Checker Tournament Champions

To Open League
Play Here May 7
Merchants, Neild’s, VFW Will
Share Sunset Park Facilities
Seven team representatives met with
Mel Mullins and Al Danakas, directors
of Highland Park’s softball league,
in Community center Thursday night
to

help

make

plans

for

this

year’s

league play, which opens May 7. Discussions will be continued at a meeting to be held
24 at 8 p.m.
By

mutual

in

the

center

agreement,

on

the

April

Highland

Park VFW’s will play under the lights
at Sunset Park on Wednesday nights,
while Neild’s and the Highland Park
Merchants will alternare Thursday and
Friday nights.
:

A ruling was made that seven out of
the nine men playing on the field for
Highland Park be residents of Highland
also

Park. The team
representatives
requested that the Sunset Park

Sue
Denzel,
David
Baum
and
Michael Field took championship honors | and 3rd, Teddy Talano.
in the city-wide ping pong tournament|
Seventh and eighth grade boys—Ist,
sponsored
by
the
Playground
and | David Baum; 2nd, Henry Bertucci, and
Recreation board in Community center | 3rd, Bob Manfredini.
as a feature of its Easter vacation proChecker champions included:
gram.
Third and fourth grades—lst, Bill
The

checker

Both tournaments
Mel

Mullins,

representing

Neild’s

Sport

’ Winners

were:

in

the

ping

Fifth

and = sixth

Michael

Field;

grade

2nd,

tourney

Veterans
hall,.8

Masons,

372

&amp;

Calvert Reserve

Fleischmann’s |
Preferred
GOT tis $3.78

STONE

Central

ARE YOUR

&amp;

H

LORD CALVERT
Sth tees $4.52

P. 64

Blend

Or

FOR

5th ees

HUNTER’S

ESTIMATE

HILL

Legion
8 p.m.

hall,

21

H. N. GAMLIN
H.

A.

soe

Terms

S. First St.

H.

P. 5102

bth

No.

Wake

@

Up!

OLD

Tours

CALIFORNIA

No.

Spring

7-Day

Sheridan

to:

on

LAKES

From $98.50

H.

and

R. ANSPACH

TRAVEL

mer

|

|

is here

BUREAU

370%
Central
Avenue
George L. Lundberg, Manager
Phone: Highland Park 1211
(Bek Now and Avoid Disappointment

of Straight
Whiskies

font

A

OLD TAYL
R
Bonded, ane a

FLEISCH

Bond,

and

tor

$425.

ea tc

$67&gt;

eA

$6

‘

ANS

TAYLOR'S
New

York

comes

with

|

3°

_

State

PETRI
California Wine

sum-

$0.68

CHRISTIAN BROS.

a bang,

California

Wine

DURE ee
ph teed $1.75

F. |. Port, Sherry,

so have your clothes spic,

road,

MEXICO

Cruise

$4.09

Bil ceca

145,

GUATEMALA

GREAT

BLACK GOLD.

GRAND

Garments

12:15

Without A Care!
SPRING AND SUMMER
$

Sunnybrook
witite ade $4.09

90 proof, 5th $4.46

Bonded,

Your Spring

226,

TRAVEL
OZARK
SMOKIES

$4.09

FINE ART

Witten

North

&amp; HILL

Sth ia

Blend

Wars,

Post

5th ....W0....... $4.23

‘OLD UNDEROOF
Sth es $4.09

present
wire.

Deerfield 416

temple.

Legion

$4.42

ck $4.25

Seagram's 7 Crown 5th $3.94

e

if you prefer we will rewire your
screens with bronze or galvanized
CALL

e

of Straight
Whiskies

FOUR ROSES Sas

p.m.

Lions
p.m.
American

Reserve | —

PRIVILEGE

SCREENS?

®

F.

THURSDAY
club, Moraine
hotel,

z

HILL

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combination screen and storm sash.

150

Masonic

of Foreign

William Penn 5th ........ $3.39
IMPERIAL 5th ............ $3.39
50 GRAND 5th ............ $3.39

Peddle,

temple.

Arch

4579

Tom

INSURANCE

boys—lst

Ronald

HOW

MONDAY
Rotary club, Moraine hotel, 12:15
p.m.
Kiwanis club, Sunset Valley club,
6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
Highwood
Legion | Post No. 501,
city hall, 8 p.m.
Odd Fellows Lodge, No. 42, Masonic

Royal

Phone

Ronald

3rd,

Bevins;
.

Schenley

team.

WEDNESDAY
Park Chapter,

Buddy

|

BON oa sna $3.90 |

chants; Ed. Sheahen, the VFW, and
“Pie” Brennen, Neild’s Sport Shop

Highland

2nd,

ee)

335 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood

|.

Engstrom.

Eb

WITH
The
LODGES

3rd,

a8) eh|

Bit tas $3.89

Grammar school girls—Ist, Sue Denzel; 2nd, Carol Menke, and 3rd, Berta

and “Timer” Inman and Jim Sheahen,
representing the Highland Park Mer-

Junior

pong

Engdahl;

Seventh and eighth grades—Ilst Walter Jastrzemski; 2nd, Romano Ori; 3rd,
Jerry Nugent.

of

Community center. First place winners
were awarded gold medals, and second
place winners, silver medals.

Faoro,

shop;

director

Bob

MSc

Cheatle.

Peddle;
Hatter.

were conducted by

assistant

2nd,

Fifth and sixth grades—Ist,

classes.

respective

their

in

“Bock-

Frank

and

Peterson

er’

were:

in|Goldberg;

3ill Goldberg being crowned champions|

League.

the meeting

resulted

Walter Jastrzertiski, Ronald Peddle and | Frank

diamond be conditioned before each
game, and that the public address system be used.
It was also decided during the meeting that Neild’s junior team represent
the Highland Park Playground and
Recreation board in the North Shore
Attending

tournament

LIQUORS
Aisa

and span and ready re duty when the first warm
breeze rolls ‘round. Sparkling clothes give your
family that well groomed look which is so admired.
We take pride in cleaning your clothes to preserve
their original color and.wearing

life and

ments

longer

style,

quality.

let Reliable clean

For longer

your

gar-

now.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618 N. Green Bay Road

Highland nae

Tel. H. P. 177

Muscatel

Ve BAM.

ise

$2.39

BEER
MEISTER

BRAU

nee

OF F6 :

Case

Of 24

$290

GOLD CROWN

$370)

3a

rages

MILLER HIGH LIFE
CAR@ OF 28

hook
a

$350 ft

PABST BLUE RIBBON $360
Cage:

Of: 24

ocho

ie

ts

ke

Phone 4579
FREE DELIVERY

ir

fe

�Mostly
Whiss _Agnete
ho

bs

for

Bride

S33.

To Feature Juvenile

Sh sin

pune

Wome

Gordon

Fashion Show During

Ravinia

of

PTA

Benefit

ae

A Jack and
Jill review will be
one of many attractions at a dessert
bridge to be given by the Ravinia

Charles K Whtchell

PTA

Tuesday

afternoon,

at 1:30 o’clock

April

for the benefit

of the

Jill review

of clothes
both girls
collection

and Jill shop

A

prize

is a fash-

for children of
and boys. The
of spring and

for

each

table

planned,

and

during

prize

will

cash

wood

of

the
be

Park.

bridge

is

afternoon

a

awarded.

be purchased

Hansmann.

Rathe

in Highland

$50

ets may

from

Mrs.

C.

Tick-

Mrs.
E.

EI-

Brand-

riff is in charge of general tickets for
the dessert bridge.

At

a

family

gathering

on

Music Club Meeting to Be,
Held at Kraft Home Wednesday
Easter

‘son of Mr.
Mitchell
of
are

being

Miss

and Mrs.
Sheridan,

made

for

Larsen,

Marvin
V.
Wyo. Plans

a June

who

has

wedding.
taught

at

West Ridge school in Highland Park
for the past four years, received her
degree
at
Northern
Illinois
State
Teachers
college, DeKalb, and has
attended Northwestern university and
University of Wisconsin.
Mr. Mitchell is attending Northwestern university and will receive a
degree
with a

ment.

in the school
of commerce,
major in personnel manage-

He

also has

university,

Okla.,

attended
and

Phillips

University

the

European

son

of

Mrs.

The

regular

monthly

meeting

Highland Park Music club will
at the home of Mrs. Kenneth

225

Lakewood

place,

April 23, at 2 p.m.
Two of the talented
club will present an

on

of the
be held
Kraft,

Wednesday,

members of the
interesting pro-

gram,
including two groups on the
piano by Mrs. Virginia Schur and two
groups

of songs

presented

by Mrs.

Don

Cuthbertson. Mrs. Cuthbertson will be
accompanied, by Miss Olga Sandor. It
is hoped that many
be present to enjoy
Returns

From

club
this

Bermuda

members will
musical treat.
Trip

Miss Eleanore Becker of 388 Briarwood place, returned recently from
a two-week

vacation

in

Bermuda.

of

road,

Elmer

L.

Miss

Miss
model.

Highland

Clavey

Park,

of

Bohnert’s

parents.

Bohnert

is

She

lege,

Mo.,

Mrs.

Frank

a_

attended

with

professional
Stephens

her

Reach

Clavey,

col-

fiance’s
(Bette

and visited in Highland
'Clavey home in April.
Mr.

will take

who’served

sister,
Clavey),

Park

at the

in the

navy

during the war, is now managing the
nursery business of his father, the
late Elmer L,. Clavey. He is a grandson of Burr H. Kress of Hazel
nue, former Deerfield mayor.

ave-

Plans Coffee Klotch,
A “coffee klotch” and bake sale are
being combined into one feature attraction
by Infant
Welfare
Wing
members,

center
a.m.

to

Mrs.
of the

to be held at the community

Saturday,

April

19,

from

1 p.m.
Robert
Sanders
is chairman
committee, which consists of

new Wing members
June, 1946: Mesdames

admitted since
Bertram Beers,

Daniel
Cunningham,
Lee Gatewood,
Edward Gourley, Benno Nell, Robert

Nereim, Robert Nicholas, Robert
Raughley Jr., Jack Ronan, J. Edwin
Sunderland
and
Paul
Wells;
and
Misses Barbara Ives and Joan Frable.

FASHION

the Michigan Shores club, By popular
request this will be a dinner dance with
cocktails and canapes served by the
to

the

guests.

members

Lew Diamcnd and his orchestra wil}
furnish
the
music
for
the
evening
which includes strolling musicians who

will play during the cocktail and dinner
hours.

This
closing

party
to an

promises
enjoyable

to -be

a

gala

series of dances

which have been enthusiastically attended by the members of the Fortnightly. This ends the 16th season of
the

North

Shore

Fortnightly

ep

Married April 26
Mr.
246

and
North

SHOW

Mrs.
Federico Tamarri,
avenue,
Highwood,
an-

nounce the approaching marriage of,
their daughter, Inez, to Peter Molendy, 107° Prairie avenue. The ceremony will be performed at mass at
9

a.m.

April

26

in

St.

Highwood,
by the
Gleeson, pastor.
Tamarri

sister,

James

Rev.

will

Mrs. Guy

be

church,

James

D.

attended

by

J. Bernabei,

235

North
avenue,
Highwood,
and
the
prospective bridegroom by Mr. Bernabei.
A reception for 100 guests will fol-

low the ceremony in the home of the
bride-to-be’s parents. After a wedding trip the couple will make their
home at 245 Burchell avenue, High-

The last dance of the season will be
held by the North Shore Fortnightly
group on Saturday night, April 19, at

committee

Dias

Peter Molendy to Be

her

Last Dance of Season

other

Wiss

10

theatre

Saturday in Wilmette

and

WENNBERG

Bake Sale Saturday

Miss

_ CHILDREN’S

SALLIE

and Mrs. Victor R. Anderson of
Chicago, is attending the Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts where Miss
Wennberg also is studying.

Infant Welfare Wing

Fortnightly to Hold

executive

MISS

The betrothal of their daughter,
Miss Sallie Wennberg, to Richard
W. Anderson of Chicago recently
was revealed by Mr. and Mrs. C.
R. Wennberg of Highland Park.
Mr. Anderson,
the son of Mr.

of

Cincinnati. During the war he served
as a first lieutenant with the 35th
Infantry division and saw active com-

bat service in
of operations.

The marriage of Miss Elaine Boh-.
nert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Bohnert, and Gordon E. Clavey,

place in June at the White Star Rice
plantation near Gillett, Ark., the home

and

Warried

in Hane

tainment.
The Jack

Jack

Sunday, H.
J. Larsen
of 908 Fair
Oaks
avenue,
Deerfield,
announced
the engagement of his daughter, Miss
Agnete Larsen, to Charles K. Mitchell,

Bride

ds.

Gir

Clavey

summer wear, to be modeled by
vinia schoo] children,
are from

LARSEN

A

ansas

as

ning an afternoon of delightful enterion show
all ages,
attractive

AGNETE

ae

Will

Ce

29,

organizations
general
fund.
Mrs.
George
Reeves,
chairman,
and
her
committee are busy these days plan-

MISS

Clavey

Wa

dances

and, the members will look forward to
the reconvening of the group next November.

THIS
CHARMING
COUPLE, Linda Harrison and Bowen Schumacher, will show the
audience at the Jack
and Jill review April
29
what
the
well
dressed lad and lassie
are going to wear this
season. Wardrobe for
the children’s fashion
show,
sponsored
by
the Ravinia PTA, will
be furnished by the
Jack and Jill shop.

wood.

Miss

Percy
Jr.

H.

is a nurse,

and

Mr.

is employed at the Anchor
company
in Libertyville.

Miss Inez Tamarri Is Honored
Guest at Pre-Nuptial Showers
Miss

Lois

Sunday

bridal

M.

Ginter

afternoon,

shower

North

in

Christiana

honoring
North

Photo by
Prior,

Tamarri

Molendy
Coupling

Miss

avenue,

entertained

April

her

13,

home

avenue,

Inez

at

at

a

3127

Chicago,

Tamarri,

Highwood,

|

her

246
class-

mate
during their nurses’ training
together at the Norwegian-American
hospital. The gathering was attended
by other -nurses who worked with
the bride-to-be at the NorwegianAmerican and County hospitals.
Miss Tamarri will be married to
Peter Molendy, 107 Prairie avenue,
Highwood, April 26 at 9 a.m. in St.
James church, Highwood.

�Plan South of Border Program
For fH. P. Woman's Club Tuesday
The Highland Park Woman’s club
will hold its annual meeting and election of officers following a luncheon
at 1 p.m.

The
to be

on

April

22.

program of the afternoon is
presented by Mildred Wright

Bairstow

of

Waukegan,

who

calls

her lecture “Customs and Costumes
South of the Border.” She will appear

in

a picturesque

native

costume

and will bring six additional costumes
to

be

modeled

also

some

and

other

by

rare

club

and

members,

beautiful

native

and

textiles

handcrafts.

Some

of the textiles are museum
The entire program will be

pieces.
highly

colorful.

as

few

eged

North

Americans

know

them.

to

are

amusing

and she

has

ventures

at

and _ enlightening

encountered
almost

thrilling ad-

every

ing Nazi submarines

turn.

Dodg-

and mines

in the

Caribbean
in a blacked-out Norwegian
freighter and
being marooned
by
a
hurricane,
earthquakes
and
floods deep "in the jungles of Mexico
for eight nerve-wracking
days,
are
just a couple of incidents in her colorful career.
Mrs. Bairstow was born in Denver
and received her early education there
as well as in conservatories of music

in various parts of the United States.
Critics say that her voice is beautifully adapted to the lyric quality of
Spanish
and French
pronunciation
with which her lectures are spiced.
Her knowledge of the Spanish and
French languages has been a valuable
medium in enabling her to establish
iriendly relationships with the Latin
American

Mrs.
some

people.

Bairstow

has

of the foremost

lectured

Now

lands of the West
Because

at
Frozen
Fruit

ice,

members

of

are

asked

servations

field

traveler

on

and

Bairstow,

writer,

is

Spanish-speaking

gives

to

her

an

lecturer.
authority

America

listeners

and

information

acquired
through
extensive
travel.
She was recently lauded by the Mexico City press for her efforts in creating a better understanding between
our

countries,

and

true ambassador
Having
sOuth of

was

acclaimed

a

of good will.

spent
much
of
the border, Mrs.

and

the various

historic

her life
Bairstow

background

countries.

the

people

their

by

Sat-

court,

customs

Chickens
Size

H.

P.

Pork

All Kinds, 24

Calves

gal. $4.75

album

from Alden

3199

is something

Harris,

- Capons
Meats

Pet Foods

We

Deliver

in

Liver

-

- Beef

Pork

Tenders

-

Lamb Legs

_ Chops - Also Whole Carcasses

Pastries

Cooked

Veal

Chops

Fish &amp; Sea Food
Frozen

-

Beef Tenderloins, - Steaks

Processed

Foods

Made

By Famous

Highland Park
FOR DEERFIELD

CALL

Call
860

We Specialize in Processing Meats
Your

Home

Chefs
Enterprise

1215

Ready for

Freezer.

(Lowest

Prices)

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
724

Deerfield

Clarence

S. Wilson

Rd.

Deerfield,

III.

3% MILDRED
F WALLDRE
of Deerfield

singers

The

Jr.

Highland

Park,

newest

news

for

Spring-into-Summer . . .
our cool, colorful cottons! Look fresh and
smart all day in our
handsome street dresses.

til.

GETTING MARRIED ¢
A wedding

- Geese

Squabs

Specializing
in natural
unposed pictures of your
party, wedding or reception
Tel.

- Ducks

19.

PERCY H. PRIOR,
Photographer

She has visited

and

Gar-

Turkeys

&amp; Small

re-

Mrs.

three guitar-playing
Broonzy,
of people’s songs.

of

in all types of homes,
from
palmthatched Indian pole huts to marble
palaces.
Thus,
she
has
learned
to

know

Carol

to

serv-

mail

Fruits

Bendfelt Ice Cream
Pt. 32c &gt; 14 gal $1.20

A group of North Shore young
people, junior members of the Civil
Rights committee, will present the first
“North Shore Hoot,” an evening of
American folk songs and ballads, at
8 p.m. on Friday, April 25. The Hoot
will be held in the Skokie school in
Winnetka, and will feature Win StracBill”
“Big
and
Asbel
Bernie
ke,

has had opportunities to travel far off
the beaten path to study the primitive
culture

688

April

to

prices.

Dairy Products

“North Shore Hoot,” April 25

MILDRED WRIGHT BAIRSTO
Wright

telephone

for luncheon

Day,

urday,

Mildred

Indies.

lack

lowest

Juices

Vegetables—Lge.

in

States from a
the major is-

Service, I wouldn’t be

We carrya variety of foods, including whole meals

before

organizations

of

that I’ve used the Frigid-Freeze

without it. Those fresh frozen foods are making a hit with
my whole family. You can call on me every week.

this country, including numerous ones
in the Chicagoland area. She has just

returned to the United
three-months’ tour of

f

privil-

Her unusual experiences in different parts of the world have been
exciting,

1610 FREES)

RTREEZER
TCE
“Food SERVICE

@
@
@
e

Photography,

ACCESSORIES
COSTUME JEWELRY
BLOUSES
MILLINERY
BAGS

of which you will be

forever

“The

proud.

Shop

With

You

in

Mind’

—

Be Sure of the Finest —

Charge

ALDEN HARRIS, Photography
7S.

St.

Johns

Ave.

Highland

Park

Open

639 Deerfield

Rd., Deerfield,

III.

Accounts
Monday

Invited

Evenings

Tel. Dfid. 806

�Mrs. Murray to Head
Wellesley Fund Drive

Our Weekly Storyof
HIGHLAND

PARK

HOSPITAL

Report for the week April 5 to April 11 inclusive
Last

Emergencies attended
| Babies delivered
Operations performed ees EB ae oe a
X-Ray examinations ee
Laboratory examinations eee meee

ae

eer

he,

eee

I

i

dee Beek |

eee

rsa

ee

This

Howell
was

Wellesley

143

fund

Nees te ae 27
Se
ae 77
Pre at 300

284
1,191
4,114

eee

ee
ae

Mrs.

12

ee

Week
20

Park

Year
259

‘}

CLEANING

Hias

Wei
sheet &gt;
se

te

;

DRAPES

2

Woe;

-

;

Sy

a

¢

DUFFY
»

&amp; DUFFY

in

of

WINNETKA

Highland

chairman

75th

of

the

Anniversary

Lake

county

at

a

luncheon meeting of the Wellesley
College Alumnae council, held on the
college campus Saturday, April 12.
appointment

of

Mrs.

Murray

was announced by
Wellesley, Mildred

the president of
McAfee Horton,

who

will seek to raise

said

the

college

ait

s Wibbard

Wedding

WH

Take |

iz bic, _Aprit 30
Miss
Mr.

of

Winifred , Howard, ‘daughter
and Mrs. William J. Howard

of Kenilworth, will become the bride.
of Walter Edward .Willard,
son of.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Willard of
Linden
Park
place
on Wednesday,

April

30, at 8:30

p.m.

in the

of the Holy Comforter,

Church

Kenilworth.

Mrs. Howard Stein, the bride’s sis$7,500,000 by June, 1950, the 75th anter, will attend as matron of honor
niversary
of
the opening
of the and bridesmaids will be Mr. Willard’s
school. Of that amount, $2,000,000 is ‘twin sister, Mrs. James S. Kearns of
required to maintain faculty salaries, Northbrook and another sister, Mrs.
$2,000,000 for scholarships, $1,500,000 Frank H. Lennox of Highland: Park;
Miss
Katherine
Knutzon and
Miss
for a fireproof dormitory and $2,000,Georgia Gazlay.
000 for a new library.
Milton J. Hamilton of Lake Potdsr
Mrs.
Murray
has
appointed
the
will be best man.
following committee
to work with
The bridegroom is a former lieuher on the fund campaign: Mesdames
tenant colonel and served five years
James T. Barnard, Aaron S. Bauer,
Newman Fell, Ralph Heilbronn, Rich- in the. army, serving in Europe with —
the 65th division.
ard J: Loewenthal, Frank B. Wales,
A reception will be held in the
Francis D. Weeks and Miss Margaret
home of the bride’s parents followJohnston.
ing the ceremony. After a wedding Mrs. Herbert C. Paschen of Hubbard Woods. is chairman
of Illinois.

CLEANERS

HIGHLAND PARK

College

campaign

The

SPRING

Murray

appointed

©

for the

state

The despotism of custom is on the
wane. We are not content to know that
things are; we ask whether they ought
to be,
—John Stuart Mill

trip, the

on

couple

the

Wess

oe

will

North

make

Soa:

Ke

The
of

home

Lachiak

Bride

tn une

engagement

riage

their

Shore.

Miss

and

Susan

coming

Lackner,

mardaugh-

ter of Mrs. Julius Ernest Lackner and
the

late

ian

Go Ahead

Dr.

Lackner,

Schooler,

Schooler

David.

son

of

and

of

Chicago

Schooler,

Leon

Mrs.
and

was

Dor-

David
the

sete

late

“lle

re-

cently.
Miss

Lackner

was

graduated

from

Highland Park High school in 1942
and Smith collegein 1946. Her fiance
was graduated from Roosevelt college and attended Northwestern university and University of Illinois. He
served in Public Relations, Radio Div.
S. Army, during the recent war.

You Cant: Hurt Those

ae ee we
Be Denim aes

Both

.Miss

Schooler

are

offices

Lackner

in

the

and

Mr.

administrative

of development

at

Roosevelt

college in Chicago.
The wedding will take place on
Wednesday, June 18, at the home of
the bride’s mother, 31 Ravine terrace.
The couple will make their home in

Made of tough. 8-oz.
LANE Blue Denim to

Ravinia.

stand hard wear. They’re
Sanforized, Copper Riv-

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE

eted and Double-Stitched
with Orange Thread.

IN SIZES 2 T0 18 59-09

We
To

FELL'S
Open

Monday

Nights

7:00

to 9:00

Do

Have All New
Equipment
—
Your Work Right

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood
We

Build Lawns
Driveways

TRY

US

and

OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137 N. Second,

All Phones 3785

�Legion Post 145

et

”

Legion Women Make Plans for
Poppy Day Monday, May 26

Plans Dance May 3
Highland
American

“Help and hope is the meaning of
the memorial poppy to those who are f Gereeinainal source of suport for the
rehabilitation and
child
paying the human cost of our world continuous
war victories”, Mrs. Eggert Carlsen welfare work of the auxiliary.
The government does much for the |
and Mrs. Ellery Harvey, Rehabilitation chairman of the Highwood and disabled, but the government cannot |
Highland Park units of the American do everything. There are many veter- |
Legion, auxiliary, stated today as the ans and veterans’ families which do
auxiliary continued preparations for 10t come within the legal provisions
the

annual

observance

of

Poppy

for

day,

others

Monday, May 26.
All the money contributed by those
who wear poppies in memory of the
war dead goes to aid the wars’ living
victims,

the

disabled

veterans,

the

volunteer

poppy

are many

are

Lutherans to Attend
Representatives from the Zion Lutheran church, Highwood, will attend a
leaders’ meeting for the North Shore
tomorrow evening
in
Paul’s church

being

held

in preparation for the $1,500,000
paign for Augustana college at

camRock

Kenosha.

The

meeting

is

Island, Ill. Funds will provide for additional

fine

and

endowments

dormitories,

arts

The

building.

Rev.

a

Wilbur

of the
chairman
general
Palmquist,
campaign, and the Rev. Theodore E.
Matson, Illinois conference chairman,
will speak during the meeting. The Rev.

Herbert W. Linden is chairman
North Shore district.

of the

There

are

many

compensation

meet

their

is

needs.

too

There

fields of service into which
agencies

cannot

reach

and

Legion

Victim
of a
Friday morning
Andrews, wife
chief of police.
tained a double
when she slipped
floor at her Park
is being treated
hospital.

is planning

THE HOME CLINIC
of

the

owned

a games

and

local vets.

p.m., with a new type of number selection,
and
door
and
game
prizes

home

all

Refreshments

by

midnight.
their

will

be

served,

dancing

from

10 p.m.

Members

are urged

Complete

household

service on

equipment

furnishings.

fol-

Call

until

H. P. 4766

to bring

friends.

MANY WAYS TO LOOK AT IT! |
Yes

tain—it

little as they pay in
hardships for our war

bitterly

while

most

of

Oscar

Iverson,

and

Miss

Helen

Mrs.

of

Mrs.
Park

Chicago,

were at Downey hospital at Great
Lakes, helping the patients to make
poppies for Poppy day.

or

Parkers

give

to

the

send

of patients

—_

quality

it to Erm-

If you think ehough of it fo have it cleaned
Think enough of it to send it to us... .

ERMINE CLEANERS, INC. |

American

OTTO F. FISHER, Pres. |
ALL PHONES —

at Downey

HIGHLAND

:

PARK 3710

ta

hospital.
oan ew

GOLDE

Slam

Solid Silver

&gt;&gt;.

4

Wise)

APPROVED

Se

by

EXPERT LUBRICATION

STERLING

PRELUDE .. . a delightful pattern of
delicate beauty. A shimmering, concave ribbon of silver is romantically
crowned with a floral cluster so
delicately carved that it has the appearance of actually being applied.
SIX

PIECE

$929.63

PLACE

SERVICE

125

WHILE

U

WAIT

including tax

CREDIT TERMS

I. H. NEMEROFF
Jewelers &amp; Opticians
Across from the Bank
Same location 35 years

‘Tel. Highland Park 630

§

N MOTORS |
:

| AE

INTERNATIONAL

a
?

ine Cleaners.

auxiliary on Poppy day goes
fund which is spent entirely

for the welfare

the

es
ae

angle—it pays to

Each day for weeks before Poppy
day, the patients work on the poppies

Legion
into a

—

August

Cole and
Highland

Bowen

doesn’t

the beauty angle

us

or
nothing.
Buying
and
poppy shows
that we ‘at

Benson, Mrs. Phillip
Edwin ‘L,. Gilroy of

can

matter if you
consider it from

least recognize and are grateful for
their sacrifices.
On Thursday, April 10, Mrs. Chris
Matthiesen, Poppy day chairman for
Highland Park, Mrs. Ellery Harvey,
Mrs.

. . you

cleaning problem many ways!

victories. The human cost of war is
so unequally divided among us, some

so

|

gt

One thing is cer-

pay little
Wearing a

|

and | |

For further;

were made in our defense. Poppy day
gives
us all an
opportunity
to do
something
for
them
ourselves,
to

paying

|

by three | 2

information,

will be awarded.
lowed

operated

look at your dry

land

home
accident last
was Mrs. Rex R.
of Highland
Park’s
Mrs. Andrews susfracture of the leg
and fell on a waxed
lane residence. She
at Highland Park

145

party and dance on Saturday, May 3.
Games are scheduled to start at 8:30

until they are tired. The money High-

Fractures Leg in Fall

Post

there
the auxiliary goes with
aid
made made possible by the poppy
contributions.
These are our disabled veterans and
dependent families. Their sacrifices

help them a
suffering and

Meeting in Kenosha

churches to be held
at 8 o'clock at St.

to

official

their

workers

whose

meager

families and the families of the dead.
The
dimes,
quarters
and _ dollars
dropped into the contribution boxes
of

compensation.

Park

106 So. First

HIGHLAND

é

PARK 2500

_

2

�_

VEW
-

*"Y-W.C-A--Calendar&lt; |

Hold Softball Tryouts

Tryouts will be held Sunday at 2

WEDNESDAY, April 23,
10 a.m. Sewing group.
THURSDAY, April 24,
10 a.m. Creative Writers.
12 Noon luncheon
7:30 p.m. Painting class.
SATURDAY, April 26,
.
8 p.m. Saturday Evening club dance.

p.m. at Sunset Park for the Highland

Park VFW post softball team, according

to Jack

Clavey

and

Pat

Moran,

post
members
in
charge
of
team
-atrangements. It was also announced

that league play will be carried on
and all men interested are to contact
either Clavey or Moran.

Centennial of Missouri Synod
Members of the local Redeemer
Lutheran church will join with other
Lutherans

in

hundredth

anniversary

ing of the Missouri
day, April 27.
The

IT’S ROSE TIME AGAIN
and

you'll

For summer
|

a

appreciate

our

labeled

and

synod

was

on April 26,
eran church

packaged

roses.

60 Green

DECORATORS

Bay Rd.

Shop

|

Winnetka

132

one

found-

on

organized

became

the

nucleus

church

body

grew.

throughout

inchs

synod

in First St.
of Chicago.

It grew from
membership
of

EXTERIOR

the

the

Sun-

in

1847,

Paul’s

Luth-

an church in America. A group of
Saxons emigrated to Missouri and

rollers,

spreaders, garden tools, seeds.

Colnial

of

of

The
establishment
of this church
body was
partly a protest to state
control of the church in Germany and
partly an attempt to found a Luther-

beauty buy your roses today . . . Also vines

and flowering shrubs, grass seed, plant food, lawn

observance

from

which

4,000 in
1,500,000,

the

world.

this

1847 to a
scattered

The

Missouri

synod belongs to the Synodical conference, which represents about one
third of the Lutheranism in America.
The American Lutheran church and

the

United

sent

the

Lutheran
other

church,

two-thirds

THE

reprein

cluding

this

country. Nineteen institutions of higher
learning,
including
Valparaiso
University of Valparaiso, Ind., have
been founded by the Lutherans.

destination-fun!
in smart sport shirts

The

Lutheran

Walter

A.

Hour, with

Maier,

which

the

dred

into

men..In

py Van Heusen

1845,

the

Rev. William

dians as a group and demonstrate the
Christian life to them. Indian children

Stitched for action, styled for leisure,

right for wielding rod-and-reel,
racquet or niblick—they’ve got a
wonderful air of happy-go-lucky
masculinity. We have Van Heusen

sport shirts in a variety of friendly

fabrics, cool colors and smart
new styles.

were

brought

into white

adult

Indians

were

tact

with

A

few

a Christian
church

Saginaw

Bay

still

the

show

More

by

of
of

Repeat

in

has

been

Behnken,

president

Synod

Lutheran

deliver

Hour

the

address

on WGN

broadcasts

will take

at 2 p.m. and

given

not

Cleanup Week

Citizens

are

asked

papers on parkways
the specified days.

in-

to

place

Answer—To be given by

Ralph E. Wagers, C.S.B.

:

Member of the Board of Lectureship of The
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts.

Gorton

School

400

Illinois Road,

Free

Lake

Forest

April 21, at 8 p.m.

Lecture
The public is cordially invited.

GARNETTS MENS STORE
CENTRAL AVE.

HIGHLAND

PARK

Auspices of
First Church

old

for pickup on

Question—Why Is “Christian Science:
a Prophetical Religion’?

Monday,

place

WJJD

Pivst watdss
6.6 iigis
oc cced April 28
Second ward ............ April 29
Third ward. ........-.0.5% April 30
Pe
GN.
May 1

who

than $1,000,000 has been

East

over

at 11:30

City of Highwood

the

Indians

shipped,

hun-

Bulletin

by the Missouri synod for overseas
relief, $50,000 to Shanghai, $100,000
to Scandanavia. Thirty-five thousand
been

will

over WAAF
6:30 p.m.

Michigan,
their

have

J. W.

the Lutheran
a.m.

dollars

to

Five

subsidize
orphanages
Europe.
Ten
thousand
been given for Japanese

Missouri

con-

side with

packages

Rev.

of clothing

and

into

cemeteries

graves

church,

community.

region

were buried side
white brothers.

schools

placed

the

BEHNKEN

locations.

thousand

The

of

Leohe

of Bavaria undertook a unique mission project
by sending
Lutheran
Christians to settle among the In-

world

pledged to
throughout
dollars has
Bibles.

its* fifteenth
year using 905 radio
stations, is a project of Lutheran lay-

J. W.

300,000 pounds

desperate

Rev.

is going

REV.

of Christ, Scientist
Lake Forest

at

�Thursday,

April

17,

Page

1947

Peddle Receives Eagle Award

17

IT’S SPRING
SPRAY TIME

TREES &amp; SHRUBS
May we figure with you on Spraying, Feeding,
Trimming, Removing or other tree services you,
require.

may

HOYT TREE EXPERT CO.
515

Highland

Photo

by

S.

ST.
6047

JOHNS AVE., HIGHLAND PARK
N. MENARD, CHICAGO 30

Newcastle

535

Park

4140

M etzenberg

HENRY PEDDLE, JUNIOR ASSISTANT SCOUTMASTER of Rotarian Troop 30, is shown
(center) immediately after he has received his Eagle Scout decoration from his sister, Mrs.
James Jacobs,
the former Ruth Peddle, substituting for his mother who was out
of the city.
On the new Eagle Scout’s right is his brother-in-law,
Mr.

Jacobs.

The award was made Sunday, April 6, at a merit badge
court of honor held in the gymnasium of Elm Place school.

Miss Elva Bolle
Is
Appointed to
U. of Ill. Staff
Miss
Johns

Elva

Bolle

of

avenue

has

been

at

626

South

St.

appointed

Before

Miss

Bolle

for

Arbor,

Mich.,

taught

to

the

university,

physical

education

SPORT HAS

prior

to

We
that
new

are proud to announce
with the acquisition of
equipment

we

are

now

Smartest

VENETIAN

selections

in

HIGHWOOD GLASS &amp; PAINT CO.
Waukegan

“HOOKER
PAINTS”
Phone H. P. 531
Highland
Ave.

24
most

HOUR

with

exacting

Scotts Seed

conditions.

Ee

y ZB
Za

SAVE
As

a

when

THIS

special

develop

free,

we

will

of

film

roll

offer

is

Saturday,

good

until

April

19

YF;

“She can’t hit or field but she

Serving

sure has a large following.”

305

WAUKEGAN AVE.
PHONE HIGHLAND

the North Shore

thru.

We're tops within our “field”. Our
appliances can’t be matched anywhere.
xs

VanDs
er ee) aL
PARK 1533

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Alden Harris
PHOTOGRAPHY

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LOLs

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AD!

offer

one

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Turf

Builder

this ad is presented!

This

ATTEN GU

Ill.

SERVICE

inte OD Veet

POMEL

Park,

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All photofinishing is done in
our own laboratory under the

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\

and

that taught health education in addition to athletics work at Gorham
State Normal school in Maine.
She
received a BS degree in physical education from University of Iowa.

SHORE’S NEWEST SHOP

NORTH

YOUR

FOR

women.

going

CONSULT

and

to

the staff of University of Illinois’
Chicago Undergraduate
division
at
Navy pier as an instructor in physical
education

Ann

show

7S.

St.

Johns

Highland

Ave.

Park

SCOTT’S FOR DENSE SHADE—Cool green grass right up to
5 Ibs. - $6.25
3 Ibs. - $3.75
the tree trunks. 1 Ib. - $1.25
10 Ibs. - $12.35.
(grassfood)—keeps shaded grass
SCOTTS TURF BUILDER
alive and sparkling. Clean and odorless.
25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft. (50x50ft.)
50 Ibs. - $3.75 feeds 5,000 sq. ft. (100x50ft)
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds 10,000 sq. ft. (100x100 ft.)
SCOTTS WEED
tain, all broad

$1.25 and

CONTROL—Easily destroys Dandelion,
to the
harm
without
weeds
leaved

Planlawn.

$3.85.

HUSENETTER
365 Roger Williams

HARDWARE
Tel. H. P. 4387

�n)
o
s
x
i
H
H.
.
s
r
M
e
m
Na Head Seeing Eye ©
To

| To Discuss Child
Guidance At Green
‘Bay School Tonight

Mrs. H. H. Hixson recently was appointed chairman of the Highland

maturity,

members for the support of The Seeing Eye. The enrollment campaign

questions

to

be

an-

swered in the stimulating panel discussion to be held at Green Bay Road
school,

tonight

at

8 o'clock.

Miss Lawry Turpin, Mrs. Ernest
Belmont, Mrs. Stanley Lind and Henry Stein will discuss different phases
of the subject, “New Horizons in Our
Responsibilities toward Children.” Dr.

C. O. Dahle, superintendent of School
District

107,

will

serve

as

moderator.

Following the discussion, refreshments will be served, with the Green
Bay Road school first grade mothers
acting as hostesses.
Everyone is invited to attend the

Blue Moon
GOLD: oN-RICH
@ Distinctive
flavor and tex&gt; ture in a natural ‘semi-soft

discussion.
—_—

A friendship that makes the least
noise 1s very often the most useful, for
which reason I should prefer a prudent
friend to a zéalous one.,

Addison

Park

will

team

for

officially

the

open

enrollment

when

of new

members

of

the
committee
meet for luncheon
Tuesday, April 22 at the Casino club,
195 East Delaware street, Chicago.
Members of the Chicago Seeing
Eye executive committee will be the
luncheon hosts and Huntington
B.
Henry chairman, will preside. Guest
speaker during the meeting Tuesday,
will be Joe E. Brown, currently starring

in

“Harvey”.

Mrs.

the
the

Michael

Cudahy,

chairman

of

enrollment committee, will close
lun@heon program with instruc-

tions to workers on the job before
them during the next four weeks. The
enrollment will close on May 20.

JOSEPH GIALLANZA,
operatic
baritone and Highland Park singland Park team are Mesdames John
ing teacher, appeared in recital
with a group of vocal artists at
Thomson, Jack Heitman, Dudley Onhall the
afternoon
of
derdonk,
George
Strecker,
George Kimball
Mr. Giallanza
Ross, Jr., Frederick
Hecht,
E..M.| Saturday, April 12.
sang “Canta pe me,”
“For You
| Hadley,
Baldwin
Newman,
Arthur Alone,” and in a duet with MarRooney, John Wilbor, William Rose, jorie Cuthbertson, “La ci darem Lo
Assisting Mrs. Hixson on the High-

John

You MUST See It

B.

Martineaux,

Ellsworth
Miss

Mills,

Mitzi

Robert

George

Heck,

Mason

and

Butz.

To Believe It.....

Mano”

from

‘starring

999

322 N. First St.

all North Shore cast of 50

Giovanno.

Mass.,

S. Guthman
will

deliver

of Wora

sermon

entitled “Meeting the Challenge To- .
day” at North Suburban Synagogue
Beth El, newly organized Jewish Conservative

Tel. H. P. 77

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A SPECIALTY

an

Sidney

cester,

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION

Don

Massachusetts Rabbi to Give
Sermon at Beth El Synagogue
Rabbi

“Hips, Hips, Hooray!

—

Enrollment Campaign

What
responsibilities
should
be
taken by teachers, parents and religious leaders, in guiding children to
are

‘Sings in Recital

synagogue

holding

services

at the Winnetka Woman’s: club, to‘morrow at 8:30 p.m.
Rabbi Guthman! attended the Beth
Hamidrash Letorah of Chicago and
is a graduate of University of Chicago. His first pulpit was in Chelsea,
Mass.,

and

he

is now

Israel synagogue in
who are interested

serving

in

Beth

Worcester.
All
are invited to®

attend.

©
‘ ®

Sensational dancing ! ! !
Terrific

HERE

comedy ! ! !

COMES

A

Scott Lawn!

@ Marvelous singing ! ! !
You
can
own
a _ beautiful
Scott lawn this easy way:
Banish dandelions, buckhorn
and
the like with
Scotts
Weed control. Restore grass
sparkle
and
health
with
Turf Builder.
Fill in bare
spots
with. vigorous
new
grass from Scotts Lawn Seed.

Proféssionally produced and directed by Will J. Harris
for the Men’s

Club,

North

Shore

Congregation Israel.

Central School Auditorium,
GLENCOE

Tuesday

and

Wednesday

April 22 and 23, 8:45 P. M.

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For full sun or light shade.
1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. - $6.25
25 Ibs. - $29.85.
Scotts
Dense Shade, same prices.
a
SCOTTS

TURF BUILDER—Complete food for hungry grass.
$2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft.
50 Ibs.
$3.75 feeds
5,000 sq. ft.
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds 10,000 sq. it.

25

Ibs.

SCOTT

SPREADERS—Handy

seeding

and

tires,

Tickets on sale at Fell’s store and Gsell’s drug store in
Highland Park; Adams drug store in Glencoe; and Conney’s pharmacy in Winnetka.

for

feeding.

precision machines for quick
25 lb. capacity - $7.85.
50 Ib., rubber

$14.85.

é

SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Quick
to grass. $1.25 and $3.85.

and permanent.

SHERONY HARDWARE
314

RAILWAY

AVE.
Tel. H.

No harm

HIGHWOOD, ILL.
P. 2041
3

|

«

.

�Thursday,

April

17,

' Page

1947

The Ups and Down of Spring

19

1REDALE
MOVING

AND

PACKING

OF HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

AGENT ALLIED VAN LINES

STORAGEH. P.

374 Central Ave., Highland

181

Park

e

By

Stoge

econ

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.
Photo

AT

A PUPIL

SCHNADIG,

DICK

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

tell the

can

SCHOOL,

RAVINIA

Let Meals Sing of Spring

days of spring after a
world there’s nothing like the first sunshine
Here he is seen makwinter of cold, snow and confinement indoors.
Ravinia

The magic touch of Spring is upon us. Sunday
menus as well as every day meals need to keep in
step. Bright colors, zesty flavors, new ideas spell

of
on the playground

ing the most of the recent fair weather

school.

Sponsors

Naturalist Campbell

Labor temple
Tuesday, April

is

sponsoring

his

Funds
to be

appearance

The

subject
which

of

he

Mr.

will

Campbell’s

illustrate

lec-

with

col-

ored motion pictures, will be “Summer
Homing
and Roaming in the Great
North Woods.” Many of the movie
scenes

were

Wisconsin
creatures
abounds.

Mr.

made

at

his

sanctuary

and

show

the

friendly

with

which

his

island

Campbell

has

given

5,200 lectures to audiences

in

wild

retreat

more

Park

last

year.

The

program

he

admissicn

will

be charged,

but

a

voluntary collection will be taker to cover

the

expense

auditorium.

All

of

renting

money

the

school

collected

over

UU
Quick
Central

Avenue—Room

Highland

Telephone

Park

H.

P. 1553

are

at

for boy and

Community

center.

12

well to investigate
have to offer.

what

FOUNDRY COMPANY
MAS. 577
Take

Chicago

CHICAGO,
North

Shore

Junction
block

ILLINOIS
to

North

and walk one
west.

Ham

(Butt End)

besimee

Young men 20 to 35 years of
age, who want to learn a good
trade and earn good compensation while doing so, would

NORTH

Baked

* Bee

ee

ee

et

ae

ee

ee.

ee

ne

oe

Place half of a Wilson’s Certified Ham, fat side up, on
arackina
shallow baking pan. Bake in a slow oven, 300°F., 25 min. per lb. Ifa
meat thermometer is used, insert the bulb to the center of the largest
muscle, being careful not to let it touch a bone. Bake until internal
temperature reaches 155°F. If you wish to glaze the ham, remove it
from the oven half an hour before it is done, peel off the skin and
score the fat in diamond shapes with a sharp knife. Dot with cloves,
sprinkle with brown sugar and return to a 350°F. oven to brown.

THE CHICAGO HARDWARE

THE NEW SECRETARY
397

event

APPRENTICE
MOULDERS
do
we

Service

the

Seeking

is to

new and
especially

from

We
Are

than

for his 1947 lecture tours.
No

in

Park on
at 8 p.m.

YOUNG
MEN
VETERANS

four million persons. Widely known as
the “philosopher -of the forest,” he is
considered by many to be America’s
foremost interpreter of nature.
A capacity crowd heard Campbell’s
program when he appeared in Highland
given on May 4 is entirely
one that has been prepared

. ... in eating...

to charity.

will be used

activities

than

of more

in Highland
22, beginning

received
donated

that amount
girl

here.
ture,

interest in cooking

living.

?¢.

Campbell,
famed
naturalist,
lecturer and photographer, will

speak in Elm Place school auditorium
on Sunday, May 4, at 3 p.m., it was
announced
today
by
Highland
Park
Playground
and _ Recreation _ board,

which

renewed

Party

The Catholic Daughters of America
will sponsor a games party at the

To Give Lecture at
Elm Place May 4
Sam
author,

Games

ee

ee ee coe ane

ee

Se

ae

ee

WY

ce cme em ee

Melody for Spring
Keep your menu in tune with the
season. Start with a fresh fruit cocktail, then bring on the baked Certified

Ham, parsley buttered potatoes, asparagus bundles topped with pimiento
strips, tossed vegetable salad and hot
crescent rolls. Mint ice cream with a
touch of chocolate sauce will finish the
meal in perfect harmony.
Pineapple chunks tipped with maraschino cherries and bits of curly endive give the main dish extra eye
appeal.

Repeat Performance
Leftover ham is delicious when scalloped. Combine 1 % cups diced, cooked
Certified Ham with 4 hard cooked
Clear Brook Eggs (sliced), 1 cup
diced, cooked celery and 2 cups medium white sauce (made of 4 tbsp.
Certified Margarine or Clear Brook
Butter, 4 tbsp. flour and 2 cups milk
and water from cooking celery). Top

mE

a

sme eet ea ote on

NR

Se Se

co

.

!
l
1
|

1
I
I
J

with buttered crumbs and bake at
375°F., 20 to 25 minutes.
Grind smaller pieces of ham coarsely
and add to scrambled eggs. Makes a
mighty tasty breakfast. Add grated
onion and diced green pepper and,
presto, it’s a luncheon dish you'll be
proud

to serve.

Snack Scoop
: Sandwich time is any time whether
it’s noon, tea time or midnight. If
you’ ve been looking for a snappy treat,

you'll like this deviled ham and cheese

spread.
Combine
1 can Certified
Deviled Ham, % cup grated Certified American Cheese, 2 tsp. catchup,

1

tsp.

prepared

mustard,

and

tsp. Worcestershire sauce. Spread

2

on

bread, Meltba toast fingers or crackers

and broil until slightly brown, about 5
min. This amount spreads 7 or 8 slices
of bread. Grand either as a sandwich
or canape spread.

Sincerely,
George Rector

�Page

20

Thursday,

Miss Holt Elected
To Phi Beta Kappa
At Iowa University
IZOD
TO

THE

BRINGS

AMERICAN

SALISBURY

SQUARE

SCENE!

Miss

Joan

and

Mrs.

son

street,

Phi

Beta

Holt,

Herbert

daughter

E. Holt,

recently

Kappa,

scholastic

was

fraternity,

of

to

honorary
the

State

University of Iowa, Iowa City.
Miss Holt is one of 33 university
students elected to the fraternity this
spring.

Phi

Beta

Kappa

requires

a

3.2 grade point average in all liberal
arts courses. A grade point of 3 is
equal to a B average.
In addition to maintaining

a

high

scholastic average, Miss Holt is active
in student affairs. While a freshman
she was on the orientation
council,
and was a member of Alpha Lambda
Delta, honorary scholastic fraternity

for

freshman

sophomore

YWCA

women.

year

and

she

During

was

of

chairman

for

Information First, a university women’s
association
which
obtains
well
known
speakers
from
all over the
country. During her junior year she

was

elected

Women’s

treasurer

association,

of
and

chair-

man for YWCA.
Miss Holt is now a member
of
Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism

Tau

fraternity

Alpha,

for

women:

national

Kappa

honorary

nalism
fraternity, and Pi
national social sorority.

jour-

Beta

Phi,

A senior in the college of liberal
arts majoring in advertising journalism, Miss Holt entered the university
in the fall of 1943. She will be graduated

in June.

Sponsors Card Party April 22
8

at

p.m.

at

the

school,

high

noon.

1041

Ridge road, Wilmette. Mrs. A. Keil
and Mrs. J. Bleser are in charge of

to the grammar

school

contests,
Highland.
Park
and Recreation board con-

Participants

were

sixth,

seventh

«nd eighth grade boys and girls who
had won the school contests. Harry
Kubalek and Kenneth Crowell, school
athletic instructors, conducted the cityplace

First

meet.

wide

winners

were

second

place

medals,

gold

awarded

place

third

silver medals, and
bronze medals.

winners,
winners,

Winners of the contest were:
Nancy
girls—Ilst,
Sixth grade
lewer.

Le-

Cas-

Seventh grade girls—Ilst, Naomi

girls—Ist,

Grade
Eighth
2nd,
Pritchard;
Diane Forsythe.

Seventh

grade

Dotti

3rd, Jack

Bud

Philip

May;

grade boys—Ist,

J. Rietz;

Rob-

3rd,

boys—Ist,

2nd,

3rd,

Dick

H..Freeberg;

Hardacre;
Moss.

Eighth

Brabara

Tresch;

boys—lst,

grade

Sixth

2nd,
erts;
Schotanus.

2nd,

Susan

Carol

3rd,

Ferguson;

Ann

sell; 2nd,
Secrest.

3rd,

M.

R. Cimbalo;
Riggio.

August Baracant
To Receive CPA
Certificate
August

The Mallinckrodt Mother’s club wil]
sponsor a card party on Tuesday, April
22,

1947

ducted-a city-wide free throw tourney
in Braeside school last Friday after-

University
art

a climax

free
throw
Playground

her

president

program

As

Mr.

elected

at

17,

School Free Throw
Champions Win Medals
In City Tournament

1330 Jud-

national

April

Baracani,

232

|

South

Central

avenue, Highwood, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Adolph
Baracani,
238
High
street, Highwood, recently was notified

that

he

was

successful

in passing

the Illinois Certified Public accountant examination held last November.
On

arrangements.

April

24

he

will

be

a

guest

of

the Illinois Society of Certified Public
Accountants at a dinner
House, Chicago, where

at the Palmer
CPA
certifi-

cates will be presented.
A graduate of Highland
school.
school

and Northwestern
of commerce, Mr.

the husband.
Hargiss, also
high

school,

Very Beau Brummel with its cutaway lines — solid

and

Neaxtha Weathered
THE DRAKE SHOP e IN THE DRAKE HOTEL
THE 950 SHOP @ 950 N. MICHIGAN AVENUE
THE EVANSTON SHOP e 1636 ORRINGTON
THE NEW OAK PARK SHOP e 730 LAKE STREET

Kimber

is no

freedom

Business

Charles,

tyrant like
where

its’

3.

custom,

edicts

and

are

not

—Bovee

x

@

Izod collection of suits, coats, dresses and blouses.

$4975

Moser

resisted.

tailored to a British “T’’! In a beautiful box-weave

Borne beige, Bathurst blue. Sizes 10 to 16.

of

have two children, Julie

and

There
no

wool weskit! Unmistakably Izod of London, for it’s
menswear wool — and an important suit from our

6,

High

of the former Nadine
a graduate of the local

college. They
Ann,

Park

university’s
Baracani is

Duracleaning preserves the
fabric.
No
scrubbing.
No
soaking. SAFE ... even for
antiques.

@

Recommended by America’s
foremost furniture and department stores from “coast
to coast.”
@ Colors revive. Wool fibers regain resilience. Pile unmats
... rises.
Duracleaning is done in your
home.
@ Mothproofed also... if desired.

Phone, today

.

.

. : . AMBassador

3222

Duraclean Co.
Division of HOME SERVICE CO.
839 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield

Eee

tf

H

GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50
SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Hotel Sovereign.

.

Phone Deerfield 444
Chicago

¢

aan Stuart Boom.

he
Se
a at

Newly

Decorated

Private

Rooms

quets
Swimming

and
Pool

for

and
Ban-

Business
NOW OPEN
Available

Kenmore

Phone:

Ballroom
Weddings,

Meetings.
to

the

at Granville

BRlargate

8000

Public

�“

oris é in Wilmette
SKOKIE

at GLENVIEW

HIGHWAY

ROAD

Across from our new, modernly designed flower shop

ANNOUNCE the OPENING
SATURDAY,
|

For

Exterior

¢ Finest Nursery Stock

° Garden Furniture

shrubs,

Smartest

rose |

bushes, perennials and annuals.

° Garden Tools
Most .recent developments in
power lawn mowers, hand-cart

OUTDOOR

Designed

For

night

by Mangel,

time

in

modern

Large Ali Baba jars, urns. gazing
globes, bird baths and decorative

for patio and outdoors.

hitching posts.

© Bulbs, Seeds, Insecticides, Fertilizers and Other Garden needs

LIGHTING
Florist

enjoyment

designs

° Outdoor Pottery

wrought iron and rustic furniture

wheelbarrows, hoes and rakes.

SPECIAL

Decoration

Open until 10 .. . Every Evening Including Sundays

ee

evergreens,

19th

Of Our New

Wrought Iron Garden Furniture

Choice

APRIL

in

your Flower Garden

CHARLES TROESTER, Manager
Telephone: Wilmette 5690
In Wilmette . . .. Visit the Mangel Flower
Shop . . . the finest flower shop in the Middle
West.
reg
In Chicago . .. Mangel Florist Shops are
in Five Nationally Famous Hotels.

�Page 22
Rabbi Bhiulminn Will

| Color Print Demonstration for
A

Rabbi Charles E. Shulman will be
the speaker at the annuai closing
luncheon meeting of the North Shore
Congregation
held
12:30

discuss

“Living

There

tions
_

Israel

Sisterhood,

to be

in the
temple
in
Glencoe
at
p.m. Monday, April 21. He will

in Difficult

also. will

by

Robert

be

Spiro,

Times”.

musical

selec-

baritone.

demonstration

will

be

given

at

of
the

color
next.

Reorganize N. S.

printing

meeting

of

the newly formed Highland Park Camera club Wednesday, April 23, at 8
p.m. The club meets every second and
fourth
Wednesday~
evenings
at the
Alden

Harris

studio,

7 South

St. Johns

avenue,

Spiro has made many radio appearances and concert appearances both
here and abroad.

Fourteen teams were represented at
a meeting of representatives of the
North Shore Softball league held Monday, April 7, at the Howard school,
Wilmette. Plans were made for the
coming

Mr.
Rabbi

Richard

over

the

the

coming

C. Hertz

installation

of

will preside

officers

year.

for

Bethany Philathea
Class Plans Spring
Sale April 29-30

Softball League;
Start Play June 9

season

rangements
agers

and

the

following

Philathea class of Bethany

the

various

Laurel

communities

with

ar-

from

street,

April

29

and

7 until

9 o’clock,

On

Wednesday,

Contributions

for

the

rummage

sale

are requested. They may be brought to
the church at any time from now until
the sale.

Those

wishing

picked

up

are

asked

Walter

Meierhoff,

to have

articles

to ‘contact

H.P.

Orville Wessling,

com-

representing

teams

eight

to

McGovern

evening.

Lake-Cook county line being in the
North section and teams south of the
Lake-Cook County line being in the
South section. Each section will be limited

and

Wednesday,

the sale will be held from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. but will not continue in the

the

of

and

30. The hours on Tuesday will be from
9 am. to 5 p.m. and in the evening

teams:

north

avenue

Tuesday

The North Shore Softball League
will be divided into a North and South
section

Evangeli-

cal church will sponsor its spring rummage
sale at the church,
corner of

were agreed upon by man-

representing

|

H.P.

2191,

or

Mrs.
Mrs.

1224.

munities.

It was also agreed that following the

Rabbi Berman to
Speak in Glencoe
Friday Evening

tourna-

round-robin

a

of

completion

ment in each section, the top four
teams in each section will play a double
elimination

and

will
tion
for
series

the

for

series

teams

four

the lower

championship

in each

sec-.

Rabbi Morton M. Berman of Isaiah
temple
will
exchange
pulpits
with
Rabbi
Charles
E.
Shulman
Friday
evening
at North
Shore
Congrega-

elimination
A
trophy.

a double
consolation

play
the

tentative opening date is set for June 9.

tion Israel.

FLOORS SANDED
AND

Something new to hitch your ‘wagon’ to
If you think last spring’s Special did wonders for your car,
just wait till you try this one!

CENTRAL
Ask
for Mrs.

I

have

of the
Shore.

sanded
finest

synagogue in New York. For over a
decade he has occupied his present
pulpit
in Chicago and has taken a

STEWART

101 8. PARKWAY
PROSPECT
HEIGHTS,
Phone Arlington Heights

leading part in the Jewish life and
affairs of our larger
metropolitan
community. He will use for his ser-

ILL.
7120-M

mon

5218
Stewart

and

finished

homes

along

has
had
a.
disin the Rabbinate.

For many yéars he was associated
with Dr Stephen S. Wise at the Free

FINISHED
WITH
DURA SEAL

SHELBY

;

Rabbi
Berman
tinguished
career

topic,

Regular

over
the

temple

1000

All

North

“The

Twice

services

every

visitors

Friday

are

Called”.

are

held
night

cordially

attend.

One vital service after another . . . in a single car-restoring,

worry-saving package for winter-weary cars!
a

But what’s so extra about your Standard Oil Dealer’s
newest 10 Star Special?
Something more than a skillful chassis lubrication job?
Plus a change of gear oil in transmission and differential?
In addition to a painstaking check of battery, tires, radiator,

and all the danger points? Yes, all that . . ..and more besides!

For this year your Standard Oil Dealer includes an oil
change with engine-cleaning- Permalube.
It’s our newest;
finest motor oil. Standard Oil Company.

MEL BRANDT and his: “505
2:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
An oil change with Permalube
is part of the Special this year

BETTY BOLT and her FASHION PARADES, every Wednesday and Saturday,
2:30 p.m.

Yes, the new star among the 10 vital
services in your Standard Oil Dealer’s
big spring Special is the finest motor oil
Standard ever made... PERMALUBE...

Removes the'goo’

Improves the go!
3 other fine motor oils
Quaker State Iso-Vis Polarine

FIFERS,”’

DEL

RENE’S

ORCHESTRA

nightly.

—Featuring—

M

MARIANNE
Lyric

FREE
Rhumba
Lessons

SELDON
Irish

ov
tt

FEDELE

Soprano

REED
Tenor

neha

x

at
at

invited

the
8:15.

to

�? Open 305 Acre River Wo
ods
Subdivision Near Deerfield
Homes Being Built with an Eye
To Preserving Beauty of Land
Opening
division

the

Des

tract,

to

Baird

&amp;

of the few pieces of
and pasture land re30 miles of the Loop.
of the old Clybourne

park,

amusement

spot

dev-

acquired

the

director,

from

Basil

nor, president of the National
dation for Infantile Paralysis.
Acknowledging

ancial

report

receipt

from

the

good

work

community

of

Highland

paralysis

will

continue

“This

March

of

of

the

and

the

on

Dimes

is a notable example

way

Praise
for the local
March
of
Dimes committee
headed
by Postmaster Daniel Cobb and the citizens
of Highland Park, was received last
week by Joseph P. Daly, Lake county
campaign

of

your

every

O’Con-

Founthe

fin-

Park,

of

doing

people

are

tional

Foundation

and

to

American

The

American

things.

unified

protect

through

to
our

the

Na-

at

polio

children.

The

strike

March
of Dimes
will
stronger and the battle
disease will be
tory is won.”

campaign

of the

waged

until

final

present

owners

%

Plots

have

have
Eight

clusive

use

as

of

residents

a recreation

_ Here you can shop in an atmosphere that is pleasing,
comfortable and inspiring . . . a shop devoted exclusively
to the needs of making your home more beautiful...

adequately

has

area

been

set

which

in-

cludes handsome stands of giant
elm
and
maple
trees
interspersed
with
flowering
hawthorne
and
-crabapple
trees.

Radzienda Arranges

Program for Elks
Boxing Show April 25
Lou
Radzienda,
nationally
known
boxing director:of the Catholic Youth
organization,
has
arranged
an outstanding program for the boxing show
to be staged by the Highland Park Elks
lodge in the high school gymnasium
April 25. Golden Gloves and CYO
champions will be featured on the card.
Mel Mullins is chairman of the Elks
boxing

show

committee,

and

or

from

any

more

livable.

x

THE NORTH SHORE’S FINEST HOME FURNISHINGS STORE
During the past 16 years, Garo’s have
won an enviable reputation for providing
highest quality broadlooms in a variety
that could not be equaled.

unusual plans.
Your own ideas can be
coordinated to create interiors that express

your personality.
Our

Now, Garo’s enlarged home makes it possible to display even larger and more
exclusive selections of the highest quality
broadlooms than ever before . . . all ready

for immediate installation.
Garo’s enlarged custom upholstery,
drapery and slip cover workrooms are
capable of originating and executing

interior

decorator

is at your

service

to assist you with suggestions for styling
everything from
entire home.

a

single

piece

to

Elk.

Men commonly think according to
their inclinations, speak according to
their learmng and imbibed opinions,
but generally act according to custom.
\
—Bacon

199
Green Bay Road
Wilmette

to

clean,

moth-proof,

repair,

alter

and

flame-proof rugs of all kinds. Work done
in your home or in our workrooms.

GAIRO’S
Addie

your

Garo’s Rug Service Department features
the most modern equipment and methods

George

Bock co-chairman.
Tickets may be purchased from Don
Seguin, chairman of tne ticket committee,

Store _

Plan now to visit Garo’s Open House during Forma]
Opening Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Garo’s have gone
“all out” to bring home makers a beautiful new home
furnishings store that is in keeping with the thousands of
fine home served by Garo’s.

protected by restrictions emphasizing architectural attractiveness, conformity and maintenance of the
unspoiled pastoral beauty of the land.
A 15 acre riverside park for the exaside

Home

Thursday - Friday - Saturday

Homes

been

New

~ GARO'S|
OPEN HOUSE

Homes in River Woods have been
built by Malcolm Millard, Harlan H.
Hackbert,
Merritt H. Barnum, Arthur Jerrems, Richard R. Wolfe and
Robert G. Prosser.
The property has been divided into
tracts ranging in size from 1%4 to
6

acres.

Ave., Highwood

North

Furnishing

veterans have purchased lots and plan
to build in a group.

«

the

Shore’s

Originally the- syndicate acquired
the land to protect their holdings to
the north and west. Twenty home
sites now have been sold, and several

Built

Zagalia’s Service Station

Visit

agents, are Ralph
A.
Bard,
Philip
Moore, Fred Preston, L. H. C. Bouscaren, C. Donald Dallas, Edward L.
Ryerson and Malcolm S. Millard.

Have

“All I say—it’s lucky for you the
car was just completel y winter
serviced by Zagalia’s!!”
401 Waukegan

for years as
Among pre-

type
homes
are planned.

re

PUBLICITY, INC.

—

sent members of the owning syndicate, for whom Baird &amp; Warner are

attractive
ranch
been built. More

OFEATURES

job well done.”

land from the original grantees, the
John Haben family and Orange Brace,
who used the property
pasture and farm land.

|

vic-

“We are proud of the fine campaign
you
have
conducted.
Our
national
headquarters workers salute you for

a good

|:

grow
ever
against the

eloped by the Soo railroad at the time
of the Columbian exposition in 1893.
Acquired from Grantees
The

-—
}--

front.”

In March of Dimes

Warner, is one
Original timber
maining within
It lies just south
a popular

tile

O’Connor Praises

Local Cooperation

according

of

efforts of millions of people all over
the country, the fight against infan-

sub-

of Deerfield has been announced by
Baird &amp; Warner
Inc. of Chicago.
The subdivision consists of 305 acres
lying southeast of the intersection of
the river and Deerfield road and extends one-half mile east’ to Portwine
road and a half mile south along the
‘river bank.
y
This

“Because

citizens

Plaines river west

of their River Woods

on

which raised $878.30 in the campaign,
Mr. O’Connor said:

Furnishings

Telephones
Wilmette 6300
Winnetka 3000

;

�-

by

Es

ri

NOW

at Dales

,

‘

j

ee
5
z

¢ (eer

/

te

NEW Charm School . . . you can achieve Poise,
Grace. Glamour, SO

of every woman. You owe it to yourself

ESSENTIAL

to the charm

and to your future to understand

and

develop your best qualities, both in looks and personality. The Dale name has
long been well known and respected in the field of popular dance instruction.
Now it invites you to explore the field of feminine charm.

ENROLL

605

DAVIS STREET
EVANSTON
GREENLEAF 4180
Stadios

also

PERSONALIZED

Posture

NORTH WABASH AVE.
Phone ANDover 2730

The Dale Studios continue fo
offer both men and women the
finest dance instruction. Private
or group classes.

Arnal
cthnaclmctlinnahectlinnlinnahinntlinctltndltthions,

FOR

COURSES

IN:

Photographic &amp; Fashion Modeling

located

In the Loop at
203

NOW

*

Poise
Hair-Styling

DANCE

STUDIOS

Diction
Clothes

an

°

Walking

e

Makeup

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Figure Control
Social

Graces

Coordination

ae

�Scout Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

Presbyterian Women
To Hear Missionary
At Monday Meeting

To Open 19th Year June 24
Predict Record Rush for
Reservations This Year
Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan,
the camp
that thousands of Scouts dream about
with the coming of summer,
will
officially open its nineteenth year on
June

24.

Owned

and

operated

by

the

Mrs.
now on
foreign

Hobby Show to Be
Held At Braeside
School Sunday
Braeside’s

biennial

the all-day meeting Monday, April
21, of the’ Woman’s Association of
the
Highland
Park
Presbyterian
church.

hobby — show,

North Shore Area council, Boy Scouts
of America, this camp has been acclaimed
by
Scouters
and
veteran
campers as one of the truly great

sponsored by the Braeside ParentTeacher Civic association, will be held
in the school
auditorium
Sunday,
April 20, at 3 p.m.

camps of America.
It is located
in

Braeside
residents
exhibit their hobbies,

Langlade

Wis., ‘about 270 miles from
shore, on

Spring

county,

the North

lake, 23 miles

east of Antigo in an area surrounded
by thousands of acres of woods and
many lakes.
Represents Scouting
Literally thousands of Scouts have
camped at Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Kan, and
hundreds

more

eagerly

await

their

time to attend. To the older Scouts
who have been to camp it is a loneremembered

experience;

to

younger

boys, adventure in the great out-ofdoors.
For the Scouter the camp
represents the spirit of Scouting, for
no Scout program “is complete without camping the Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan way.
Early indications point to the greatest

season

in

the

Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan.
ing

date

two

ready

are

Ka-Ja-Wan
attend

of

Camp

the

open-

of. camp

months

high,

are

is

still

away,

being

headquarters.
new

history

Although
received

Interest

this
and

more

year
Scouts

wafned

than

reservations

to

in

at

who

fill

al-

Scout

Camp

has

Ma-

reached
plan

out

to bring
on

North-

a

their

Saturday,

are
and

exhibits
April

tion

will be provided

bits

overnight.

urged
to
are asked

to the

19.

Police

school
protec-

to protect

exhi-

Mrs. George Wadsworth and her
social committee will serve refreshments.

This

Braeside
hobbyists

is

an

opportunity

residents
to
and exchange

for

meet
ideas.

all

fellow

_ The hobby show committee, headed
by John Kuiper, consists of Joe Bul-

mer,

Joe

Eisendrath,

er, Wyatt

Jacobs,

Mudge,

Bud

Charlie

Sprawl.

to attend.

Al HeimerdingJim

Murphy,
Camp

William
Lyon,
missionary,
furlough after 17 years in the
field, will be the speaker at

Kelley,

Fred

Carl Quang

and

Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

of-

ters only three periods, with a limit
of about 240 Scouts per period.
Starting dates for each two-week
period are June 24, July 8 and. July 22
Scouts will travel both ways on the

and

at

10 a.m.,

prepare

the

ladies

hospital

will

dressings.

This will be followed by the chancel
service at noon led by Mrs. E. T.
Barnes.

at

2

p.m.,,when

Mrs.

tell of her experiences

Lyon

will

in Valparaiso,

Chile, where she assisted her husband
in religious and educational work. °
The bakery sale will be in charge

of

Mrs.

CATALOG

OFFICE

:

Luncheon will be served at 12:30
p.m.
by
members
of
Mrs.
Eric
Molke’s group. The program will begin

Med

:

Starting
sew

Afnipemoy

Rex

Andrews’

group.

Board

members are asked to note that there
will be a meeting on Monday at 9:30
a.m. Ladies are also asked to remember the rummage sale which will be

HAND
LAWN
MOWERS

held on Thursday,
May
1. Those
wishing to donate articles for the
sale may bring them to the church
at any time before that date.
Custom. may
errors,

but

lead

it justifies

a man

into

many

none.

Chicago
&amp;
Northwestern’s
‘“Flambeau”, .boarding the train at Highland Park and being discharged there
on

the

return

trip.

to

their

applications.

Sign Up Early!
This year above all other years,
Scouts are urged to sign up for camp
early. Only one Scout out of five
throughout the council will be able

RUGS

JOHN MORAN
- FURNITURE - CARPETING
LIFE-TIME

717

Glencoe

CLEANED
MOTHPROOFING

Ave.

Tel.

H.

P.

1137

Immediate

Service

Typewriters, Adding Machines,
Calculators, Registers,
Pick up and delivery
511 Waukegan, Highwood
Tel. H. P. 5505

$1725

rticle No.
84WR8256Y

ORDER IT TODAY FROM
OUR CATALOG OFFICE!

“Youll love this milk of

Letter lable.

Richer Quality’

Here’s another big Ward
value.
. alightweight,
unbreakable, pressed
steel hand lawn mower.

It is designed to give
you many years of efficient service and to withstand hard wear.

Light blue finish.
Order

No, 84 WR

8256Y

Phone

'H. P. 4800

Ee

28 N. FIRST
Highland

Park,

4
Il.

�- NOW! WRAPPED IN 0)
Meadow

Gold

twice

Butter

keeps

its fine, delicate

ect

‘Propose 50% incresse.
In State Assistance
To Public Schools
be

State aid to public schools would
irgreased 50 per cent during the

year

flavor

as long!

beginning

next

July

1 by

pas-

sage of a bill sponsored in the Illinois
legislature by Representative Thomas
A. Bolger of McHenry ,and other
members of a commission which is
completing a two-year
study
of
school finances.
For school districts in the 8th senatorial

district

of

Boone,

Lake,

and

McHenry counties, this would mean
payment of a total of $700,066.21, or
$233,355.40
more than was anticipated
for the coming year.
Under the bill, payments to counties would be as follows:
Boone: $51,536.85, an increase of
$17,178.95.
Lake: $531,671.26, an increase of
$177,223.75.
McHenry:
$116,858.10, an increase
of $38,952.70.
To make possible this increased
state

of.
an

aid,

663,000

Flavor Fresh

from the creamery 16 your table:

Now — double assurance that you will enjoy
ishing goodness of Meadow Gold Butter!
For Meadow Gold’s amazing, new aluminum Wrapper keeps butter fresh twice as
long as ever before!
So, get a pound of Meadow Gold Butter
today. Notice that each quarter-pound has
its own, separate, protective wrapper of
shining aluminum foil. When you serve

‘
Ee

Meadow

*

At the Creamery ...
Meadow Gold’s churn-

Going to Your Store...
Meadow Gold, wrapped

fresh goodnessissealed
in for you by the aluminum wrapper.

in

aluminum,’is

deliv-

ered fresh daily in insulated trucks.

you'll savor the delicate

Gold,

In Your Home...
the last quarter-pound
tastes as fresh as the

At Your Store...
the new aluminum foil
- wrapper seals in freshness, keeps out other
food flavors.

first — flavor-guarded
*tilitreaches your table.

_ Meadow Gold Butter
SOLD
WILMETTE
Holbrook Royal Blue
R. W. Rapp Co.

Store

AT THESE

STORES:

WINNETKA

GLENVIEW

Pauloplos
Foods
Redke’s Grocery and

Country
Charles
Rugen’s
Midwest

Market

North Town Fruit Market
Yan Deusen Grocery and

Hill's Market
Voltz Grocery and Market

Market
George B.

R. W.

é

HIGHLAND PARK
others
maces

Blue Goose

Suburban
Market

Co.

-

,

KENILWORTH
enilwo
roc

a
R.

Stee

Rapp

Winters

Food

and

Grocery

Market

Mart
and

J.

n

Croak

;

NORTHBROOK

Melzer Grocery and Market
Lystlund’s Highway
Delicatessen

,

HUBBARD Woops
Grocery

and

Coats
@ncerd one
Market
Feldm

Ss
ce

e

GLENCOE
Glencoe
Grocery
Market

members

with

an

assertion

that

it

is

the

commission’s

proposal,

the

legislature

is

deciding

on

regular biennial appropriations that
will not be paid out until 1948.
The $9,663,000 appropriation
was
proposed as an emergency measure to
help tide schools over a crisis until
the next year, the commission explained.
In a report to be submitted
to the legislature soon the commission also will recommend a permanent
increase in state school aid, but
schools will not realize benefits from
it until 1948.
The commission said the emergency
50 per cent increase in state aid for
the coming year was decided upon
because it would be based on “sound
equalization
principles.”
Increasing
the amounts of claims already submitted would allow schools to benefit
from the appropriation in proportion
to their needs, it was pointed out.

Immaculate Conception Mother
Guild to Meet This Afternoon

Side Store
Levernier
Store
Store

wees
arke

other

the increased state aid would be made
effective for the coming ¢chool year
by paying 150 per cent of the 1946
claims which schools now have pending with the state auditor of public
accounts.
The increase would cover &gt;
the equalization payments and flat
grants provided by state law.
School districts normally run a year
behind in their collection of state aid.
For example, payment of claims for
the 1946 school year will begin July 1,
1947. It was for this reason the commission proposed to overpay the pending claims as a means of giving increased aid to schools immediately
while

richness of butter at its best. And — you'll
see that the last quarter-pound tastes just
as fresh as the first. For all the wonderful Meadow Gold flavor is safeguarded by
the aluminum wrapper, until you’re ready
to serve it.
Don’t throw away the wrapper until you've
finished the quarter-pound. Re-wrap the unused portion of butter, keep it flavor fresh.

and

needed to raise teachers’ salaries and
meet other mounting school costs.
The bill now is awaiting a hearing
before the House of Representatives
appropriations committee.
Under

all the delicate flavor and wholesome, nour-

Bolger

the commission have introduced
emergency appropriation of $9,-

and

A meeting of the Mother’s guild of
Immaculate Conception school is being
held this afternoon at 2:30 o’clock in
the basement of the rectory. All members are urged to attend, since finai
plans are to be made for the first annual luncheon to be held April 30.
In order that mothers of small children may attend, eighth grade pupils

will be on harid to care for them. The
third and fourth grade mothers will act

as hostesses.

ce

�me

Artistry in a Great Bi y Splash”

Paving
DRIVEWAYS
Now

is the

Asphalt

time

and

—

PARKING

AREAS

to get an estimate.
Don’t
the rush season is here.

Macadam

Paving —

Surface

wait

A
THOROUGH
SPLASH
in the morn-

ing is demonstrated by
in this
Alden
Harris

until

Ave.,

FURTH

Des

Plaines

Phone

Treatment

Des

Plaines

picture

experiment

taken

*

with —

3

avenue studio. Mr. Har-_
ris and his assistants,

Jewel

Word

Lemmon,

1165

process

and John ~

are

in

of taking

the
trick

,

action shots with the
equipment
which they
_ say can photograph a
bullet
clearly
as
it
emerges from the muz- —
zle of a gun.

&amp; COMPANY

Alden

Harris

Photography

Funeral

Street
5

AGP | ARR
broke

Nien

All

Phones

iMPORTANT
offer

complete

Chicago

L7G

DDN

Directors

E. 47th

936

he

&lt;&lt;

so

We

Kenwood

0700

ANNOUNCEMENT
and

right near you on the North
Furth staff of directors.

highly

Shore

adequate

using

the well

facilities

known

OF
RECORD
PROFESSIONAL
AN OUTSTANDING
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

Fiore Infant Dies
In Ames Hospital

|

American

survived

by

a

twin

sister,

is

Glader

Op

WALTER
Tailor

ALTERATIONS
/

Women’s

Clothes
Without
Suits

to

Carry

is famous for its full-size accommoda-

Brown

or Blue Armor

Duck

.... $59.50

&amp; up

BLACK

217
209

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EE

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told,

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LOUIS
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Use Our Lay-away Plan

WAUKEGAN

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o
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8 N. Second St.
H. P. 1712

Tourobe

41

39
eo
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Patrick
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Also Cleaning and Pressing

Hartmann

Excavating

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Fis
32.
40
40
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42
42
43
43
AB
45
— 46

F.
J.°
ahi:

Bo

Delay

Made.

Tazioli

\Carisog | is

W.
F.
O.

Men’‘s ed

Legion Bowling League

April 12, 1947

Manhattan
Hat Shoe
John B. Nash
...
Joe’s Tavern
.....
Onesti: Bros.) [6204.2

paternal

grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Fiore
of
Highwood
and
maternal
grandmother in Boston.

The

News

Tower:
Casitrai527). Disa cisscetes
Bildestram
Oosls: csi a cles cacecs Wakes
Washington
Gardens
Vogue
Cleaners
................ Ri ebee satis
Duffy. &amp; Duffy Cleaners ............ 48
AwG:
MePherson: © 25562
ees 48
Tommy’s
Service
Station .......... 47
Prése«:FLING; BMD
3. deeceiaseda.cke 47
Anchor’
Inetizane@:
&lt;2... 25h
iak 45
Labot Temple
Tavern
45
Highwood
Bump Shop .....
44

The parents are residents of Highwood and have; been making. their
home in Ames while Mr. Fiore is atState college there.
parents
Lawrence

Highland Ten Pin

Bowling

Graveside services were held in All
Saints
cemetery,
Des
Plaines,
this
week for Lawrence Fiore, infant son
of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Fiore.
Baby
Lawrence died at
the
hospital
at
Ames, Iowa, where he was born on
Tuesday, April 1, 1947.

tending Iowa
Besides the

tion.

—s_—&gt;

\

Advisers

‘

a new lightning action
camera at his St. Johns

SKOKIE VALLEY ASPHALT CO., Inc.
1228 Harding

unique

as an

of

Foreign

Wars”
*~

|

P.

609

‘

�ay

High Air Cargo
Rates Discourage
Shipment of Goods

CATALOG

Not until rates have been reduced

OFFICE

5

Time and Temper Savers at

or

6

cents

a

ton-mile

WEEK

Prices

an

article

Air, Law

to

cargo

in

the

and

John

L.

current

issue

University
Commerce
Drew

of

the

Journal

of

states.

and

Alan

Passen,

aviation consultants and co-authors of
the report, “Air Cargo: A New Force
in Marketing,” write that the average
long-haul rail carlot rate for fruits and
vegetables is approximately 1.5 cents
per

ton-mile,

fresh
86 WR 2296.......5.98

air

expect to attract the major portion of
perishables and finished’ goods’ traffic,
Northwestern

Special WARD

can

and

the

express

rate

fish averages about 5.7. The

ferentials
estimated

for

dif-

between these rates and the
9 cent rate for air cargo,

expected

by

1950,

still. would

air carriage for normal
most commodities.

preclude

shipment

of

“The dependability of air cargo operations has improved steadily during

ithe past year,” Drew ana Passen write.
“The cargo operators, like the air passenger lines, have taken advantage of

the many
techniques

86 WR 5105.......3.49

of the war. Assuming that the carriage
of cargo will not be restricted to operations between fixed points, it may

WARD WEEK brings these handy household

be

helps to lighten che task of every housewife.

bargains are just an example of the variety of
values you'll find in our big Ward Week
Circular. So place your order, by phone or in
NOW and benefit

by these special sale savings!

Reg. 6.98! Toasts two slices, both sides
at one

time.

OG WR

Bae:

With

detachable

cord.

ment

o vrec ck ccads:

that

air

freight

operators

are

not

unknown,

however,

and

the operators are the first to admit that
there is room
for considerable im-

New Aluminum Food Chopper with three
keen steel cutting plates. Rust and stain
resistant. 86 WR 5105..........3.49

provement.

Automatic Electric Iron with heat control dial, detachable cord. AC only. 3%
Ibs.

expected

will take advantage of alternate routes
and fly around the weather, if necessary, to complete flights according to
schedule. In such event, air cargo operators should be able to show a considerably better record of flights completed on schedule than that shown by
air passenger operations.”
Although official records of dependability and safety of air cargo operations are not available, the authors say,
shipper testimony and other evidence
recently presented indicate that the
record of dependability has been satisfactory.
One of the largest air freight operators in the nation stated that, during
four months of operation, the company
had experienced no major mechanical
failures and only one claim for damage
to shipments handled. Delays in ship-

Thriftily priced to save you money, too! These

person, at our Catalog Office

improvements
in operating
and instruments growing out

86 WR 2699......-4.95

Citing that the principal advantages
of air cargo to marketing are speed
and, to a lesser,extent, convenience, the
authors say further that in a profitand-loss

system

the

importance

of

these advantages

must

be measured

in

86 WR 2699..............4.95

terms of net economies or price enhancement which they produce, as com-

Reg. 5.49! 26-Piece Stainless Steel
Cutlery Set. Polished! Classic design.
86 WR 4800.............

pared with other forms of transportation. At the rates expected to prevail
over the next several years, the article
states, it does not seem likely that air
cargo will effect broad, revolutionary
changes in the present distribution system.
By the time rates get down to 6
cents

86 WR 4800.......4.98

plant

TELEPHONE

4800

a

ton-mile,

however,

the

avail-

ability of this form of transportation
is likely to play an increasingly important role in decisions relating to

a

— *

28 N. FIRST ST.

location,

warehousing,

production

scheduling, product diversification and
general sales policies.
The quarterly Journal of Air Law.
and
Commerce
resumes _ publication
with the forthcoming issue after wartime suspension.

�EVANSTON NINE HERE ON FRIDAY &gt;
; Forgotten

Local Golfers
Meet McHenry In
Opener At Sunset
Giants

Face Thornton

League Match

Highland Park
In League Home
Opener Tomorrow

Men

Whip Northbrook.in Home
Game Last Saturday, 11-7

in First

on April 30

By Steve Herz

By Ray Geract
Sports Editor

“pee

Highland Park High school’s Suburban League Champion Golf team,
coached by Harry Bolle, will meet

Highland Park’s 1947 baseball team
will unveil before the eyes of local
fans tomorrow afternoon in the first

McHenry,
Taft,
and
LaGrange
three pre-season events on April
25 and 26 respectively.

league

in
23,

home

game

of the year

against

defense

Evanston. The game is scheduled for
4:00 p.m. at the High School Athletic
Field on West Park Avenue.

of their crown on Wednesday, April
30, against Thornton High school at

George
Grover,
who
returned
to
the Highland
Park gym department

The

local golfers

will open

after
military service, is the new
coach. He replaced Lester Kelly who
is no longer at the local school.
The pitching department remains
Highland Park’s weak spot as the

Sunset Valley Golf Course in -Highland Park. The Suburban League Golf
Tournament
in
which
schools participate
will

all
league
be
held
in

Highland Park at Sunset Valley on
Saturday May 31.
Coached by Mr. Bolle, last year’s
golf

team

the

was

area.

one

Winning

of

all

the

of

best

its

matches the team captured
urban League crown.

in

league

the

Sub-

Mr. Bolle, who has been coaching
golf at the local high school for over
fifteen years

now

said, “The

prospects

look good this year and Highland
Park has a very good chance to enter
the State Meet.” This year’s team is
bolstered by the fact that they have
nine lettermen returning to the squad.
The boys who won letters on last
year’s squad are Richard Sheridan
(who shot a hole in one), “Mouse”
Ori, Danny Coleman,
Amedeo
Minnorini, Deno Melchiorre, Dick Flynn,
Dick Peterson, Larry Larson, and Ben

Evaglisti.
Among the teams that the local
golfers will meet will be Taft of
Chicago who have been city champs
for four years in a row now. Also
included will be La Grange who has
a fine golf team and in previous years
has been
state.

one

of the

top

teams

in

the

The golf season will be highlighted
by the State Meet on May 23 and 24
and the Suburban League tournament
at Highland Park on May 31.
PRACTICE
Wed., April

23

SCHEDULE

....

Fri., April 25
Sat., April 26 ....
LEAGUE

McHenry

(Here)

Taft
La Grange

(Here)
(Here)

GOLF

Wed., April 30
Fri., May 2

....

SCHEDULE
Thornton
Morton

Wed., May 7 .... New
Tues.,

mek

May

Mie

Mon.,

May

13

..

Trier (There)

Waukegan

ae oi cee
19

....

(Here)
(Here)
(There)

DISTRICT

Evanston

(Here)

Tuesday, May 20 .... Proviso (There)
May 23-24
STATE MEET
Mon.,

May

26

....

Oak

Park

(There)

Sat., May 3I—SUBURBAN LEAGUE
TOURNAMENT AT H. P.

Sophomore Nine
Open April 29
At Evanston
Stambach,

will open

A Reader Gives Views On

its league

To

On Wednesday
The

track

team,

Panther, will
season
next
against

coached

by

Mark

open its outdoor track
Wednesday
afternoon

Argo

High

school

of

the

South Suburban League.
1947 Outdoor Track Schedule
Wed., April 23—Argo Varsity (Here).
Thurs., April 24—Argo
Frosh-Soph

(There).

:

Sat., April 26—Wheaton Relays.
Wed., April 30—Waukegan
Varsity
(There),
|
Thurs., May 1—Waukegan
F roshSat.,

Soph (Here).
May 3—Mooseheart

Tues.,
Wed.,

(There).

10—Fros-Soph

Evanston.
Sat., May 17—District
Evanston.

Invitational

at

Fri.,
Sat.,

May

23—State

Track

Meet

Meet

at

at Cham-

paign.

May 24—State Meet at Champaign.
Tues., May 27—Lake County Meet at
Lake Forest.
Sat., May 31—Suburban League Meet
at

Evanston.

will

replace

Leslie

Bishop,

who

at Evanston.

‘Sophomore Baseball Schedule
Tues., April 29 .... Evanston (There)
Friday, May 2 .... Waukegan (Here)
Friday,

May

9

....

Thornton

(Here)

Tues., May 13 ...... Morton (There)
Friday, May 16 .. New Trier (There)
Friday,

May

Tues., May

23

27

....

....

Proviso

Oak

Park

the

(There)

(Here)

Editor:

In last week’s issue of the Highland
Park News
Sport Page was printed
an article which was intended to show
Highland Parkers just how bad some
of the sports at Highland Park High
school
have become.
[I am _ inclined
to agree with you on all points except
one, and that is to give the students

any of the blame for what is happening to sports at the local high school.
Being a Highland
Park Merchant,
I KNOW

men

for

of

a fact

that

town

have

this

interest in athletics

In

your

story

the business

very

little

at Highland

Park.

last

week

you

also

mentioned that the facilities offered
a student at Highland Park are far
under those of neighboring schools.

Can

Relays.

May 6—Maine Varsity (Here).
May 7—Maine
Frosh-Soph

Sat., May

He

season at Evanston High school on
Tuesday, April 29This will be Mr. Stambach’s first
year of coaching at Highland Park.

is as

Athletics At Highland Park
Track Team to
Face Argo Here

you

THING

tell

us just

is being

what,

done

if ANY-

about

this?

In

my opinion Highland Park can well
afford the best of everything for its
high school and if it can’t something
should

be

done

about

it.

I realize that Highland Park is the
smallest school in the Suburban Conference, but I am sure that this city
has athletes that could do very much
better than they have if given half
a chance.
I. believe
an
athlete
at
Highland Park has two strikes against

him.

Especially

season

gets

under

way.

Whip Northbrook
In a non-league game last Saturday
at the local field the Little Giants
whipped
Northbrook
high — school,
11-7. The batteries for Highland Park
were Gooseman
and Malizia. Both
teams scored three runs in the first
inning, with Highland Park adding
four more in the second. The scoring

THE POOR FELLOW WHO HAS *
TO HIT FOR A SACRIFICE,
"NEVER MAKES A RUN, AND
NEVER GETS ANY CREDIT

is now

The Highland Park High school
sophomore baseball team, coached by
Harold

current

in

basketball,

swim-

ming, and track. I have seen the local
high school athletic field and agree
that it is one of the finest in the
country. Why can’t the other sports
have those same kind of facilities ?

I am also inclined to believe that
there is, something wrong with the
training which is given to boy’s in
the elementary grades. I once attended a swimming meet at a neighboring school which put on an exhibition of youngsters. I was amazed at
how young they began. That’s what
Highland Park needs.
A.F.W.

follows:

Highland Park ... 341 012 —11 13 1
Northbrook
300 130 0—7
10 3
Play Waukegan
Next Tuesday, April 22, the Little
Giants will travel to Waukegan to —
face
the Bulldogs in a Suburban
League game. Starting time is 4:00
p.m.

Little Giants Defeat
New Trier’s Nine.

5-4 in League Opener
By Steve Herz
“Play ball!” shouted the umpire and
play ball they did as Highland Park
High school’s varsity baseball team
defeated a highly rated New Trier
nine 5-4 in a thriller at the athletic
field on West Park avenue last Monday afternoon, April 14.
New Trier scored four runs on five
hits and two errors while Highland
Park won the game on five runs,
seven
hits and three errors. Bob
Plummer struck out six men being
relieved by Don Harder the winning
pitcher

in the

first

of

the

fifth.

Meggiorini, Ott Spark Attack
Joe Meggiorini and Don Ott took
most of the bows for the winning
offense. Joe belted out a double to
right field his second time up to drive
in the -first run of the ball game. In
the fifth inning he drove in another
run

with

a

single

to

right

field

to

tie the ball game up at four all. Joe
also crossed the plate twice himself.
Don hit into a double play his first
time up but redeemed himself by
driving in the tying and leading run
on a long double to right in the third
(Continued on page 34)
(EDITORS
NOTE—This
department has been unable to obtain any
information in regards to the bettering of facilities for students at Highland Park High. Letters to this column should be addressed to the
Sports Department.)

��Deerfield

‘Mr. and Mfs. Ward Gauntlett and
two children, Jane and Dexter, and
Mr. and Mrs. George Gauntlett of
' Deerfield road were guests last weekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs,
Robert

Mrs.

Johnson.

Johnson

in

and

Milwaukee,

Mrs.

Ward

Wis.

Gaunt-

lett are sisters.
Mrs.

Willard

J.

Loarie

entertained

a-group
of friends at bridge and
luncheon last Wednesday at her home
on Oxford road.
Roberta Nolde was a charming little
hostess on Monday for a group of her
young friends at the nome of her
parents,

Mr.

and

Meadowbrook

ry

Mrs.

F. W.

Nolde

oi.

lane.

Dr. Dorothy S. Davis spent the fore
part of last week with relatives in
Neenah, Wis., and is now back at her
home on Deerfield road.

Plans are now underway for the
new home for Mr. and Mrs. David
Inman Jr., adjoining the home of Mrs.
Inman Sr. of East Deerfield road.

Mrs. Clifford E. Morgan and two
children, Maurita, and Rex, have returned to their home on Forest aventie
after a fortnighgt’s visit with Mrs.
Morgan’s sister in Royal Oaks, Mich.

Phone

Deerfield

Phone,

Res.

708

J.

&amp;

Women’s

Deerfield

806

816

Mr. and Mrs. C A. Baechler Jr.
(Dorethy Jean Anderson) have found
ansapartment in Chicago Heights near
Mr. Baechler’s work ane moved there:
on Saturday.

Carl

Kress

home

in Winnetka.

Mrs. Harry Norton

father, Frederick
gan

H. Meyer of Wauke-

road.

Mrs. Earl Frost of Osterman avenue was. hostess to members
of her

bridge

club on

Fridayat the home

of

Rugen

of

Ernest

Mrs.
her daughter,
Chestnut street.

Adam
Courson
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
3rownstown,
IIL, were here last week
at the home of their daughter,
Mrs.
Delbert Meyer of Sunset court.
Guests

Mrs.

J. C. Fuller returned on Satur-

day from a visit with friends and relatives in Hialeah, Fort Lauderdale, St.
Augustine and Sanford,
Fla., to her
home on Meadowbrook lane.

Mrs. Robert O. Peterson of River
for a
road opened her home
Woods
meeting of members of the Friends of

last Wednesday

Orphans

Bowling

Waukegan

Tel.

Academy

Rd.—Deerfield

Deerfield

Open
Saturdays

III.

morning.

at

the

home

of

Mrs.

Julius

Johnson of Central avenue last Tuesday
were Mrs. Harry Harris, Mrs. Henry

LeRoy

Harris, all from

GOODS

and

wife,

Mr.

and

family

Road,

Waukegan

and

of. ee

Gerald

Cherry

last
and

Clampitt

—

street.

pee

Mineota..

POWDER BOX BEAUTY
SHOP

Chi-

|

:
2

Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
4
Mr.
Frank and daughter, Julie
Expert
Permanent
Wavers
Try
our Circlette ‘Wave
that is sprayed
into your hair.

Mrs.

J.

R.

Hopkins,

formerly

of

Ramsay road, is back in Chicago, after
a stay in California and Texas.

GILLWEVE

BEAUTY

SALON

Miss

Mr.

Mr.

Dorothy,

Gillen,

Weve

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

884

NEWS

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Home

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762

DEERFIELD

MAGAZINES

Delivery

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POCKET (PENGUIN-DELL) BOOKS
CIGARS CIGARETTES SOFT DRINKS
758

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

&amp;

Real

|

175

SELIG
1925

REALTORS

f

Estate—-Loans

764 Waukegan
Edward H. Seiig

Road,

Deerfield, Il.
Haroid R. Vant

Tel. Deerfield 155

-

LUCIUS

FROST'S
RADIO

AND

ELECTRIC

DEERFIELD
APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges
- Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of appliances

Deerfield

Waukegan

Road

- Tel.

Deerfield

CAKES
122

Tel. Deerfield 5$2—Eric Banfield, Prop.

~ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION

ESTATE AND INSJRANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Il.
29

Deerfield

808

Mercer
Lumber

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan; Rd.
Deerfield

DR.

Companies

Building Materials
612 Railroad Ave
Deerfield,
Illinois
Tel.
Deerfield 2

-

G. C. PARKNEN,

O.D.

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
Phone
674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Road

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Lumber
-

aa

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

BAKE SHOP

Waukegan
Deerfield

ERSKINE

REALTOR

DIRECTORY

BUSINESS

SHOP
GIFTS

95

—

Clampitt

a few days.
of their son

Mrs.

on

VANT

W. R. MITCHELL

Available

John

Mrs.

Mrs. Florence Hawthorne, who has —
spent the past six months with her
daughter, Mrs. C. Russell Sugden of —
Westgate road, returned to. Winni- —
pegy Canada, where she will visit for
awhile before going ‘to her home in ~

&amp; Company

and

Sr. of —

623

90

Bowling
and Sundays

Mr.

Bowen, Ill, spent
week at the home

Bleich, Mrs.
Harry
Walterman,
Mr.
and Mrs. Philip Walteman and baby,

and Mrs.
cago.

West

Mrs.
Paul
Hunter
observed her —
birthday anniversary on Sunday at
her home on Westgate road with a ~
family gathering for the event.

(Eleanor Meyer)

and daughter, Elizabeth Lu, of Harvey,
1l1., spent Thursday with Mrs. Norton’s

+

760

Always

Mrs.

Accounts

GEORGIAN

Tel.

REAL

sister,

Evenings

Monday

Grimes

DRY

John

Minn.

704

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, II.
Telephone Deerfield 33

THE

Kress’

Ernest

Established

Road

invite Charge

Franklin

Mr.

Apparel

Deerfield

Tel.
We

was

and Mrs.

Highland Park left on Saturday for a —
two months’
automobile trip in the —
west. While in Tucson, Ariz., they will a
stop to see Mr. and Mrs. B. A. West —
(Jean Pettis).

WALLDREN

MILDRED

Open

Wing,

POKORNY

W.

635

nue,

5869

Deerfield,

Road,

Waukegan

S/
7
*,
eeLealesreorenlooresreslenreores
ervey

ZenesZenleoTenlerlensesleseezecLealeaoalensealencea en sens esses,

Mr. and Mrs. James Mailfald have Williamson of Minneapolis, Minn. They
returned from a visit with the Ernest | were entertained at dinner Thursday
evening at a family gathering at the
Sandstroms
(Ruth
Mailfald) in Red

GARAGE

RELIABLE

Mr.

Mr. Morgan took the family up, but | A house guest the past week at the
| Greenslade-Kress home, 801 Hazel aveonly remained for the first weekend.

Deerfield

250
Park

Highland

aZooZeoye ealeoTeoZeoleszeerenlenyenrensesy.ao

Activities |

KNAAK’S

Coal

THEO

PHARMACY

J. KNAAK,
Est.

Phone

R.

Ph.

1884

1

Deerfield,

TL.
aumidniine

M. A. FRANTZ

758

Deerfield

419

Tel.

Road

&amp;

EST.

SELIG

—

1925

764

Telephone
880

its

branches

Waukegan Road
Tel. Deerfield

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA

NURSERIES,
Inc.

Established

INSURANCE

all

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

SAUSAGE
Deerfield

and

&amp;

MARKET
Deerfield

577

Waukegan

PAINT

CO.

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting
756

Roads

Waukegan

Road

- Deerfield
155

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

DEERFIELD

TAXI

SERVICE

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD
Day and Night Service
Reasonable

Drfld.

81

Rates

Courteous Drivers
&amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield

4

Tools |
Goods |

Deerfield,

Telephone

VANT
in

813

Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

DEERFIELD HARDWARE

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND

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OPTOMETRIST

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BETTER PLUMBING
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295

'

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Deerfield Road—Tel. 707
“Best
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FRUITS

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�Thursday,

April

17,

Page

1947

33

Men’s Club Rehearses for Musical Comedy

TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED
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CHANDLER'S
525
“Hips,
bers of
musical

Hips, Hooray” shout memthe
dancing chorus in the
comedy
of the same
name

being presented by the north Shore
Congregation
Israel Men’s club at
the

Central

Glencoe

school

auditorium

April 22 and

In the extensive
ing opening night

in

23.

rehearsals precedwith its elaborate

costuming, rolled pantlegs substitute
for
skirts.
“Girls,’
shown
above
perched on their partner’s knee, are,
from
left to right,
James
Gordon,
Harry
Barnett, Theodore
S. Mayer,
Edward J. Kann, Morton
R. Mann,

Irving

J.

Miller

and

Vernon

Baim.

Martha

Sharp,

called

and Henry Maltenfort.
Harold
Blumberg,
Milt

Seymour
Nordenberg,
Jack Weiller,
Earl J. Rusnak Sr., Melvin B. Todes,
Vernon Fox and Stanton Schuman.
More than 50 men are participating
in the show
devised and staged by

Al Stallman, Lawrence Dimsdale,
Sam
Kotchever,,
Dr.
Meyer
Steinberg,
make

up

Will J. Harris,

takes

the

atricist
mented

“the

guardian angel of European children”,
was guest of honor of North Shore

amateurs can attain under experts,”
Harry Schultz, president of the Men’s
club commented.
In addition to the revival of popular tunes of past years, the show fea-

bring

for

the

luncheon

as

Mrs.

Rev.

Sharp

and

Waitstill

a long
service

her

husband,

Hastings

Sharp,

the

have

and
distinguished record of
to thousands of refugee chil-

dren and war-torn families in “most
of the European countries.
Serving as relief administrators for
the

American

government

oslovakia,

they

group

refugee

of

in

brought

Czech-

the

children

first
to

the

United States for the US Committee
for the Care of European Children.
Through her work, Mrs. Sharp be-

a

refugee

children

through

of

Jewish

carnival

frequently

during

staff

H.

scene

on

Coney

Island

Queen

“The

of

Burlesque”

Steinberg,

Shane,
man,

Dr.

Erwin

Charles
Milton

Tigerman,

Joe

Al

Stall-

Bernie

Ham-

merman,
Gerson
Gluck,
Harold
Blumberg and Edgar Bernhard.
Featured in a satire on the traditional

Uncle

Glick,
Levy,

Tom’s

cabin

Marshall
Asher

Sol

are

Dr. Joel

Berman,

Moment,

Sam

Seymour

assisting

Mr.

those

are

now

on

specialty

following:

3100

sale

' ROOFIN G

at

La-

Company
(repairs-renewals)
Asphalt Shingles—Roll Roofing
Wood
Shingles
repaired
and
preserved with HOT Asphalt or
Stain

Gutters

Cleaned

Siding

—

- Coated

Insulation

Tuck-Pointing

Gsell’s

drug store and Fell’s store in Highland Park,
Adams
drug
store
in
Glencoe, and Conney’s pharmacy in
Winnetka. Tickets will also be on
sale at the door.

B. AMIDE!
Highland

Cc. MORDINI
Park 1203

i

DOWNING’S FLOOR
SHOP
373

Roger

Williams

.

Ave.

Floors and
Floor Coverings
Linoleums,

Asphalt

Rubber
Floor

and

Tile

Sanding

and

Finishing
‘

Tel. H. P. 566
doing

the

are

Winternitz,

Kotchever

Snider.

Among

Tickets

Lester

H.P.

are

Cheppe,

Podolsky,

include

Tel.

Ne:

oy

:

UNE

MONARCH

Xe
FOZ

PL

PRUNE PLUMS

num-

Lawrence

Dimsdale,
Harry
Bergman,
Herman
Anspach, Nate Grabin, Harry Schultz

Hadassah.

FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought

FOR

LOCAL
DELIVERIES
PROMPT
SERVICE
Phone
Highland Park 570

National Delivery
Service
Ave.

com-

among the stars. Other leading parts
are taken by Art Marpet, Dr. Meyer

A musical
program
by Josephine
Rubel, well known
pianist, also was
a feature of the afternoon.

212 Railway

and

Jerome

as

bers

rescue

and

Sol
Hammerman
as
a
playboy and Jack Shapiro

was instrumental in creating Children
to Palestine, Inc., a Christian-Jewish
the

written

Pincus

in
which
Broadway

and

for

music

Jack

Solomon, North Shore residents.
They have written several numbers

came
so
interested
in
the
Youth
Aliyah program of Hadassah that she

committee

the show.
The technical

which

Harris

by

to

spotlight

ensemble

fayette Fisher, Arthur Margolis, Albert Stern, Joe Corre, Richard Grauman, and Jerome H. Solomon.
Curtain time for both Tuesday and
Wednesday nights’ performances is
8:45 p.m.

special

guest.

singing

Ave.

Shoreline

Snider,
Berman

covered in preparation for “one of the

tures

neighbor

the-

Bernard
Hammerman,
Sol
Art
Marpet
and
Marshall

the

Central

Tigerman,

greatest
amateur
productions
ever
presented on the North Shore.”
“With
professional
guidance
throughout, including dance instructions
from
Ruth
Low,
well-known

posed

a

known

and producer, who has comon the wealth of talent dis-

Hadassah at a Youth Aliyah luncheon at the temple in Glencoe yesterday.
Each
member
was asked to
a

nationally

dancer
formerly with
the original
Ballet Russe, ‘Hips, Hips, Hooray’
illustrates the surprising perfection

Mrs. Martha Sharp
Is
Hadassah Guest
Mrs.

Kneeling are the men taking the
part of “men”: Dr. Harry M. Verne,

Highwood

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Pianos —

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—

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the

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the

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held

each

other

scoreless

in the

sixth

inning and Highland Park held New
Trier in the seventh and final inning
to take their Suburban League opener
5-4,
This Friday April 18 the Parkers
will meet Evanston in their second
League

match

of

the

season.

The

game is called to start at 4:00 p.m.
at the athletic field on West Park
avenue.
Close!

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cf

rf

3.) oe

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Murphy

2”"—All

Sizes

and Miller,

Inc.

932

Estimates

Linden

Ave.,

of the
tion.

Mrs.

Chicago

S.

will be

Citizens
in

this

742; Night Ph., GREENLEAF
4585
NORTH SHORE FOR 40 YEARS

NAVAL

ACADEMY

:

:

@ Boys 14 to 17 learn seamanship, boating. 75 miles from
Chicago. Cutters, sailboats, motorboats. Junior Camp

(boys 11 to 13) — sailing, swimming, sports.

WRITE
DRIVE

FOR

CATALOG
LAKE GENEVA,

WISCONSIN

N.,

of

of

health
of

the

state

will

take

which

Miss

Somenzi &amp; Son Forms

New Partnership

owner’s

the

Pottker,

3

=
:

FS

-

son-in-law,

who

active

duty

has been released from
with the navy.
Somenzi and Sons has

in

to

addition

appliradios

department

present

its

to

expanded

include a complete line of home
ances, refrigerators, washers and
.

store.

The store will be open the usual daily
hours, and also Monday, Thursday and
Saturday evenings until 9 o'clock for
the convenience of customers.

Mangel’s to Open New $100,000
Nursery in Wilmette Saturday
On Saturday Mangel Florists will
$100,000 nursery
new
their
unveil
across Glenview road from their Wilhighway.
Skokie
on
shop
mette

three

Stretching

acres

along

highway, the nursery is
unexcelled in the Middle
Greens and shrubs will
by rustic wrought iron
garden furniture, and set

Skokie

said to be
West.
be enhanced
and modern
off by pot-

tery.

The old horse drawn wooden wagon
which was used when the company
was established at the turn of the
century also will be displayed.

Highland Park

rf

AND

R.

Maude B. Carson, R. N., chief, Division of Public Health Nursing, Springfield, Illinois Department of Public
Health, is chairman.

3b

MILITARY

all parts

session

Piacentini,

Sf

sym-

Health associa-

Robinson,

in public

Gooseman,

ie

a

Moderator.

from

interested
part

K.

FURNISHED

BY

in

7th annual conference

Public

970 LINDEN AVE.
HUBBARD WOODS
WINNETKA
SERVING THE

participate

of the

Illinois

BECKER ROOFING CO.

CONDUCTED

SHORE

program

Winnetka

‘LAKE GENEVA NAVAL CAMP “szzae

104 SOUTH

will

Meggiorini,
Ott, ss
Martin, 1b

Ph.,

NORTHWESTERN

Voters,

posium on citizen participation in
public health to be held in Springfield,
Saturday, April 49, as part of the

Phone Winnetka 4166

Insulation

and

en

It was announced this week that the
firm of Somenzi and Son, 336 Railway
avenue, Highwood, has been changed
Trier.
:
to a partnership and will hereafter be
In the last of the fifth Highland known as Somenzi and Sons. The partPark also scored two runs on two ners in the new business include Lodohits, two runs and two stolen bases
vico Somerizi, original owner, Bruno R.
to go into the lead 5-4 at the end of Somenzi, his son, who was recently disfive full innings of play. Both teams- charged from the army, and Ralph E.

Christens

:

CONSTRUCTION

Free

Mgr.

of

fourth
saw
McCarthy
and
Greco
strike out and Piacentini ground out

ANOTHER NORTH SHORE OFFICE
To Serve You Better With
Roof Repairs —- New Roofs

Noble,

favor

cut Christen and Christoph and Plummer struck out his sixth man to retire the sides. The home half of the

McAlvey,

REPAIR

and

Photos
Home

H. P. 6025

J.

in

and White.
In the first of the fourth Ott threw

Crantz,

No deposits are Required
Until Proofs Are Shown

H.

3-2

AB

Opening Special
doz. 5x7 for $16.95

+

score

New Trier

397 North Ave.
Highland Park

Children’s
Taken in

the

Parkers when they scored three runs
on three hits and two errors. Plummer started out the rally with a
single. Maliza walked putting men on
first and second. Meggiorini doubled

Framing

N. Genesee

second.

stole third, and Martin stole second.
Gooseman grounded out to Gratter
and Ott was out on a close play trying to steal home to retire the sides
with one man left on the bases and

popped up to retire the sides New to the pitcher.
Trier leading 2-0.
|
Plummer was knocked out of the
In the last of the first Maliza lined box when New Trier scored two runs
out to Christoph, Meggiorini was safe on four walks, one error
and one
on an error by Christoph, and Ott hit stolen base. Plummer was relieved by
into a double play Christoph to Trom Harder who later went on to win
to Moore to retire the sides. In the
the game when the score was four
first of the second, Plummer struck to three against him in favor of New

LARSEN &amp; PETERSEN
PAINT CO.
120

McAlvey,

on

it out to first on a passed ball. McAlvey then stole third and Heybner
stole second. Moore the third baseman got a hit to left center driving
in the first two runs of the ball game.
Chirsten

{| @

and

Ott

AB

R

23

cf

McCarthy, If
Coens
tS
2b
,
Dv.

nlesescecsooonoum™

fielder,

walked,

neort

1767

YOU

outs

left

Martin

wleeenmocoooom

WHAT

two

Plummer struck out the last man to
retire the side but Maliza the catcher
dropped
the ball and Heybner beat

Estimates

Park

with

Trier’s

Grey.

ulecomcoomnoror

HAVE

New

and

mlecesceocoronny

“WE

started

Green

Mrs. Eugene
Hotchkiss, member
of the Lake County League of Wom-

orn

Suburban Roofing Co.
Highland

te

Highland Park got. off to a bad
start and found themselves trailing
by two runs when the first half of
the first inning was over. The trouble

Cleaned, Repaired
&amp; Coated

Free

°

In Symposium in Springfield

oor

‘

inning.

Parkers first run of the ball game.
Don Ott then doubled into right field
driving two more runs across the
plate. Marsch was knocked out of the
box and Gratter relieved him for the

cor

(Continued from page 29)

Mrs. Hotchkiss to Participate _

|

Little Giants”

~

SIDING — CAULKING
Gutters

ante

to right driving in Plummer with the

~

ROOFING

a

anleneccoocon=

ey

Winning pitcher—Harder.
Losing pitcher—Bernside.
Time—2 :03.

|
“Not guilty! You can’t blame him
for stealing clothes cleaned at

DeLuxe Cleaners.”
Pick Up
Phone

Home

and Delivery Service
Highland Park 455

DeLuxe Cleaners
454 Waukegan

Ave.

Highwood

Juke

Owners

Boxes

Iinois

Simplex

Exclusive

831

Attention

Now Available
Rumpus
Room

for

Your

Distributing

Co.

Wurlitzer

S. Wabash Ave.
Chicago
qe

5,

Distributor

’ Wabash 4090

IIlinois

ee

�Vendee pee

intendent,

God shield have priority on your time. ‘Satad some hours in church
Key to the
Scriptures”
by
Mary
Baker
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
Oakridge

and High
Highwood

Herbert

W.

Eddy:
“Everything
good
or
worthy,
God
made.
Whatsoever is valueless or baneful, He
did
not
make,—hence
its unreality.
In the Science of Genesis
we
read that He saw everything which He
had
made,
‘and,
behold,
it was
very
good! ... Sin, sickness, an death must
be deemed as devoid of reality
as they
are of good, God
- They are without
a real’ origin or existence.
They have
neither
Principle
nor
permanence,
but
belong,
with
all that
is material
and
temporal,
to the nothingness
of error,
which simulates the creations os Truth”
(pp. 525, 286).

street

Linden,

Pastor

SUNDAY,
April 20,
9:30 a.m. Church school.
10:45 a.m. Christian Education Day will
be observed
at the
morning
worship
at
this time.
Sermon
theme will be “What
Christ
Provides
For
Human
Minds.”
Anthem
by the choir.
THURSDAY,
April
24,
Social hour
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
following.

TUESDAY, April 22, Luther League
FRIDAY,
‘April 18,
Leaders meeting in Kenosha.
THE

WESLEY
METHODIST
CHURCH
North avenue and Lauretta place
William
G. Overend,
Minister
SUNDAY,
April 20,
9:45

a.m.

ments

Sunday

under

the

school

for

all

supervision

of

Ira

Breakwell,
superintendent
and
Ruben
Olson,
assistant
superintendent.
Sermon topic:
a.m. Morning worship.

“Jesus
1:30

the Good Shepherd.”
p.m. Several members

attend

Zion

Passion.

will

leave

ments.
11
a.m.

8

gather

p.m.

Fuller,

at

the

church

president.

FIRST

UNITED EVANGELICAL CHURCH
“A Community Gospel Church”
Green Bay road and Laurel avenue
R. S. Wilson,
Pastor
Tel. H.P. 1731
SUNDAY,
April 20,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school for all ages.
10:45 a.m. Hour of worship.
The pastor
will
bring
a message
reporting
on
his
attendance at the convention
of the NaAssociation

of

Evangelicals

uled to exchange pulpits with Pastor Wilson at this service.
The Winnetka pastor
a

Cleveland,

recent

graduate

of

‘Tenn.,

Bob

and

Jones

is

in

will furnish
music
evening
message.
April 21,

Men’s

fellowship

is

as

well

sponsoring

are

invited,

and

may

as

their

bring

a

son

or father, or some one elses son or father.
Reservations should be made not later than
Friday, April 18, by contacting Nels Dahl,
chairman
of the
committee,
877
Ridgewood drive.
WEDNESDAY, April 23,
8 p.m. The mi-week
service of prayer
will be held.
FRIDAY,
Aprii 25,
7:30
p.m.
Choir
rehearsal.
FIRST

CHURCH
OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
387
Hazel
avenue
This church is a branch of The Mother.
Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist.

The
11

at

Boston,

ning

Sunday
o’clock

Mass.

morning
and
the

meeting

of Christian

“

which

services
is
Wednesday

includes

Science

healing

held
eve-

testimonies

is at

this

8 o’clock.

Frozen

Lord
my
not
die

.

than

behold

on

to

iniquity’

Among
the

the

God,

mine
Thou

Holy
art

evil,

an

One?
we
of
purer

canst

(Habakkuk

the

citations

Lesson- Sermon

was

1:12,

which
the

O

“The ‘Lord

is

13).
from

fear
and

forget

eth
thy
thee

all
life

Bless
not

all

thy
from

with

light

and

my

. Though
“me,
my

the
all

thine

an host should
heart
shall
not

Lord, O my
his
benefits :

iniquities;

who

soul,
who

heal-

diseases;
who
redeemeth
destruction; who crowneth
lovingkindness

and_

Lesson-Sermon

also

included

J.

|

Chic kens

Ib. 39%

services.

;

oa

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION
CHURCH
Deerfield and Green Bay road
Nei
Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison, Pastor a ine

Rt.

Rev. Edmund

Rev.

John

P.

Sundays—6:30,

J. Skoner, S.T.L.
o hehee

O’Connell,

MASSES
7:30,

9,

S.T.D.

10,

11

and

Week-days—6 :30, 8:15.
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
eves
of
first
Friday
Holidays, 4 and 7:30 p.m.
BAPTISMS
Sundays—1:30,
or at other times

;

&gt;

:

study in “Let God Be
“The New Earth.”
Subject:
study.
7:30 p.m. Watchtower
Hope.’
Resurrection
the
for
“Reasons
of the
the resurrection
“Touching
Text:
621 5
True.”

dead

Book
p.m.
Subject:

I am

called

day.”—Acts

in

question

by

you

Frozen

PEACHES

SPINACH

Birdseye

Birdseye

Frozen

Frozen

H.P.1676

SATURDAY

Rib
Pork
Roast
3-Ib.

GREEN PEAS | CORN W.K. | Applesauce

The pound

CHICKEN LEGS AND
THIGHS Ib.”....................

SHOULDER

EVISCERATED

LEG

RIB

O”

Rib Roast

BEEF
6th &amp; 7th
Rib ib |
39%

cuts

Ib. 39%

Ib.

LAMB
Ib. 49

ROAST

Ist to 5th

BEEF
TenderLiszine

sti eh
BACON

Whole

Ib. 59°

Ribs

'2¢

89¢ | CHICKEN
NECKS Ib.

“a Ac

19¢

WINGS&amp;

DUCKLINGS'b. 59¢c 'Frankfurters

BEEF

lb. A9c

HAMS

MILK

Whole

Grade A

Ib. 59%

Gal.

62¢

Ib. 59&lt;

IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 25th SUMMER IN HIGHLAND PARK
WE

OFFER

FRUIT

COCKTAIL

THE

FOLLOWING

SUPER

BARGAINS

Del Monte or Good Kind, 59 value
Limit 2 Cans

MAINE

While. Supply

Lasts

sie Ties the can
SARDINES!» Oil, 15¢ value..................---.--------- Disiteed
Limit

GREEN

BEANS

Sovoy,

2 Cans

French-Style
Limit

the

following
passages ‘from
the
Christian
Science amy gece “Science and Health with

ASPARAGUS

souP

this

24:21.

PHONE

Birdseye

Frozen

LAMB CHOPS bb. 29c

unos

ALL BEEF
FRESH GROUND

Birdseye

BREASTS

ain

“JEHOVAH’S
WITNESS
YWCA
274 Laurel
avenue
Highland Park, Illinois

FRIDAY,

Frozen

2 Cans

Campbell’s,
Limit

2 Cans

While

Supply

Qe

Lasts

Sliced, 29¢ value ..................-... the can } 5c
While

Supply

Lasts

15¢ value .--./-..-.---eseeeeeeones Takei the can Qc
While

Supply

a

request.

Synod

pkg. stent 29. |: DER: vis. 19¢ | pkg. ........ 23¢
CHICKEN

12

noon,

a ROSe

tender

mercies . . . The Lord executeth righteousness and judgment for all that are
oppressed”
(Ps. 27:1, 3; 108: 2-4, 6).

‘The

our

salva-

shall I fear? the Lord
is
of my life; of whom shall

I be afraid? &lt; .
encamp
against

forgiveth

my

Rev.

:

North St. yea
avenue.
2
THURSDAY,
April 24,
9:30
a.m.
The
Spring
meeting
of the |
Arlington Heights Regional Women’s Guild
will be held at St. Peter’s church, Northbrook.
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
&lt;
A
cordial
welcome
awaits
you at ail”

Sunday.

Birdseye

Sliced

Bible
tion: whom
the strength

Lutheran

|

8 p. .m. The
Women’s cecsitinee: will ‘meet |
at the home of Mrs. Charles Johnson, 421

Forest.

the

the

worship.

look

comprised

following

10:45 a.m. Morning
TUESDAY,
April 22,

16 oz. pkg.59¢ | pkg. ........ 29e: |’ pkg. -..---: 21c.

shall
eyes

not

Lake

WGN
of

PRICES—THURSDAY,

The
subject
of
the
Lesson-Sermon:
in
all Church
of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday,
April
13,
was:

“ARE
SIN. DISEASE,*
AND
DEATH
REAL?”
The Golden Text was:
“Art
thou
not
from
everlasting,

avenues,

over

president

FIRST ST.

Strawberries

Frying

9 :30 a.m. eendad. aii

ST. JOHNS
EVANGELICAL
REFORMED
Green Bay road and Homewood
avenue
Alvin S. Kniker, Pastor
SUNDAY,
April
20,

Birdseye
Brosh

first Father-Son dinner, which will be held
at 6:30 p.m. in the YWCA on Laurel avenue.
The speaker will be Merril Dunlop,
associate pastor of the Chicago
Evangelistie tabernacle.
He will show
pictures
of a recent missionary tour to Mexico, as
well as speak.
He is a pianist and composer also.
A men’s quartet from Chicago
will
sing.
All
father
and
sons
of
the
parish

a.m.

HAMBURGER

second

year as
pastor
in Winnetka,
while
studying
at
the
North
Park
Theological
seminary.
He
is
a
musician
of
accomplish-

ment
and
bring the
MONDAY,

Bar-

END

Sigek

Trus

of Missouri,
Ohio
and
other
states
will
speak on the ‘‘Centennial Year.’’
Repeat
broadcasts
over
WAAF
at
2 p.m.
and
WJID at 6:30 p.m.
:
SUNDAY,
April 27,
10:45
a.m.
Observance
of
the.
Centennial of our church will take place on

NORTH

College

his

to

WEEK

Rev.
Robert
Bodin,
pastor
of the
Mission
Covenant
church
in
innetka,
is
sched-

is

the

minister,
friends
will

motor

22-24

in

Omaha, Nebraska, April’14-17.
This association is a cooperative movement of more
than twenty conservative denominations, as
well as colleges, schools and independent
churches.
7 p.m. Christian Endeavor for youth.
7:45 p.m. Evening gospel service.
The

in

to

by

Wisconsin

11:30

| Re Ne ee

South

tional

sermon

and

Behnken,

rington
where
in the High
School
auditorium at 7:45 p.m. the 170 Voice Chapel
choir
of our North
Central
college
will
render
a Sacred
Concert.
Admission
is
free; an offering will be received.
People
desiring transportation should make contact
with the church office in due time.
TUESDAY,
April 22,
8
p.m.
Fourth
Quarterly
Conference

The Woman’s Society of Christian Service meets the THIRD
TUESDAY
of each
month, at the church at 8 p.m.
Mrs. L.

D.

worship;

Rev. Lester H. Laubenstein,
6:45
p.m.
Members
and

to

Flay.

THURSDAY,
April 17,
7:30 p.m. Choir practice.
The official boards meets the SECOND
MONDAY
of each month,
at the church
at

Divine

of iombavation

Dr. I. L. Schweitzer.

REDEEMER EVAN. LUTHERAN CHURCH
587 West Central avenue
H. K. Platzer, Pred sa
Tel. H.P. 95
FRIDAY,
April 18,
8 p.m.
Discussion
group
at the
parsonage.
SUNDAY,
April 20,
9:30 a.m. Sunday: school.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
9:15 a.m. Early worship at Lake Forest
in the
American
Legion
hall,
McKinley

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Laurel avenue and McGovern street
Lester H. Laubenstein, Minister
24 McGovern street—Phone H.P. 3522
SUNDAY,
April 20,
9:30 a.m. Sunday: school in all depart-

depart-

Mrs.

japaivision

stewards, class leaders, and presidents of
organizations are expected to be present.
Those
who
are
responsible
for
reports
should present them in writing.
Tee eevee
April 24,p.m. Senior choir rehearsal.
SATURDAY, April 26,
10:30 a.m. Bethany Choristers rehearsal.
SUNDAY,
April 27,
4:30 p.m.
At the Vesper Service at a
“Tea’? will be held in honor of the members
whom
we
received
during
the
last
Conference Year.
The Rev. Francis Guither, pastor of the historic North Northfield church, will be the speaker.

Lasts

}

j

|

f

�WEDNESDAY,
Aril 23—
8 p.m. The Bethlehem choir will practice
under the direction of Mrs. A. Cox.
THURSDAY,
April 24—
6:45 p.m. "The Bethlehem Bowling league

Deerfield

Church News
HOLY

—
62

HARRISON

BUREN

ST.

3747-3748

Cos A
AND GLASS
of
EXQUISITE DESIGN

Glenview,
Glenview

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
Rev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.

Ill.

and

artist,

The

original

painting

THURSDAY,
April
1
p.m.
Women’s

presented

meeting.

the

congregation.

The

to

pastor

hangs

in

17—
Association

(Camels

Brands
RALEIGHS

KOOL
REGENTS

subject to stock on hand)

Carton of 10 Pkgs.
(200 Cigarettes)
MINIMUM
3 CARTONS

Sunshine, Wings, Carton $1.15
NO

LIMIT—Ali
Cigarettes

Orders

Guaranteed

Insured

Include

FRESH

DEPT:

22

SEALTEST

EDWARD

for

pestage

and
service
within
150 miles — 12c for
8 cartons — add ic
fer
each
additiona!
carton.
Prices subfect to change.

Thousands of Satisfied Customers.
Ali orders s hipped rw
oie
receipt of checkor
ey order.
LARGEST CIGARETTE MAIL “ORDER COMPANY
IN THE MIDDLE
WEST. Est. Over 25 Years

SALES

CO.

Annual

Meeting.

New

officers

are

for

EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH
638 Waukegan Road
Phone
Deerfield
858
Rev. Hugo
Leinberger, Pastor

SATURDAY, April 19—
8 p.m. Golden Band at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. David Lundquist.
SUNDAY,
April \20—
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
7:30 p.m. Senior Youth Fellowship.
Vr
ot April 23—
7:30 p
Choir rehearsal.
SATURDAY,
April 26—
8 p.m. Fellowship club at church.
Fhil
Johnson’s
movies
and
talk
on
trip
to
Europe.

with that honest-to-goodness

peaches and cream flavor.
Get it where you see the

familiar red emblem of quality.

Hunter,

of

Lute

Mrs.

Carl

and.

attended

Ross

are

enter-

P.

Hunter

and

will

attend

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Clampitt attended the wedding of Mr. Clampitt’s
cousin, Paul Laffry to Miss Blanche
Feldott on Saturday ‘morning which
was solemnized at Sts. Peter and Paul
church in Naperville.
In the evening
they returned to the home of Mrs.
Clampitt’s parents in Chicago where
they helped to celebrate the golden
wedding anniversary of her grandparents, Mr.
formerly of

Hertel

and Mrs.
Highland

U. G.
Park.

Carrier,

Children

Baptized

Sunday

Rev. Hugo Leinberger of St. Paul’s
church baptized two of the grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. William
Hertel

Sr., in their

home

on

Chestnut

street on Sunday:
Robert Frank Hertel, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Carl Hertel (Hazel
Johnson),
born
February
9, 1947;
sponsors, Lorraine Hertel and Alvin
Hertel.
mea
Susan

Marie

Hertel,

At Capital Airlines ticket office
in North Shore Hotel, inquiries
are courteously answered and
reservations secured for air
travel,

liam

Hertel

Buy

Red Horse

daughter

Station

on

Schultz of
Red Horse
road from
possession

Friday.

ANYWHERE

Attend

CALL pearsorN 5711 OR
YOUR TRAVEL AGENT... downtown ticket offices in 112 W. Adams
St. (Field Bldg.) and Hotel Stevens

Capital
AIRLINES
Known for Years as “PCA”...One
of America’s Pioneer Airlines

College

Dinner

Mr. and Mrs. James Tibbetts of
Chestnut street attended a pre-centennial dinner of Lake Forest college,
its 90th anniversary, last Friday evening at the Edgewater Beach hotel,
Chicago.
Wallace Reichelt, another
alumnus, also attended.
Pure humanity, friendship, home, the
interchange,of love, bring to earth a
foretaste of heaven.
—Mary Baker Eddy

Northshore Garden of Memories

Very Reasonable
Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

BEST

BY

ANY

TEST

of

Jr.

Hudson Holste and Earl
Wheeling have bought the
filling station on Waukegan
Ralph Wickersham and took

THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN

CREAM

the

Ballet.

A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited

ICE

a

Song.

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hertel (Lorraine Milbratz), born February 23,
1947; sponsors, Hazel Hertel and Wil-

AT YOUR SERVICE...

ICE CREAM

the

with

PAUL’S

FLAVOR-OF-THE-MONTH

REAL PEACH

to

excellent

opportunity

and

Russian

tions.

An

P.

performance

neth

the church
budget
discussed,
made by the various organiza-

HAMMOND
INDIANA

Vow its-Scaltest time!

Kenneth

taining at dinner on Friday evening
for Dr. Dorothy S. Davis and Ken-

be elected,
and reports

ST.

PALL MALL 4
°

Mr. and Mrs. John Derby (Shirley
Clark) celebrated their sixth wedding
anniversary on Saturday with a dinner party in Chicago for Dr. Dorothy
S. Davis, Miss Doris Hunter, and

monthly

members to become better acquainted
the activities of the church.

LUCKIES
CHESTERFIELD
OLD GOLD
PHILIP MORRIS

the

SUNDAY,
April 20—
9:45 a.m. Church
school.
11 a.m. Sunday
Kindergarten for children from 8 to 5 years of age.
11 a.m. Morning worship.
2:30 p.m. North
Shore Tuxis
Rally at
Lake Forest college.
MONDAY,
April 21—
meet
as
Girl
and
Boy
Scout
Troops
eee
p.m.
Board of Trustees
meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
April 23—
6:45 p.m. Congregational dinner followed
by

All Standard

the

photograph

FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek,
Minister
Manse:
1024
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775

SUNDAY,
April 20—
9:45 a.m. Church school—classes for all
age groups.
10:55 a.m. Morning worship.
The photograph
of the
picture
painted
by
Harry
Shigeta of the Gethsemane
scene will be
to

presented

Bethlehem church a large sized
of his painting Gethsemane.

The William L. Keadys of BannocnKbur have been at Ponte Vedra, Fla.

Mr.

will speak on the theme—‘‘Gethsemane.”’
TUESDAY,
April 22—
8 p.m.
The
Woman’s
Auxiliary
meets
at the home of Mrs. Aksel Peterson.
Mrs.
Harold
Peterson
is in charge of the devotional period.

1212R

photographer

Fourth
Presbyterian
Church
of Chicago.
The painting was presented to that church
in
gratitude
for
its
allowing
Japanese
Americans
to worship
there
during
the
war.
This
picture
will be presented to the
congregation on April 20 at the morning
service.
The
pastor
will tell the story
behind the painting and will speak on the
theme of the picture.

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Bozlter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace

MIRRORS

meet.

Presentation of Picture
At
the
last
meeting
of the
Fireside
club Harry: Shigeta, who is an outstanding

Sunday Masses: 7, 8:30, 10, 11:30.
Daily Masses: 6:30 and 8:15 a.m.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Confessions,
FRIDAY,
April 25—
8 p.m. Card party at parish hall.

New Address —
E. VAN

will

| Deerfield Activities

CEMETERY

Prices
Phone Maj.

1067

�Stagers Present
“Outward Bound”
In

presenting

“Outward

Bound”

next weekend, the Stagers of Deerfield undertake
one
of the
stage’s
great masterpieces—a dramatic tradition.

Since
story

1923,
has

Sutton

held

Vane’s

audiences

moving

enthralled

and caused the late Alexander Woolcott to say of it, “The nicked and inkstained little critical yardsticks which
we all carry to the theatre with us
are of pitifully little use when
it
comes to measuring the impalpable
things which make ‘Outward
so stirring and so quickening

Bound’
an ad-

venture.
It is packed with
and it wrings the heart.”

wonder

The

play

has

been

for

EVERYDA’! PRICES
TO NEW LOW AT
SORE on

many

years

considered and reconsidered by the
Stagers’ play selection committees.
Until now it has been repeatedly rejected as a bit @bove the dramatic
talents of the organization.
This year, however, it was felt that

REGULAR
REDUCED
JEWE

HERE

HUNT'S

OR SIGNET

OCEAN

SPRAY

HUNT'S

CALIFORNIA

CHERRY

VALLEY—IN

on 3 OF

FINEST

FANCY

(IN SYRUP)

SUGAR

YELLOW

‘

NO. 24/2

FANCY

Sn?

GIRL

GINGHAM

NO

STOKELY’S FINEST

could

handle

the

job

HUNT'S CALIFORNIA

and

to

the

themselves
aboard
an
ocean
liner,
where they meet the calm, gentle, and
kindly
steward,
Scrubby,
played
by

Martin Decker.
Among the passengers
Henry,

are Ann

and

couple

who are the first to discover the
nature of their voyage.
Cynthia Gillespie and Frank Sturtevant enact
the roles of the young couple.
Tom Prior, portrayed by Russ

is

a

talented

and

intelligent

Mau,

young

man who, unable to adjust himself to
life, has submitted to the anaesthesia
of liquor.

Geneva Ritter plays the part of
Mrs. Cliveden-Banks, high society at
its worst—intolerant, snobbish, petulant and grasping.
The Rev. William Duke, a young
minister full of enthusiasm for the
work of his profession and a stabilizing influence among the passengers
is interpreted by Paul Pagett, Jr.
Helen Ross,
good-natured,

woman

as Mrs.
humble,

CORNED

Midget, is a
poor
char-

obviously

out

of place

(Continued

on

page

41)

in her

ALB

Beef Hash... es 25¢
LAKE

SHORE

Prune Juice... «2, 21°
GIANT

Ponped Rice. 2 pxes, 19°
GIANT

4-OZ.
Popped Wheat2 xcs
15°

SALERNO

a loving and mysterious

NO. 2

Tomato Juice.___........ CAN
ARMOUR

CRACKERS

ALB

Grahams... 18. 23°

A HOLSUM

PRODUCT

CARNATION, BORDEN, PET

Evan.

Milk.

ian‘ii; O1°

1-LB.

Peanut Creme.

Bie

NOW

33° 29

ee

c

25°

ee

ee

NO. 2

WAS

NOW

o:7 19¢ 15¢

Cut Green Beans...

Honey Pod Peas......... tan 20° ale
STOKELY'S

CAN

Applesauce.____............ 3

satisfaction of its perennial advocates,
the group decided to stage it.
The play has no particular stellar
roles, every part being important and
significant in the story which tells
of a few hours in the lives of an
assorted group of individuals who find

WAS

NO. 21/5 33° 29

WHOLE

Peeled Anricots........

the current crop of available thespians

CLING

FINE

Prepared Prunes.

Ritter

39°
19°
te
29°

SYRUP

cenvad

AEE

ARE A FEW
EXAMPLES .....

FRUIT COCKTAIL .....
ROYAL ANN CHERRIES = 49°
CRANBERRY SAUCE.. on 2d
sae “S-OOtPEACH HALVES
FRUIT COCKTAIL 20. “Sat ST*
ee
BLACKBERRIES .. a.
HUNT'S CALIFORNIA

DEWKIST

Geneva

AOD

NO.

FINEST

HUNT'S BUFFET CAN

23¢ 19¢

can 12° H2°

Tomato Sauce...

Fancy Spinach.
STOKELY'S

14se [22°

JEWEL

HUNT'S

OR

EXTRA-VALUE
bait!

2

can’ 19¢ 122¢

NO.

2!/2

US

EXTRA VALUE TRIM—SHORT CUT—EXCESS FAT AND BACK
CHINE BONE REMOVED BEFORE WEIGHING
.

seer RIB ROAST % ..55°
STEWING CHICKENS ....« 49°
SLICED BACON... ... . » @5°
NEW

YORK

OSCAR

DRESSED

MAYER

FANCY 4 TO 5 LBS. AVERAGE

YELLOW

BAND

WALDORF

99 44/100% PURE ©

FOR ALL FINE WASHING

Bubble Bath 3 pxcs. 20°

Ivory Soan. 2 sans 20° Ivory Flakes. xc. 37°

BLEACH DISINFECTANT

FOR BABY'S TENDER SKIN

SOAP OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN

Linco... 2 ot. 25e } Ivory Soap... tar 21° ;Camay.
LOOSENS

DIRT, eae

Soilax WEN

Es Se

ne

‘ioeZz.

Ap aksiban 08
oger
Williams
Ave.

wail"

BLUES AS =

a

Oe

CHICAGO'S

WASH

Blu-White aan

2

PKGS.

19¢

Amer.

sar 10°

FAVORITE BAR SOAP

Fami!:

2

BARS

21¢

A FAVORITE SOAP

FOR FINER FABRICS

Sweetheart

Chiffon Flakes

re
7. 10°

BATH
BAR

17°

ate 37°

Xelol MR Cel take

�Bi

"

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~

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Nes

“

_ REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved) REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ( Improved)
yu
tu (Highland Park}
wv)"
|
dighland Park)
RED
8

_

BRICK
COLONIAL.
brick

pressed

home,

and occupied, is
best constructed
Woodridge

District.

HERE

owner

undoubtedly one of the
residencein the entire
Here’s

why:

8” Steel
“T” Beams and Lally columns; copper
gutdown

ters,

spouts.

birch

millwork

and

and

anne:

trim.

ouse

- oughly: insulated.
iving
with fireplace,
off which
large dining room, kitchen

nook

and

is

solid

in which there is a recreation room with
fireplace.
Heat
is Air Conditioned
Gas.
he 2 car garage is also of brick.
Two
‘Blocks to Woodridge (H. P.) Express station;
4
blocks
to
famous
West
Ridge
:
hool.
Shown by appointment.

_ R.

S.

HAMBLY

&amp;

COMPANY

, , Clavey
&amp; Ridge Roads,
Highland Park 1491, 4866 or 1845
pe

In

attractive

_
_

tile

kitchen,

and

breakfast

dining

rooms.

sulated,
gas
quick sale.

heat.

Will

outlying

MOVING

room,

Built

sacrifice

children.

for

brk

Ravinia

dist,

Tel. H.P. 969.

A-1

cond....$15,000

8rm frame red paint &amp; dec.’ Now.... 12,500]

"832

N.

St.

Johns

Tel.

H.P.

ES
__

‘Brick

The 2nd floor has two good-sized
bedrooms and bath, with chance for

_

additional

_ Over garage.

large

bedroom

and

few gale

ments—-Net

House

“Bt.

For

;

PAUL

PHELPS,

_ 387 Central Ave.

bath

$200

of

per

8

month

TWO

flats.

NEW

ford

with

apart-

is large

enough

for a family

with

fruit

several

_ children,
but
is. not
too
large for
the
small family liking to spread out.
There
are four baths
in the
ten
room
house
and two car attached garage.
There is a
tennis court at the north end of the two
acres, and ravine at the south.
Reasonably
priced at $58,500.
of
1900
S. Sheridan
Rd.
Just what
you
are looking for.
A ‘modern 4 bedroom
4
bath house with beautiful details.
No, re-

orchard,

of

_

Two

_ 4

car

attached

EARHART,
878

‘varage.

LLOYD

Central

Aves

7

room

_ location.

house,

Priced

-

&amp;

floor—

H.P.

has

SALE
oil

«right

H.A.

for

heat

in

quick

We
-15

Ne

nS

A.

sale.

Dek:

bath on
Y%, acre
property.

HOFFMAN

Real Estate
N. Sheridan

Ft By
bh

Broker
Ra, H.

2906...
4

spacious
library,

living
powder

room,

3rd floor.

$3

TO

with

service.
SUITABLE
both

nished.

Box

housekeeper

25

POPs

ey

e/o

years

Phone (collect) Lakeview 0171.
quarters
for mother and son

employed—Un—partly—or

Highland

Park

fur-

References.

Tel-

for

summer

rentals.

for

anytime

from
one month
through six months
for
any price from $200
through
$1,000 per
month.
Tenant
will pay brokers fee.
If
contemplating a vacation kindly list your
home with us.
,

EARHART,

LLOYD

878 Central
Ave.
VET, 5 yr. service, wife,
ter

dining

need

Tel.

H.P.

May list
P.
Tel,
2813

unfurnished

&amp;

RINGER

Tel: H.P.
880.
1% yr. old daughapt.

Excellent

ref,

2634 or 158 Beverly Pl., H. F.
5 room apt. or small house by:
if possible.
28 yrs. res. of H.
H.P. 920 before 5:30 or H.P.

after

6:30.

RESPONSIBLE
party
will pay
maximum
| rent,
year in advance for 3 or 4. bedroom
use. Will consider buying suitable home on terms.
Write c/o H. P.
News, Box D-75.

of beautifully
“landscaped
For price consult.
|! WANTED:

rs

ref-

D-25,

of

'

House or apartment.
Family
with two children.
Rent to $150.
Box
: Palos. Park, Ill.
Tel. Palos Park:
TS

ios,

Paes:

4

:

f

bk

;

oe

EON

7

i

for
or

ROOMS

235

Jef-

5172.

single business
582 Homewood

|

womAve.,

WANTED

REFINED
elderly lady, 68, desires
room
in
comfortable
home,
for
about
six
months, with meals provided.
Also, mild
supervision
and
companionship
if possibe.
Reply
Box
642,
Lake
Bluff or
Telephone Lake Bluff 2076.
,
WANTED

Stenographer.

position.

Bank,

aa

(Clerical)

Per-

First

Na-

Highland: Park.

to

Box

M-57,

c/o

giving
full particulars
and experience.

Lake

as

Forester,

to

-

training

‘

TELEPHON
OPERATORS

Chicago
or Rad-

housekeeping

H.P.

ROOM
and
private bath
on
first floor.
Private entrance and garage. Estate section of West Lake Forest, 1 mile from
North Shore station.
Car necessary.
R. Pope, Old School Road, Libertyville. _
Libertyville 1598.

stores,

June
1st,
1948,
furnished
bedréoms,
two
baths,
oil
central location.
$200
a
Write

|

RENT

for couple.

Tel.

SLEEPING
room
an.
Tel. 1178
BP.

ing

ephone
1339
evenings
or address
Box
D-85, c/o Highland Park News.
HOME
Owners.
We have numerous requests

or

of

for sum-

(collect).

P LEASANT room &amp; board to employed girl
Or woman
in exchange for help during
dinner hour, and to stay in a few evenings a week, with 2 girls.
No Sundays.
Ravinia District, 2 blks. from transportation. Mrs. G. D. Harrison, 1733 Pleasant Ave., H. P. qa

HIGH

SALARIES

$29 per 5-day week |

i

and

housekeeper
home

SECRETARY:
Experienced;
full or part
time, to work in school office jin Lake
Forest.
Making
appointment
in
writ-

EXCHANGE

t

TO

WANTED:

Forest

for comparable
Franklin
5999

Financial

adults

privi-

PAUL PHELPS, Inc.
387 Central Ave. Highland Park 4580

;
P.

Lake

ROOMS

HELP

WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by responsible
family.
Will
furnish
finest
references.
Tel.
Central 5309.
;
REFINED
young
couple,
both employed,
desire four or five room apartment, unfurnished.
Excellent
references.
Reply
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.
VET and wife desire apt.
Haven’t had a
placeto live since we’ve been married.
Tel. H.P. 8167 or 288 Cary Ave., H. P.
HOUSE’ WANTED
on North Shore for 3
adults for 1 year or summer.
Former
residents
of the
N.
S. for
20
years.
Very
responsible.
Write
B.
L. Stein,
2222 Diversey Ave., Chicago. Ill.
HOME for summer
rental, by family of 2
A

wood-

It is situated on

et

desire

Tel. State 0600

Pl.

manent

transportation,

2961.

kitchen |; WANTED:

room,

Ill.

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)

per-

with butlery on 1st floor.
4 master bedrooms, 3 tile baths on
2nd floor, and 2 servants’ rooms and

good

6 room brick, 2%
baths, ultra modern
_ kitchen.
Also
2—5
room
houses,
1—8
room brick and ‘others:
Good listings and
_ some choice lots &amp; -home sites.
Come in and talk it over with—

JOHN

a

room,

Ww. J.

45,

RAYNER

Deerpath,.

ESTATE

month.

feries

tional

erences required.
H. P. News.

the lake this red brick English home

880

KE.

SEPT.
Ist to
house,
three
heat.
East

leged to offer one of the finest homes
in Highland Park.
With full view of

RINGER

Tel.

FOR
pa

Second

$88,500.

baths.

2

bedrooms,

9323.

Chicago

HOUSE TO RENT

2nd floor there are 3 lovely bedrooms
modelling. no decorating necessary. extel- and tile bath.
Jent
condition.
Available
New oil burner. This unusual propfor
immediate
_ possession. $48,000.
.
erty
is in central Highland Park near
_
2418
#
Old
Briar.
Beautiful white brick
Tet.
ost
Colonial
cA
home
in Woodridge.
schools and transportation.
ImmediBasement.
auto.
gas
hedt..
Large
recreation
room
$22,500.
with natural fireplace.
First floor—tliv- BtecMCCWOaNCY i faux dota
*
We Ne
ing
room
with: lovely
bay
window
and

~ ENGLISH BRICK
the first time we are

Sheldrake

Ave.;
Strat-

WILL
RENT
attractive modern
six room
ouse 4 weeks
in summer;
convenient
Ravinia
location.
Responsible
tenant.
Write Box D-35, c/o H. P. News.

fireplace and kitchen on the ‘1st floor.

For

Deerfield:

service,

room

95-R-30-tf

Bell Ave.,

schools,

cliffe

burning
fireplace,
large
sun
room,
attractive dining room, wood-burning

fireplace,
library, Screened porch, powder
room,
dinin
room,
g
streamlined
kitchen
_
with electric dish washer, breakfast room.

Tel.

N.

churches, beach
home.
Phone:

brick with beautigrounds, including

ennials, and large greenhouse.
Spacious living room with

(Vacant)

years

FURNISHED

200

REAL

Across

beds,

SALE

NEW
YORK
FOR CHICAGO.
‘Rental exchange
of 7 room
home
in exclusive
Larchmont,
Westchester
County.
35
minutes from Grand Central Station.
&lt;A
very desirable 3 bedroom home with oil
heat, attached garage, walking distance

COLONIAL

strawberry

(Misc.)

in Woodland »Park,

over

266

LISTING

Charming red
fully landscaped

FOR

- GILBERT
|

VITI

WILLIAMSBURG

SALE.

ft on Woodbine
&amp; North
ft on Linden Ave., east of

6430

92x

|the entire back of. the house, overlooking the garden, there are two
at $26,500.
an
_
791 Oak Grove.
Due ‘to change of busi- |screened porches and a glazed porch.
- ness location owner is offering this modOn the second floor there are four
ern ten year-old house for sale. Delightful
large bedrooms
in
its informal country
and two baths.
The
feeling.
English
“cottage
exterior.
Lovely
studio
living closet space is more
than adequate.
room,
dining
room,
leading
to screened|,
porch, kitchen, two family bedrooms
This home can be purchased for
and
tiled bath on first floor.
Two bedrooms,
bath, and large storage space on second. the attractive price of ..... . $26,500.
*
*
*
Fine wood panelled recreation room
fireplace
in
basement,
also
full
bath.
$33,000.
_ 1408
Dean
Ave.
If you
are
looking
for
a charming
country
place
in
town
_ don’t miss seeing this property.
The house

Rich-

25

APARTMENTS WANTED

of 2 adults with

mer rental.

Westport,

Northmoor
Subdivision,
58x150
Sunset
Hills
Subdivision,

$16,000

side.

for

VACANT LOTS --- FOR
A
QUICK SALE
©

No.

on, the other

Rd.

Dee,

This white shingle Colonial house
is situated on a large lot inthe
choicest Ravinia location.
On the first floor a gracious hall
runs through the center with a large
living room on one side, and a good
sized dining room, and bright sunny

kitchen

LOTS

75x200
90x132

226
Railway
Ave.
Highwood,
Til.
TWO
FLATS,
5 rooms each, frame house
in H. P., 2 car garage, H.W. heat.
Lot
200x50 centrally located.
For quick sale.
$11.500.
Write Box 8138, H. P.

Highland Park, Ill.

ac

room

GUY

.
654
ONWENTSIA
AVE.
Comfortable
older
home
beautiful
location
dead
end
street, large landscaped property fine garden.
Exterior of house
recently
painted
% and
inside
partly decorated.
Carpets,
_ refrigerator and gas stove available.
Own.’
-.
er
might
take ~ back
mortgage
at
low
‘ interest
rate.
Living room with screened
_ porch adjoining, dining room, kitchen,
but5
*s pantry on first floor.
Four bedrooms,
summer
sleeping porch and bath on second,
Bedroom
with
lavatory)
and
store
room on third.
Separate garage building
with space for two cars: tool room
and
three room and bath apartment above.
Im_
mediate
possession.
This
is a real buy
aA

rent

course

with

C.

Road,
am

{

modernization with
1
condition—a
BOGd. Duy at n2i5
2 oe vende nore: $13,000.
Also new five room brick home
for $16,000.

quick
$18,000.

Inc.

in

2—4

Full concrete basement

_ with good heating plant.
~. Owner has left town.

and

- HIGHWOOD
Frame
Building

write:

FOR

ESTATE

577

Part of town, this property is 100 ft.
HIGHLAND ARK
in width with an approximate 200 8 roomsIN frame
house recently. remodeled
4 hedtoome:ft. depth.
Price Soi
$15,000.{
*
house ‘with two 4 room flats. cen_
The house is. of good brick con- Frame
tral
location
......) Bits
ha
_
Struction. A comfortable living room Brick Building with 4) apts. “on 13,000.
Skokie
Blvd. gross income
$235.00 per month
with fireplace, dining room, modern
_ kitchen, breakfast nook and 2-car
dy for occupancy
—$15,000 to $20,000.
_ garage complete the first floor ar:
rangement.

Ideal

SEVERAL
LOTS _ IN
RAVINIA,
BRAEside and Sunset
Subdivisions
in Highland Park at reasonable prices.
ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
AGENCY
16. N. Sheridan Rd.—H.
Pk.
:
. Tel. H.P.. 98—~Res;
$7.

&amp; SON

Ave.

details

ESTATE

REAL

6rm
cement blk, central loc ........ 11,000
Red brk 7 rm country home ........ 20,000}
Brand new 6 rm bk Braeside sec... 25,000
Several Apt. Bldgs ...... $12,000 to $20,000
15 Acre Country Estate ex bldgs.
42,500
Linden Ave. &amp; country vacant—Call us.

wooded

For

track.

FOR SALE
Thirty-three
acres
of beautiful
rolling
land with excellent view*of countryside.
North of Barrington, Biltmore Estates in
estate section.
Will divide.
F. R. Pope,
Old School Road, Libertyville.
Libertyville 1598.

HOUSES FOR SALE

5rm

exercise

&amp;

FAMILY

YORK???

ard Gunzer, Catamount
Connecticut:
;

LOVELY
five room home, two large bedrooms; beautiful deep lot.
During
telephone
strike open
everyday
2 to 5*p.m:; and 7 to 9 p.m

Owner 731 S. St. Johns.

TO NEW

horse stalls,

for

REAL

E. T. SKIDMORE

WOODRIDGE

an

living

HOUSES

(Highland Park)

ONLY
1 hour
ride from
Grand
Central
Station.
In picturesque Connecticut.
[
have 3-acres with Modern White Colonial
5 bedrms.
Home
with att. garage, 2-

gracious
living,
Spacious
closets ‘and
cupboards throughout.
Thoroughly in-

thor-

Rm. on first floor.
4
2 tiled baths on 2nd.
Room on
8rd floor finished in rustic birch and cedar
bark, especially suitable for a girl or boy’s
den. The 7 ft. 7 in. basement is plastered,
bedrooms,

_

Calif. to sell my house at 549|

tile baths,

’ large

Room
is large
is a Library:
with breakfast

Powder

from

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE __

Detamble, H. P., East of Green Bay Rd.
Convenient to schools &amp; transportation
Come Sunday.
See lovely English brick
8 large bedrooms,
dressing
room,
2%

built

ar

:

to start.

4

_ Frequent increases.
Apply To
Chief Operator
S. St. Johns Ave.

21

Illinois Bell
Telephone Company

3

STENOGRAPHER -- EXPERIENCED
Permanent position—Some knowledge of.
bookkeeping required.
Salary $165 and
up.
Apply, George B. Caskey, Winnetka
Park
District,
Village
Hall,
Winnetka
Illinois.
Office hours 8:30 a.m. to 12:06
noon; 1.00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 8:30
a.m.
to
12:00
noon
Saturdays.
Tele-

phone

Winnetka

2160. °

STENOGRAPHERS,
TYPISTS,
OFFICE
personnel.
Permanent
position
with
a
future
proportionate
to
your
ability.
Growing
national
concern.
State
age,
experience,
references
and
salary
desired.
Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

HELP

WANTED

'
9

(Domestic)

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white.
For
6 weeks or permanent, starting April Ist.
ired.
Mrs.
ue
References
require
Bride, Lake Forest 36.
WHITE
maid,
general
housework.
No
laundry.
Must like children.
Own room.
Top wages.
Tel. H.P. 457 or 646 Waverly

Rd.;

H..

Py

&gt;

.

1

COOK:
Experienced,
white.
Also
Current
wages.
Volney:
Foster.
Forest 2562.

COOK:

Experienced,

white—for

4

maid.
Lake

cooking

and
downstairs
work.
References
required.
Reply Box M-27, c/o Lake Forester,
,

GARDENER:
rent wages.
est 2552.

Two days each week.
Volney Foster.
Lake

GENERAL
housework; part
Stay or go.
Write 1212
H,. P. or Tek BiPi ss:

or full
Lincoln

CurFori
time.
Ave.,

COOK,
general
houseworker,
exp.
For
family of 2 adults &amp; 2 school children.
Own
room
&amp; bath.
No
laundry,
$35.
Would
consider
woman
with
employed
‘husband;
ref. req.
Tel.
H.P.
1288
or
Write to 868 Moraine Rd., H. F.

EXPERIENCED
Tuesday.

write
5

1439
CPs

laundress for Monday or _

References.

Tel.

S. Sheridan’ Rd,

be

é

:

ee

H.P.

H.

344

P.

or

|

�ss bh
Thursday,
HELP

April
WANTED

17,

1947

Page

(Domestic)

SECOND
MAID:
Experienced,
serving and upstairs
work.
required.
Reply
Box
M-37,
Forester.

HELP

white—for
References
c/o
Lake

RELIABLE white girl to help with housework &amp; children, 1% and 4 or cooking.
Two room &amp; bath apt., salary.
Husband
may stay.
Tel. H.P. 3963 or write Box
D-55, c/o Highland Park News.
WANTED: A couple or cook, second maid
&amp; general man, white, for place in Lake
Forest; 2 in family.
Unusually pleasant
rooms &amp; bath, current wages.
Tel. H.P.
212, or write c/o H. P. News, Box D105.

GENERAL
housework,
5 day week.
Own
room, bath &amp; radio. Two grown children.
Near transportation; references.
525 N.
Sheridan Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.:P. 6525.
GENERAL
housework &amp; cooking.
Exp., 2
adults.
Laundry
out.
Pleasant
room,
bath,
radio.
Current
‘wages;
ref.
req.
Tel. H.P. 584 or 849 Lake Ave., H. P.
COOKING
&amp;
general
housework,
small
modern home. No laundry.
Maid’s room
&amp; bath, $380 to $35, depending
on experience;

Sheridan

references

Rd.,

H.

required.

852

N.

P.

WANTED:
Cleaning woman,
5%
days a
week.
Call
YWCA,
374
Laurel
Ave.,
P:

RELIABLE white cleaning
days a week.
Tel. H.P.
Box D-65, c/o Highland

woman, 1 or 2
3963 or Write
Park News.

DOWNSTAIRS
MAID:
White.
Own room
and bath. Transportation furnished. current salary.
References required.
Reply
Box 590, Lake Forest or Telephone Mrs.
T. Phillip Swift, Lake Forest 62.
GARDENER’S
HELPER:
Experienced.
Also, to assist in house.
Apply Gardener’s Cottage, 954 N. Green Bay Road,
aor
Forest or Telephone Lake Forest
HOUSEMAN:
Experienced,
white, single.
‘Permanent position in Lake Bluff.
For
interview, Howard Linn, Lake Bluff 1570
week ends.
LAUNDRESS:
days a week.
N. Elm Tree
Forest 909.

Experienced,
white.
Mrs. Ward Wheeler,
Road, Lake Forest or
-

Two
1291
Lake

OUTSIDE
MAN:
To work two days per
week.
For interview, Write W. M. Pollock, 1005 Maplewood’ Road, Lake Forest.
HELP

WANTED

(Miscellaneous)

WANTED
Men, part or full time at
Highland Ten Pins
189 N. Second St., H. o,

WANTED:
Lathe operators &amp; other machine
shop
employees,
Modern
Engineering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.P.
1057.
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Young woman, between the age of 21 and
85 years to train for Soda Fountain and
lunch counter management.
WE TEACH
YOU
fundamentals
of cooking,
baking,
buying and menu planning.
Learn a staple, growing business. Previous experience preferred, but not a requirement.
Uniforms
and
meals
furnished.
Good salary while learning.
No
Sunday or holiday work.
Write, c/o H.
P. News, Box A-55.
ASSISTANT cook &amp; dietary maid.
Straight
hours.
Tel. H.P. 2550.
Ask for Cook,
Highland Park Hospital.
NURSE
TO TAKE CHARGE
OF 2 CHILDREN,
2 YRS.
&amp;
6%
YRS.
PERM.
POSITION.
OWN.ROOM.
HIGHEST
WAGES.
REF.
MORE
IMPORTANT
THAN
EXPERIENCE.
TEL. H.P. 3964
OR
1622 S. GREEN
BAY
RD.
WANTED:
Part time janitor at Ravinia
school, hours 2 to 5, Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon Sat.
Tel. H.P.
4020 days or H.P. 3091 evenings.
IF

YOU like golf here is an opportunity
to learn the business while working in
a golf shop.
Playing privileges.
Good
wages and meals.
Write c/o H. P. News,
Box D-45.
WANTED ~-- LABORERS
Apply North Shore Gas Co.
534 Central Ave., H. P.
MECHANICS
To Work
In
Chrysler -- Plymouth
Agency
Best working conditions
Modern equipment
Better than union guarantee
Flat rate basis
GOLDEN MOTORS
106 S. First Street
Tel. H.P. 2500

(Miscel.)

SITUATION

WANTED

HOUSEHOLD

(Domestic)

EXPERIENCED
cook will exchange services for small salary &amp; board &amp; room
for self, employed husband &amp; 4 yr. old
son.
Write Box D-5, c/o Highland, Park

SCHOOL
&amp; Sun.

Sheridan

Rd.,

girl to care for
Tel. H.P. 344 or
H.

children
‘1439 S.

P.

JUNIOR
service salesman to sell furnace,
cleaning &amp; repairs.
Can learn heating &amp;
air conditioning.
Write or call Holland
Furnace Co., 523 Park Dr.
Tel. Kenilworth 842.
YARDMAN.
Dependable man for one day
a week, $1.25 per hour.
Must be good
steady workers.
Apply 436 N. Sheridan

seen at Davis
Lake Forest.

WANTED:
Auto car washer @ polishers.
Weekly
guarantee.
Steady job.
North
Shore Buick Co., 110 S. First St., H. P.
NEED
MEN for light garden work.
Good
pay.
If looking for work be at 2384 N.
First St., H. P. any morning shortly before 7 a.m.
One or two
WANTED:
work.
Steady
wages.
Rd., Lake
Forest, Ill.
YARDMAN
eare for
Ave., H.
with

work.

men
for garden
Apply
620
Lake

Must

for

service

have

good

or

production

personality

and

be capable of selling or making
esti.mates.
Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired.
Address
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.
THOROUGH
auto bump
man
to go into
business with party who has the money.
R. J. Reynolds, 1100 N. Green Bay, H. P.
HELP WANTED
Male or Female
No experience necessary—5 day week.
GREAT
ATLANTIC
&amp; PACIFIC TEA CO.
56 N. First St., H. P.

MORAINE HOTEL
Wants steady and part time
WAITRESSES.
Ideal working conditions.

Apply

MANAGER’S.
MEN
for landscape
Must be reliable.
Woodward
Ave.,
Deerfield 197.

OFFICE

work on North Shore.
Herbert J. Frost, 944
Deerfield,
Il.
Tel.

SALES WOMEN FOR FULL OR
PART TIME WORK. 40 HR.,
51/2
DAY
WEEK.
SEARS
ROEBUCK &amp; CO., H. P.
VILLA MODERNE
Wants
Bookkeeper-Accountant.
Must
come
well recommended.
Salary
$259
a month and meals.
Also 2 Night Porters.
Skokie at County Line.
H.P. 4283.
NATIONAL ADV. MANAGER
who understands copy, production, mérchandising.
Unusual
future for right
man.
State
age,
education,
experience,
salary
expected.
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield,
Ill.
COMFANION:
For
elderly
Lake
Forest
lady from 2-6 p.m., seven days a week.
About May Ist. Reply to Box W-27, c/o
Lake
Forester
stating
age,
experience
and salary expected.
NURSE:
For
baby,
5 months,
and
two
little girls, ages 6 &amp; 9, starting April
23.
Other
help
employed,
top \ wages.
Mrs. Fred W. Fairman, Lake Forest 2798

Wanted
Male and Female
HELP TO WORK IN
HIGHLAND PARK’S
MOST MODERN FOOD STORE
Atlantic and
56
Want

‘

N.

Checkers,

Stock

Pacific

First

St.

Dairy Clerks,

Men.

Attractive starting pay
5 day week. Vacation with pay.
Free insurance, Apply Store
Manager

CHINA:
ner set;
$475.
Chicago.
all day

GARDENER
OR
CHAUFFEUR: | Experienced,
white, married.
Wife
will consider part-time day work. Living quarters.
References
furnished.
Reply
Box
N-37, c/o Lake Forester.
WANTED

(Miscel.)

VISIT

YOUR’

brac
H.P.

GOODS
OWN

Post.

We

&amp; clothing.
2744.

FOR

HIGHLAND
sell

47

S.

PARK

furniture,

St.

Storage,

579

bric-a-

Johns.
Tel.
84-B120-In-tf

ONE 4-burner gas stove; two 3-burner gas
plates
with
cabinets
&amp;
compartments
(fitting
for
housekeeping
rooms).
compl, bed; 1 electric refrigerator (med.
size); dishes,
ete.
220
Railway
Ave.,
Highwood.

N.

Oakwood,

Imported “Rosenthal” china dinservice for 12; exquisite pattern,
Apt.
406,
5240
Sheridan
Road,
Long Beach 1400, after 6 p.m.,
Sunday.

MICELLANEOUS

SALE

SALE

piece wicker.
Forest.

FOR

SALE

ELECTRIC
500.
chick
brooder;
chicken
house,
8x10-ft.;
&amp;
odds
&amp;
ends
for
chicken
business.
Tel.
Deerfield
279R-2.
Portwine Rd., Deerfield.

TWO
EXPERIENCED
gardeners
desire
work by day or monthly contract.
Tel. |
H.P.
6528
or
Write
Box
D-125,
c/o
Highland Park News.
HOUSEHOLD

FOR

PORCH
FURNITURE:
Five
860 Linden Avenue,,Lake

CATERING
Weddings. teas, dinner parties, large or
small.
Tel. Glencoe 1594.
P. C. McCultough.

Trading

one
day
a week:
to
wanted,
634 Lincoln
lawn and ‘shrubs.
P.
Tel. H.P. 5219
car

WANTED:
38 days
cleaning in Highland
Park or Ft. Sheridan.
Write Box D-95,
c/o H. P. News.

SITUATIONS

GOODS

BEDS:
Pair of new
French
style
twin
beds, 7-ft. twins with blue upholstery on
head boards.
Complete with new innerSpring mattresses,
$130 each.
May be

News.

HIGH
Sat.

MAN
EXPERIENCED
man or woman for housecleaning.
Tel.
Deerfield
548
or
407
Briar Hill Rd., Deerfield, Ill.

WANTED

WOMEN—Middle
age—neat appearing for
sales work.
H. P. &amp; suburbs.
Earnings
$50 to $75 per week.
Car helpful but.
not required.
397 North Ave., Highwood,

39

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
lawn roller for hire.
Borchardt Fuel Co.,
el. HPs: ¢%,

GET A NICE SUN TAN, WITH
-a new Sperti Sun Lamp, used 3
hours, also goggles. Price $37.50
: Will

sell for $30,

THREE
PIECE
GRAY
PEN
stripe Spring Suit (including full
length coat) size 12 to 14 Toa

small for owner.

Excellent con-

dition, $38.50.
beige,

Also, off white

light weight,

wool

dress,

JUST RECEIVED A NEW SHIP-. size ]2 to 14, worn 6 times, $10.
OF THE NEW 7.6 COLD SPOT
REFRIGERATORS
$219.50.
AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY. SEARS, ROEBUCK
oCOn BH. P.

Tel.

H.P.

wood

4484

Drive,

or 709

H. P.

Ridge-

GREY domestic rug 9x12 , antique mahogany desk, maple double bed, two wrought
iron plant stands, gateleg table.
Tel,
P. 3088 Saturdays.
ae

BOOK
SHELVES,
vases,
nick-nacks,
gas
stove, single &amp; double bed, studio couch,
cee
an zones
22 target rifle fire
antique
love
seat
over
100
years
old;
screen.
aak’s Auto Supply, 2
. Secold mahog.
china
cabinet
with broken
ond St., H. P.
AGE
pediment
top;
andirons;
round
dining |
table; mangle;
4 Windsor chairs;
studio '
RADIO-PHONOGRAPH,
beautiful
walnut
couch.
Other
household
goods.
547
combination automatic record changer—
S. St. Johns.
H.P. 2864.
takes 6 to’8 records.
G.E. Super BeamA-Scope,
no aerial,
no
ground;
boy’s
SLIGHTLY
used
9x12
domestic
oriental
bicycle.
887 Moraine Rd., H .
é
rug beautiful shadows of blue afid rose. '
Mr.
Otto
F. Fisher,
Ermine
Cleaners,
PLANNING sto buy one of the labor saving
Snes
FP
OITA:
automatic washing machines?
Then, by
all means, install an automatic storage
gas
water
IRON-RITE
ironer;
Norge
washing
maheater of ample
size,
See
your
chines ;. electric irons, Universal Proctor,
plumber,
dealer,
or North
Shore
General Mills; Norge gas ‘stoves; Philco
Gas Company.
&amp; Zenith combination
radio; lamps
for
USED
1.60 inch double drain board kitend tables; Universal vacuum
cleaners,
chen sink—12-in. back with Swing spout
$25 allowances on old cleaner; Youngsfaucet and soap dish.
town kitchen sinks &amp; cabinets.
Haak’s
Standard enamel
yes
Auto Supply, 29 S. Second St., H. P.
Lincoln Ave., H. P.
Tel, H.

ORIENTAL rug, 12x16, worn; rose
loom
12x15; two blue broadloom

broad- |
9x12;

ee

CHINESE
RUGS,
9x12, 8x5, 2x8; occassional chair, bookcase, chest of drawers,
sewing cabinet, floral oil painting, cretonne, electric wall fixtures, kitchen table
and chairs, misc. kitchen items, glasses,
Dunlap
bench
sander,
Blue
Stone
for
walls, edging or terracing, 50-ft. extension ladder, Simplex mangle.
619 Greenwood.
Tel. Glencoe 2119.
WALNUT
dining set: table, $10; 6 chairs
at $5; breakfront cabinet, $50; &amp; maple
divan,
$35. © Williams,
1811
Glen
Oak
Ln., Northbrook.
Tel. Northbrook 589-J.
UPRIGHT
Cable piano, like new; antique
library table; 9x12 oriental rug; antique
chair; antique cuckoo clock; hand painted picture.
814 Ashland, Hwd. or Tel.
H.P. 2215.
MISC.
HOUSE
FURN.
FOR
SALE:
On
Fri. &amp; Sat., 2 chifferobes, secretary, china
cabinet,
console,
mirrors,
chairs,
etc.
1135 S. Linden.
Tel, H.P. 1762.
DINING
room
furniture,
radio,
right
piano.
702
Elm
St.,
Friday or Sunday only.

also
upDeerfield.

SOLID oak dining room set, including buffet, extension table, 6 chairs.
Tel. H.P.
2117 or 584 Detamble Ave., H. P.
FRIGIDAIRE
freeze box,
8
condition.
Tel. Deerfield
Woodland Dr., Deerfield.
“CP”

Gas

chens

your
pany

Ranges
and

offer

superior

cooler,

cooking

dealer or North
..
Terms.

hole, perfect
799 or 1246
cleaner
results.

Shore

Gas

kitSee

Com-

FULL SIZE bed, wonderful spring and a|
very good mattress, $25. Simplex ironer,
gas &amp; electric,
condition,
$25.
Deerfield, Ill.

takes
See

half a sheet,
657 Deerfield

good
Rd.,

BEDS:
Extra
long, walnut
finish
metal
twin beds with springs and mattresses.
Mrs. C. H. Wilmerding, 1197 N. Green
Bay Rd., Lake Forest 1086.
WASHER:
‘“Speed-Queen,” like new.
offer accepted.
Tobin,
6 Laurel,
Forest 2107.
y

Best}
Lake

.

EIGHT
inch
tilting
arbor
bench
saw,
$79.95, ten inch, $99.50.
Immediate delivery.
Also’ many
other power
tools,
ee
available.
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co.,
MARTIN
“60” greatest Out Board Motor
of all times.
Get your order in while
our
allotment
lasts.
Pp.
Juhrend,
Salesman, 666 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield.

—_—oeEeEeEEeEee—_e_______
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE
USED
Estey one manual
motorized
organ.
Full standard
key
board,
cendo

Roy

expression.

Nereim,

247

WANTED

No

step

Central

TO

board.

Ave,

TO

Mrs.

BUY

WOULD
like to buy tool house
dren’s
play
house.
Tel. H.P.
1439 S, Sheridan Rd.; H. P.

WANTED

reed
cres-

or chil344
or

RENT

WANTED
to rent for one night one lute.
Not necessary playable.
Highland Park
Cape
Cod
Players.
Write
c/o
H.
‘
News, Box D-15.
cithatbeslannestiealhentaidaetinlemadeniahidemnntnatiadememeneedaetoeti res tT
—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_————
LOST AND FOUND
LOST:
Gold link bracelet gold medalion
with
raised
monogram.
T.F.S. on one
side, white enamel on other with 4 “‘C’s”
and triangle in red.
Reward.
Tel. H.P.
1473 or 820 S. Linden Ave., H. P.
LOST:
Lady’s
C.M.B.
and

brown bill fold with initials
identification.
Reward.
E.

Barnes, Highland
tral Ave, H. P.
USED

Hotel,

Apt.

38.

Cen-

AUTOMOBILES

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern
Ave,
Lake Forest, ‘Ill.
Tel. L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.
NASH
1946 ‘600’ four door sedan.
Extras. Best offer. Write D-115, c/o Highland Park News.

�_.

_

1946 DeSoto Deluxe, 4-door

;
PREPARE
FOR SPRING!
Storms
removed,
Screen
cleaned, painted
&amp;
hung.
Gutters
cleaned
&amp;
painted.
Vet’s
Maintenance.
Tel.
Skokie
5071.

sedan; radio, heater. | At Pure Oil Station, Waukegan Ave., Highwood, Ill.

HALF-TON
Pasquesi
P. 8899.

1939 Pick-up, condition good.
Brothers’
Garage
or Tel.
H.

PACKARD 6—1937, radio &amp; heater;
tires;
excellent
condition.
597
Ave.,
;

LAKE
North

FOR

PAINTING

CASH

WANTED

Large Quantity of
BMERICAN
PINE
FURNITURE
And
ANTIQUES,
CENTURY
a
_ENGLISH
AMPS,
ETC.
going ‘0 England for the Summer.
tie
No Reasonable Offer Refused.
COURT
ANTIQUE
SHOP
918 Linden Avenue
Hubbard
Woods
Winnetka 4085

Wholesale
CLEAN

CHOW:
old.
like
Old
ville

PRODUCTION

TOP

SOIL

P.

2

Prices Range

Less

NOW is the time to have your Refrigerator
motor looked at.
Haak’s Auto Supply,
29 S. Second St., H. P.

brown,
Three
PUPFIES:
DACHSUND
514 S. Genesee, Waukegan.
female.

CHANCES

FREE
FOR
REMOVAL:
50-ft.
wire play pen—need two men.
P.- 1118 or 8653 Park’ Ave., HH.

outdoor
Tel. H.
P.

SPACE WANTED
To store household goods for 4
Must
be dry.
Tel. H.P.
2318
2318 Lakeside Pl.,
Pr.

months.
or call

BUSINESS

PERCY

SERVICE

H. PRIOR,

Jr.

PAINTING

on

WALL

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park,
Il.
29-S-3-In-t*

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More
623 Vine
Ave., Highland
Park
M. Preti
E. O. Inman
Tel. H. P. 5676
Tel. H. P. 89
186-J-19-tf
FLAGSTONE.
TOP
SOIL,
HUMUS,
CINders,
screcnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
down, power saw for hire; general hauling
and
welding.
Tel. HP.
8931
or
8785.
John Tazioli.
SEWING
MACHINE
SERVICE
Singer &amp; other makes repaired, bought &amp;
sold; also vacuum cleaners. Will call for
and delivere
Phone
Robt.
W.
Arends,
1247 Church St.
Tel. Northbrook
624-W
TREE

TRIMMING

Removing

Dead

&amp;

Trees,

LANDSCAPING

Hauling

Away

Cement
Work
Light Hauling — Wood
ROBERT L. WHITE
1002 N. Elmwood,
Waukegan
Telephone
Ont.
7530
CRAFTSMAN
FURNITURE
REPAIR
“For Work
of Quality”
Upholstering,
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.
88rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Zion, Ill.
Tel. Zion 3496
BARTLETT

966

Northwestern

606.
most
cars.
ness.

MOTOR

Ave.,

SALES

L. F.

Tel.

EP

PARKWAY CURTAI N
LAUNDRY
Ruffled
curtains,
panels,
drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick-up a0 Delivery.
vy
Prompt
Service
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 5804
k a Bae

oat

7

eee
pone,
Peek

ae ea +

ager!Na } cota

geehr Pes
hpae
fob

Adjustments,

adh Sae
tate
| Pameee®
SA e a etdae
oh 0

Washing

or

corrections

of

on
Advertiser’s
written
copy,
fault of the advertiser
will be

to

On

be

effective

Telephone

made
phone

the

ads

error,

not
made

the
by

same

week.

adjustment

only
on
errors
number
reported

is

in
address
or
immediately.

Copy is accepted only with the understanding that this paper assumes no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical or mechanical
error.
Reply to Real Estate and Situations
Wanted may be made by phone as well
as by letter.
To reply to such advertisements
phone
H.P.
4500,
4501
or
4502
Ad
Dept.
Your
name,
address
and
phone
number
will be placed
at
once in the box of the advertiser.
The
Wanted
Ads
with
BOX
NUMBERS
identity of any Box Number advertiser
or any
information
not
contained
in
want ads will not be disclosed.
For the protection of our advertisers
replies
to blind
ads. will
not
be delivered unless the release card is presented.
Replies
will be mailed
upon
is

reserved

subject

to

to

revise

publication

or

Wieniaba

suits

—Olwer

on

wife,

the

Thursday,

April

10, at the home

Wendell

Holmes

Card of Thanks
We wish to thank our many
friends and relatives for their
expression of sympathy during

Ugolini

of

a

since

Highland

Park

resident

Froberg,

his

retirement 17 years ago. He was a
clothing salesman by trade.
Mrs. Froberg is the only survivor.
Burial was in the Graceland ceme-

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED
No

has

no

blessing

like a prudent
—Euripides

HELP

Experience

Necessary

To fabricate essential electrical
equipment
required
construction.
e

tery.

Life
friend.

in

home

Drilling
e
Tapping
@
Assembly Operations
Phone Northbrook 715

THE M. B. AUSTIN CO.
Shermer Rd.
Northbrook

WANTED

Shipping Clerk
Switchboard Operator - Typist
Experience

desirable,

but

not

necessary

LIVINGSTON PLASTICS CORP.
1443 Shermer
a

the

President’s

Mr. and Mrs. Amerigo

Germany
the USS.
had been

accept

Rts fas

his

our recent bereavement.

his daughter, Mrs. Sarah
2203 Old Brier road.
Mr. Kopcke was born in
June 20, 1866. He came to
when eight years of age and

rules.

Come

and

Funeral services were held Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at the Kelley chapel
for Herman F. Kopcke, 80, who died

To place your ad, phone H. P. 4500,
4501, or 4502.
The office is open Tuesday until 5:30
p.m.
Ads forwarded by mai] should be
addressed
to
59
S.
St.
Johns
Ave.,
Highland Park.
Tuesday,
5:00
p.m.
Deadline on all Classified Ads
RATES:
Minimum
Charge $1.10 for
20 words or less.
Additional words up
to 55 words will be 5 cents each.
All
words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All
classified
display
ads
1 inch
or
more are charged at the agate line rate.
Wot.

Christensen

Sweet is the scene where genial
friendship plays
The pleasing game of interchanging
pratse.

WANTED:
Girl or young woman.
White
for. cooking
&amp;
first floor
work.
Two
adults.
Own room &amp; bath. Day out each
week and alternate Sunday afternoons &amp;
nings.
Other
help
kept.
Transportation
furnished.
Good
wages.
180
Hazel Ave.

request.

Right

spring

avenue.

eight battle stars and
unit citation ribbon.

off

Services Held for
Herman Kopcke, 80

correct publication without charge, only
if we are notified immediately following
publication.
Cancellations
must
be made
before
8
p.m.
Tuesday
for
Highland
Park
News

50%

WASHING

Window

copy

Our service department,
has the
modern
equipment
to serve your
Stop in today.
Now open for busiC. T. Bartlett.

DECORATING

Storms and Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
R.F.D. No. 1, Box 246-A
Libertyville, Illinois
Grayslake 5414

MODERNE DECORATING
SERVICE

&amp;

M.

Mr.
Perry
married
the
former
Louise Leonardi in 1941, and they
have two .children. He served as an
air cadet in Texas for 20 months and
was released to inactive service at the
termination of the war.

JACK &amp; JILL SHOP
37 N. Sheridan Rd.

HENNING
O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North
Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, IIl.
Tel. Longbeach 2404.
Fully insured

Photographer
Specializing in
pictures of
Tel. TP i BR Oe

&amp;

25

Also large reduction

ao

secure the county’s most
ACT NOW—To
profitable small business.
One man can
operate.
Write
Mr.
R.
G. Gilbertson,
228 E. Douglas St., Bloomington, Illinois.

10-16

from $14.95 to $35.00

MISCELLANEOUS

DOGS

Sizes
3-6, 7-14,

William

tus until the end of the war. From
the rank of Apprentice seaman he
advanced to chief
aviation
metalsmith in 1942 and to lieutenant (jg)
in 1943.
In August, 1943, he left the naval
air station at Glenview for duty in
Hilo, Hawaii, and received orders to
the aircraft carrier USS Essex in
January, 1944, serving aboard that ship
in the Pacific area until the end of
hostilities. -Mr.
Christensen
holds

SPRING COATS

Retail.

and

Highwood, both vetWar II, have opened

children in Highwood.
He joined the
naval aviation reserve in 1936 on active service; and maintained this sta-

ON

CEMENT
work, basement &amp; garage floor,
walks, tuck pointing, repairing, fireplace
&amp; porches.
D. Chiesa, 2000 Washington
Ave., Wilmette, or Tel. Wil. 5647.

Black male chow puppy, 5 months
Pedigree, excellent disposition, looks
a little black
bear.
F.
R. Fope,
School Road, Libertyville.
Liberty1598.

BUSINESS

REDUCTIONS

approved
by Pitts. Lab.
Co. Line &amp; Waukegan
Rd.,
Deerfield
A. F. VOLTZ ‘
173,
R.R.
1, Glenview,
Tl.
Fhone
Glenview
734

Box

BIKES
CATS,

and

Perry

former Norma June Barnested, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Barnested
of Highwood, live
with
their
two

DRASTIC

SOIL

L.

Waukegan

Mr.

Tested
&amp;
Supply Field:

BICYCLES

BIRDS,

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

TUNE-UP

BLACK

EARLY

David

Christensen of
erans of World

under joint ownership the Highwood
Glass and
Paint
company
at 961

SURGERY

SKOKIE
VALLEY
TREE
SERVICE
Treating,
Fruning,
Spraying
Dangerous Trees Removed
gsule eabling and surgery.
All property
and men fully insured.
322. Highwood
Ave.
Highwood,
Illinois
Earl Reynolds.
Tel. H.P.
2658.

2764

Check
your
ear
for
spring
driving.
Starter,
generator,
carburetor
and
fuel
pumps.
Haak’s Auto Supply, 29 S. Second St., H. P.

ANTIQUES

408

FARM
Forest

&amp; DECORATING

MOTOR

RAVINIA MOTORS
22'S. First St., H. P.

New and Used.
Glencoe
Ave., H.

Lake

Fully Insured
Interior and
Exterior
Residential
and Commercial
Immediate Service
Phone Highland Park 6012

Good
°37 to °47
Used
Cars.
A. G: McPHERSON,
Inc.
887 E. Park Ave., A. R

AUTOMOBILES

FLOWER

Highway

TREE

DAN’S

WANTED

WANTED

FOREST
Skokie

Retail Business
In Highwood

VET,
Lloyd
Bock,
83 yrs. resident,
543
Oakwood
Ave.
Tel.
H.P.
1662.
Will
wash
&amp; paint screens,
kitchens, woodwork, bathrooms, living &amp; dining rooms,
halls, etc.

GARDENS — LAWNS
Hauling Dirt and Manure
Annual and Perennial Plants
Pansies

5 new
Vine

Two Veterane Open

Inside and Outside.
Tel. H.P. 3452 or 3053
E. R. Conger

LANDSCAPING

STUDEBAKER,
1940,
4-door sedan,
new
tires,
new
battery,
exc.
cond.,
radio,
heater, $750 or best offer.
Fred Beck,
“Saunders
Rd. &amp; Duffy Lane,
Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 233-J-1.

AUTOS

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING
PAINTING AND DECORATING

BUSINESS SERVICE

USED AUTOMOBILES

LIKE NEW:

Ave.

Northbrook —

�Thursday, April 17, 1947

Stagers Present
(Continued

from

page

37)

present surroundings.
Although unable to grasp the understanding of
the complexities of life, she thoroughly comprehends
the values of
true love and devotion.
In the: role of Mr. Longley, Tom
Evans displays the characteristics of
a wealthy
and
“successful”
industrialist—a self made man who was
not

too scrupulous

about

the

Compare! TOP taste Bread
is your best Bread buy,
for quality — for goodness.

|

which gained him his prominence and
his abundance of worldly treasurer.
All of the passengers finally come
face

to

face

can

satisfy

with

the

their

one

man

intense

CHEESE

curiosity

CLUB

LOAF

PRESERVES
Cc

their

mysterious
Thomson,

journey

and

that

RICHER—BETTER

ing provides the climax of the play.
The Rev. Thomson is played by Jim
The production is under the direction of Mrs. Donald Sheridan, a
newcomer to the group.
The
Robert

cian,

and

Maurice

Allsbrow,

C.

Tibbetts

and

for

the

the

Paul

11-OZ.

Tibbetts

SPRY
s

‘occasion.

iA

Deerfield

Stagers,

local

dra-

matic group, will hold their customary
long

rehearsal

on

Sunday

at

the

Deerfield
Grammar
school, with a
supper served at the school by their
social committee.
Play dates
are
April 25 and 26.
Home

from

Missouri

Mrs.
Hubert
Juhrend
returned
Monday to her home on Oakley avenue after a ten day visit with Mr.
and
Mrs. Herman
Eichelberg and
their daughter, Mrs. Paul Payne in
Kansas City, Mo.

L

49

Flakes

__

Lux Seap
Be

“212 23¢

= Blu-White
CUT RITE

Wax
Paper
CLEANER

Sofwash
OUTCLEANS

ee
CLEANSER

cans eae

MILD

2%

e

19¢

= ‘X01 19

—_—° 2.02. 19¢
SOAP

Gameo

Cc

A uARSE 31c

FFLAVORED

Shallots

2

sre
25C
iaietl

cx; 19¢

SOLID GREEN NEW

. . cus, B° Cabbage

TEXAS SEEDLESS

TEXAS

FLORIDA

JUICE

nes soak aan one

5 LBs, 49°

PKG.

3 iss 10°

RED NEW

Grapefruit 10 ,,;49°|Potatoes

ORANGES

BRIGHT

Gold Dust
BLUING FLAKES

cc: 13¢

“YA 10¢

RINSO

POWDER

® LARGE BUNCH, FRESH

VEGETABLE SHORTENING

of

: 29°
* 47°

ASPARAGUS . . . = 15°
CARROTS. - - - 313°

C

CANS

Wis., were also down

or

2 $0 25¢

‘*Rt
13¢
ae

Cleanser

SOUPS

Stagers’ Supper
The

Steak Sauce

Chicken Noodle, Beef Noodle
and Cream of Mushroom

Mr. and Mrs. James Tibbetts and
children of Chestnut street attended
a reunion of the Tibbetts “clan” in
this area on Tuesday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gorby
(Joy Tibbetts) in Evanston.
Mr. Tibbetts’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Merle}:

% 23°

FLAVORED

3%°223¢

SWIFT'S

HEINZ

Family Reunion

Fort Atkinson,

Baby
Foods
DERBY

car-

promptress.

BRAND

Whiffs
of Wheat $23
10c
GERBER'S
’

scCANke 99°

Rogers is in charge of propand
Marian
Kerrihard
is

Tibbetts

Whiffs
of Rice
BREAKFAST CEREAL

i Meaty Seven:

penter.

Sue
erties

BREAKFAST CEREAL

APRICO
Hunt's or Nagget

his crew of exRussell, electri-

PANCAKES

Tato Mix
TS

stage
has
been
designed
by
Rainer and will be constructed

by Milt Merner and
perts including Jim

POTATO

PEELED

Tibbetts.

16-OZ. NATO
PURE TOMATO

MARMALADE .....
NATCO COFFEE...

se QSe

—

meet-

STYLE

HARTLEY'S

STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES
Frank

KOSHER

HEINZ CATSUP....

HOLSUM

Rev.

CUCUMBER

YOUNGBERRY

BRAND

16-07
JAR

about

OF

DAILEY'S FRESH

CHERRY

Mau

PRUNE PLUMS. . 2‘
39°
TOMATO SOUP ... 7 oi :
PICKLE SLICES ... “= [9°
33¢
PRESERVES...
HEINZ.CREAM

SPREAD

NATCO

.

SUGAR PLUMS

GLENDALE

who
a

Russell

16-OZ.
LOAVES

methods

a

4 ,,, 29°

MAINE

| SUPER SPUDS
10

MES

55°

Swan Soap. 2 "sari 206
SwanSoap “xr 19¢
TOILET SOAP

Sweetheart
FOR

WALL

PAPER

Cincy Cleaner
CLEANER
Royal Lemon

"ze 17C
2 12.92 25¢
3 92% 23¢

A

FOOD

STORES

:

�‘

Sw
TE

School. Trustee

ean

t

oe

vey

Highland Park. —
TELEPHONE H. P. 2400
FRI., SAT,
Lucille Ball, John

In Chicago Hospital

\e

wie

Bt

ALCYON

See

.
-|Donna
Corsini Dies
Donna

Jean

(Continued

Corsini, 16 month

died

Monday,

April

7,

at. the

Chil-

dren’s Memorial hospital in Chicago.
Donna Jean was born in Highland
Park hospital’on December 12, 1945.

THU.,

Hodiak

“Two Smart People”

Besides the parents, two
survive.

half broth-

Added: Latest News Events; “Flying Jeep”

ers

SUN., MON., TUE., WED.,

Services in charge of the KelleySpalding Funeral home, were held at
St.
James
church,
Highwood,
on

_

“Jumping

Jacks”

Mickey

Stone

Lewis

Rooney,

“Hooray, Bo ys, it’s
we can call off the

“Love Laughs At
Andy Hardy”

to

THU., FRI., SAT.
Sydney Greenstreet,
Peter Lorre, Joan Loring

“Betty Coed”
Cartoon

Tom

TEL. L. F. 2106

FRI.,

.«

ON

THE

©

Duck,

Donald

with

TUE.,

thru
2-4;

Sat. Mat.

Sun.

WED.,

GLENCOE
Park

605

Mon.-Fri.

"THE
Gary

Jean

&amp;

18-19

THU., FRI, SAT., April 24-25-26

“LOVE LAUGHS AT
ANDY HARDY”

Also

Lewis

Stone

“RAZOR’S EDGE”
Bowe:

the

Your

Mrs.

Sleeman

Place

of

Chicago,

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN
from

1:00

‘

thru

intimate

"THE

Hart

of

funds

in the

are

Henry

Highland

Park

serves

as

at

10

born

in

Paris,

1870, and at the
was making her
Wabash avenue,
three sons, Bar-

Homer

and

and

another

New

York

daughter

who

from

page

3)

districts :
Tax

held

proposition:

Highland

Park,

yes 354, no 39; Lake Forest, yes 111,
no 14; Highwood, yes 106, no 25; Lake
Bluff, yes 86, no 10; Deerfield, yes
32, no 9; Bannockburn, yes 18, no 3.
For Philip Speidel: Highland Park,

371;

Lake

Forest, 118;

Highwood,

123; Laké Bluff, 97; Deerfield, 42;
Bannockburn, 21.
Total votes cast: Highland Park,
399;

Lake

Forest,

140; Lake Bluff,
Bannockburn, 21.

128;

97;

Highwood,

Deerfield,

42;

Walter

of Highland Park;
two daughters,
Mrs. Elizabeth Sherman of Chicago
lives

in

City.

Real friendship is a slow grower, and
never thrives unless engrafted upon a
stock of known and reciprocal merit.
—Lord Chesterfield

THE JUKE BOX
961

and

Entertainment

Continuous

trustees

(Continued

were

was

Mich., February 17,
time of her death
home at 2834 South
Chicago.
She is survived by

Carson

Vickers

In Technicolor
Selected Short Subjects

Best

Other

handle

schools

Siljestrom of
Highland
Park
and
Ralph Petersen of Deerfield. Martin

by

at. Immaculate Concepfor Mrs. Elizabeth M.

News

.

SATURDAY

romance

SECRET

HEART”

Waukegan

ae

Ave.,

NOW.

Highland

OPEN

SANDWICHES
PIES

SUNDAES
SODAS °
Phone

NOW

Park

1508

OPEN

The Smartest
Restaurant
and

Cocktail
on
the North

Lounge

ENTERTAINMENT

‘ORLAND

Side

Sunday Dinner

WITH

of Radio

Fame

From 9 P. M. Until

for 4 Days

A Roadshow attraction at our
regular prices ...

oS

“THE RAZOR’S
EDGE”

EXCELLENT
FOOD

Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney,
John Payne, Anne Baxter,
Clifton Webb, Herbert Marshall

MODERATE
PRICES

See

COMING:

Time,

and

high

Brent,

and

Jack

Martha

Starts SUNDAY

O'CLOCK”

Rooney,

Paige,

township.

and

served from [2 noon

Dick Powell, Evelyn Keyes

Mickey

20-21

Friday
church,

Apr. 22-23-24

the Girl”

Arthur

SUN. thru WED.,
“JOHNNY

Subjects

of six years,

for all grade

Lukas

Claudette Colbert,
Walter Pidgeon, June Allyson

PLAINSMAN”

Cooper

“The

NOW

6:00
April

April
Paul

THURS.

write-ins.

School Township 43 includes Districts 106 through 113. Trustees serve

|High School Election

GENESEE

GUY”

Highland

Lloyd

George

Korvin,

in

Sleeman, 77, former resident of Highland Park who died on Tuesday, April
8, at Mercy hospital in Chicago.

rett

News

Morgan,

Janis

19-22

Haymes

Jimmy

Latest

Short

WED.,

Dennis

Sonny Tufts, Ann Blyth

“SWELL

Donnell

services

“TEMPTATION”

Added,

inc.
inc.

THURS.

Open

Charles

cont. 9-11°30

Dick

Grable,

18-19

BLUES”

SUN., MON.,
Merle
Oberon,

TUES.,

“The Shocking Miss Pilgrim”
Betty

April

Also

Mouse,

April

17

“It’s Great to Be Young”

Only

Unreserved Seats, 60c tax
Reserved Seats $1.20 tax

Admission:

SAT.

Mickey

a.m.
tion

Adventure”

Leslie Brooks,

Day

Festival

Funeral

Meredith

ALSO

SCREEN

Disney’s

Madge

Jeff

was

At Catholic Church

Raines

PLUS

“COWBOY

16th Annual Spring Recital
of the Pupils of Mrs. J. C.
School of the Dance
' Walt

Ella

Curtiss,

to the

Held On Friday

APRIL

THURSDAY,

SAT.

Ken

Burial

Sleeman Services

ILLINOIS

Falcon’s

April 10.
cemetery.

3)

votes in Highwood for V.
William Briddle.
Highland Park voters cast 18 votes,
residents of Deerfield 15, and Highwoodites 37 for Rosenthal in addition

a term

Steak

-

CASINO

Conway,

“The

ILLINOIS

. One

Ravioli

Duryea,

Thursday,
Ascension

page

treasurer.

“WHITE TIE AND TAILS”

Deerpath
FRL, April 1

-

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April 24-25-26

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LAS yt
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ated in Chicago,

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:%
4

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                    <text>AMVETS

WOMAN’S

AUXILIARY

MEMBERS

PLAN

BOX

SOCIAL

Photo

Left

Russell,

Deerfield

to

right:

Mrs.

Peter

Grammar

Decorated

Thursday,

boxes

Mrs.

Albert

J.

Anderson,

school,
on

April

the

Moen,

are
table

10,

Mrs.

Mrs.

Stuart

holding

the

were

made

1947

Trevlyn

Pottenger,

Hoadley,

prize
by

and

winning
Mrs.

Moen

Mrs.

Mrs.

Eric

poster
and

Walter

Banfield.

made

Mrs.

Hoffman,

by Sue

Root

as

.

Miss

Margaret

Margaret

Jacobs

samples

|

Stein,

of the
for

their

Stein,

Wilmot

Mrs.

Harold

school,

Root,

and

by

Ezra

Smith

Jr., Charles

Charles

Russell,

Deerfield school.
“Old

Fashion

Box

Social.”

5c

per

Copy

�MY THANKS TO
HIGHLAND PARK
FOR THIS

CITYWIDE

WALKER

ENDORSEMENT

FOR

OF

MAYOR

Robert Fk. Walker
January 8, 1947:

“We,

the undersigned

that the name of Robert F. Walker
as candidate

for nomination

be

...

do

placed

for the Office

hereby

upon

of Mayor

petition

the ballot
......”

Bigier, Charlotte C.

Halsted, Jess

Sheridan, Leo J.

Sihler, Alfred T.

Britton,

Hotchkiss,

Murray,

Sinclair,

Lester G.

Bromstedt, Wm.

F.

Eugene

Howell W.

Lewis

B.

Johnson, Marshall L.

McKenna,

Bruce, Benjamin M.

Jones, Avery C.

McLain,

Harold O.

Sonnenschein, Hugo, Jr.

Cushman,

Jones, Charles W.

McLain,

Naomi

Steele, Edw. M.

Dana, George B.

Keare, Spencer R.

Nosek, Francis J.

Vaile,

Earhart, Harry

Krasberg, Bruce

Pfister, Harold F.

Velde, Karl H.

Fucik, E. J.

Lautmann, Herbert M.

Ringer,

Winters, Margaret P.

Green, Edw. A.

Lundquist, C. F.

Robinson, John L.

Zischke,

Greenebaum, Frederic

Mannings, John M.

Schumacher, Bowen E.

Zischke, Herman A.

Gregori, Grace

Mitchell, Claude

Sheahen, Gregory M.

Renner,

Gregori, Thoretta

Murphey, James M.

Sherer, Jessie D.

Sihler, Dorothy

The

Robert

S.

above

signers of the petition

Park—veterans,

muters.

In

E.

local

return

business

| promise

endorsed

men,

to

be

my

professional

Philip J.

Lotta

Hess

candidacy
men,

Smith, Samuel S.

for Mayor

skilled

Jeanne

Hannah

Frieda B.

of Highland

tradesmen,

and

com-

a Mayor for all of Highland Park. | will be a
working Mayor, answerable to any family in any neighborhood in our city. My door
in the City Hall will always be open and | will welcome the cooperation and help
of any Highland Parker. Read my personal history on the opposite page.

�Volume

22,

Number

Thursday, April 10, 1947

2

b]

Grade School Elections to be Held Bannockburn and

Board of Appeals
Hears Re-zoning

Petitions

Two petitions were presented Monday evening to Deerfield’s Board of
The

Appeals.

a request

first was

for

the extension of Class “B” (multiple
dwellings) and change from Class “A”
residential property to include the
remaining lots owned by Percy Wilson &amp; Co. on South Waukegan road,
across from St. Paul’s church and the
The second was
Deerfield cemetery.
a request to extend the light manufacturing zone to include 16.4 acres
for the Tractomotive Co. of Findlay,
Ohio.
There were no objections to the
first petition, which was in reality an
action to validate former action of
the board which had approved the
change.
‘
The Manufacturing Issue
Attorney Stuart Bradley presented
the case of the Tractomotive comPaul

pany.

B.

treasurer,

and

Cochran,

president

vice

described

the type of

and work, the size of the prop-

factory

(Full information

erty and buildings.

on this data is found

in the March

. 27 issue of the Deerfield Review.)
V. M. Dobeus, president of the
company, was the next witness and
verified the type of personnel to be
employed, the kinds of machinery involved and their reasons for wanting
a tract of 26.2 acres of property.
“Pro and Con”
=
Robert M. Cole of Chicago, real
e
estate broker, stated that he thought
the area suited only to manufacturRoy B. Moore of Skokie, Til,
ing.
“and local jeweler, spoke as chairman

of

light

the

manufacturing

commit-

of
Chamber
tee of the Deerfield
Commerce, favoring light manufacturing. M. A. Frantz, resident, plumbing contractor, and president of the
Chamber

of

Commerce,

spoke

for

William Bauman, forthe factory.
mer local business man, a resident
of Skokie, Ill., and a member of the
Chamber of Commerce, spoke in favor
of the issue.
James Flynn of Chicago, present
owner of the site in question, told
that he owned 65 acres in the area,
of which the company wishes to pur-

chase 26.2 acres.

E. F. Nelson and Albert Arentz,
members of the plan commission, told
of the Master Plan, and the possibilities of this not being the wish of
Other speakers not
the majority.
stating their approval were Robert L.
M.
Seth
Collins,
Johnson, James
Gooder, and others.

W.

R. Mitchell, taking the neutral

=

path, said he could sell real estate
to the large home owner, or to the
the
thought
he
smaller—,but that
majority should decide the issue.
Eric Banfield, home owner and local
business man, voiced his opinion definitely in favor of factories, stating
that the men who fought this war

are back and want to work near home.
Robert E. Jordan, nearest neighbor
to the

it

was

proposed

poor

factory

farm

land,

stated

Deerfield Village —

Saturday, April 12; Hours Vary

that

“Class-R”

‘residential property, a weed patch,
ais had fumes of smoke and garbage.

school elections
and high
Grade
all take place on Saturday, April 12,
with the hours set by the various
school boards. No opposition is announced.
DEERFIELD
Deerfield Grammar school is the
polling place for:
12 noon to 7 p.m. High school election. Candidate, Philip Speidel of
Lake Forest, 3-year term.
3 p.m. to 6 p.m, Township school
trustee. Candidate, S. R. Rosenthal
of Highland Park, 6-year term.
12 noon to 7 p.m. Deerfield Grammar

school. Candidates,

Vernon

J. Giss

for president,
for
l-year
term;
George Jacobs for member, 3-year
term; Mrs. James Tibbetts, J. B.
Carson, and William Jacob, to fill
unexpired terms due to vacancies
they are now filling.
WILMOT
Wilmot
Grade
school
board
of
directors includes Warren C. Darling,
H. L. Hurlburt, and Mrs. Fred Marx.
Mrs. Marx’s term expires. Time of
their election has been set for 4 p.m.
to.6 p.m. Mrs. Marx is a candidate
for relection.
Wilmot district voters will go to
their own school for their director
election,

but

to

the

Deerfield

Gram-

mar school for high school board
member and township school trustee.
They will also have a referendum
on April 19 to vote on their proposed new building.
BANNOCKBURN
Bannockburn grade school election
will be held Saturday from 8 p.m.
to 9 p.m. At 7:55 p.m. there will be
the annual caucus for the selection
of a candidate, as is customary. This
year, Mrs. J. B. Cleaver, who has
served for two terms, is not a candidate for reelection so a new director
will be selected at the caucus.
Other members of the board are
George
Stanwood,
president,
and
Forrest Laidley, member. Mrs. Cleaver has been clerk»
The high school election will have
polls in the Bannockburn school from
12 noon to 7 p.m. Philip Speidel -of
Lake
Forest
is the candidate for
member of the board of education.
HIGH SCHOOL
Philip L. Speidel, president of the
First National Bank of Lake Forest,
is a candidate for election as a member of the Deerfield-Shields Township Board of Education on Saturday, April 12.
Mr. Speidel, who is a resident of
He

favored

a buffer

across

for

the

the

factory

the

heavy

as desirable,
manufacturing

tracks.
No Action Taken
The board of appeals adjourned
the meeting, to weigh the evidence,
and report their findings to the village board.
John A. Benz is chairman of the
board of appeals and the members
are Walter Lige, Hubert Kelley, H.
C. Hawes, and Eugene Engelhard.

Elections April 15 |

Lake Forest, is a graduate of Highland Park high school, class of 1914,
and Lake Forest college.
There are five members
on the
board of education and each member
serves three years. Two members are
elected one year, two members are
elected the following year, and one
member the third year. This is the
third year in, the sequence.
Mr. Speidel, who is a member of
the board of education at the present
time,

was

appointed

last

fali

to

fill

in the vacancy of Mr. George T.
Rogers, who resigned.
Polling place will be the Deerfield
Grammar school for all West Deerfield Township citizens not living in
Highland Park, Lake Forest, or Bannockburn. Hours are 12 noon to 7
p.m.
Other polling places for the high
school election are in Lake Bluff and
Highwood, six locations in all.
Township School Trustee
Samuel R. Rosenthal of Highland
Park is the candidate for Deerfield
and West Deerfield townships school
trustee. He is unopposed. Other trustees are Henry Siljestrom of Highland Park and Ralph Peterson of
Deerfield’ There are three polling
Park National
places—Highland
Terrace
Oak
Highwood’s
bank,
Deerfield Grammar
and
school,
school. Polls are open from 3 p.m.
to 6 p.m. All West Deerfield township
Grammar
votes at the Deerfield
school.

of the

rezoning of two

pieces

Alexander

was

strike
told that the telephone
vented the appeals board from

preget-

S.

ting together on Tuesday. evening to
sign their written report.
that
recommendation
first
The
Percy Wilson’s lots on South Waukegan road, across from St. Paul’s
church, be changed from Class “A”
multiple
“B”
Class
to
residential
dwellings, was approved by the village

Trustees

board.

present

and

vot-

ing were A. G. Bradt, H. G. Cazel,
A. J. Mercurio, G. T. Scott, and
Floyd Stanger. Trustee P, A. Tennis
was absent.
for rezoning to alThe change
company to
low the Tractomotive
erect a factory on County Line road,
met

had

with

some

objections,

and

as there was no written explanation,
the village board tabled it, and an
amended petition until a later date
for a special meeting with the board
appeals.

of

Garbage

Brick
and

burning

at

National

the

Co. came in for considerable
lively

debate,

with

cinct 2.
There

is no opposition

and

the can- —

didates are:
Homer

G.

ie
Cazel

for

trustee

(4 year

term).

Ce

Eric Banfield for firmstee (4 year
term).
Se
Joseph King for trustee (4 year term).
Daniel Hunt for police magistrate (4
year term).
Polls will be open from 6 a.m. to
5 p.m.

_

|

BANNOCKBURN
The Village of Bannockburn will
hold its election on Tuesday, April 15,
with the Bannockburn school as the
polling place. There !s no opposition. —

Polls will be open from 6 a.m. to 5

p.m.
Candidates will be:
Edwin M. White. for president

(2 year

term).
V. T. Mertz for village clerk (2 year
term).
.
F. M. Conley for trustee (4 year term).
K .K. Towler for trustee (4 year

term).
C. Farquhar for

trustee

(4 year |

term).

The Deerfield village board memevening, were given
bers, Tuesday
a verbal report of the findings of
the board of appeals which had. met
the preceding evening for a public
of property.
Mayor Robert

its election on Tuesday, April 15, with
—
two polling places. Deerfield road is —
the dividing line for the precincts. Citizens living north of Deerfield road
will vote in the Town Hall, Deerfield
road, precinct 1. Those living south of
Deerfield road will vote in the basement of the Masonic Temple, the vil- |
lage offices, on Waukegan road, pre-

R.

VILLAGE BOARD
PROCEEDINGS

hearing

DEERFIELD
The Village of Deerfield will hold

the

result

Strong Wind Blows Down
Shugrue Cafe Window
The large plate glass show window
in Shugrue’s Coffee shop was blown
down by the strong winds Saturday
Ei
evening.
a3
The village truck and employees
were around on Monday picking up
all the branches on the parkways
and streets which had blown down
over the weekend.

—

NOTICE
Deerfield
structed

to

police
begin

have

been

arrests

on

inMay

1 of all those who have not purchased vehicle licenses and dog
licenses.

—

that the brick company will receive
a five-day notice to stop the ordinance violations. The brick company
had a staunch supporter in George
“Scotty” Burnett.
The Sheridan Rifle club was denied a full permit. They had peti-—
tioned to set aside an order limiting

their club to shot gun shooting. They
had applied for full status.
Full details of the entire meeting
will be reported in next week’s Review.
'

:

�Page

4

Thursday,

MEET

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

April

10,

Vol.

1947

PUBLICATION

22,

No.

YOUR

NEIGHBORS:
THE JOSEPH W. KING FAMILY

THURSDAY, April 10—
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7:30 p.m. Royal Neighbors.

OFFICE

SATURDAY, April 12—
12 noon to 7 p.m. High school elections, and all grade school elections,
with time set by various boards; also
election of township school trustee.
8 p.m. Amvets Auxiliary Box social.

year

MONDAY, April
8 p.m. Legion
Temple.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press
Association
‘Entered as second-class matter November
, 1944, at the post office at Deerfield,
Illinois,
under
the
Act
of March
8, 1879.”

8 p.m.

Did you know that a little fellow
in the Wilmot kindergarten took a
copy of the Deerfield Review to bed
with him and tucked it under his

:

is so fond

of

his

teacher,

Photo

Guest Editorial

had

a pet

proverb,

passed

on

to you

Stagers to Present
“Outward Bound”
Deerfield Stagers will present “Outward Bound” by Sutton Vane on Friday and Saturday evenings, April 25
and 26, in the Deerfield Grammar
school.
Guest director will be Mrs.
Donald T. Sheridan of Saunders road.
The scene is to be on board ship
The
and the time is the present.
cast:
Martin Decker
Cynthia Gillespie
nn
Henry
Frank Sturtevant
Jr.
Mr.
Russell
Mau
Mrs. Cliveden-Banks
............ Geneva Ritter]
Rev. William Duke ..........-. Paul Fagett Jr.
Pia PROG. i cai cdpuh dich ononviansos
dedenne Helen Ross
Wiis SL AMBICY ste Gicscdcngersstackaten Thomas Evans
Rev. Frank Thomson ...........- James Tibbetts

by

Ezra

Smith

Left to right: Mrs. King, holding Gregory, 5 months old; Joseph
R., 9 years old; and Mr. King, with their German shepherd dog
“Lucky.”

Mrs. C. E. Bates, and was so thrilled
to see her picture—that he had to
The Joseph W. King residence is
have it all to himself. The Wilmot
school teachers appeared on a re- at 869 Rosemary terrace, where they
have lived since 1939, coming here
cent cover of the Review.
;
It was gratifying to have so many from Chicago.
telephone calls of commendation for
Mrs. King, mother of two young
the two church pages preceding Palm children, finds time for outside activiSunday and Easter Sunday with pic- ties.
She is book review chairman
tures and articles devoted to the four for the Deerfield Woman’s club and
churches of Deerfield.
ways and means’ chairman of the
The warning to parents about chil- Deerfield Grammar school PTA.
cee.
%
;
dren not getting into strangers’ cars
Mr. King is assistant manager of
brought at least 50 telephone and the Otis building in Chicago; a real
personal calls of inquiry, as well as estate broker; a member of Building
thanks for the reminder. Sorry we Managers’ association of Chicago; a
could not divulge names.
member of National License Law OfWe hope the young man who had ficials board;
vice chairman
Real
his
wallet
returned
to him
has Estate Examining committee, State
thanked the finder of his employer’s
$1,700. That’s a lot of money!
James Kilcoyne has received some
compliments this week for his fine
photograph of the two pastors of
By Mrs. Eric Banfield
Holy Cross church, who appeared in
Aims and Objectives of
last week’s Review.
The Amvets Auxiliary
Many thanks for all the words of
praise
about
the
special
features
The Amvets’ auxiliary was formed
covering a varied range of reader
interest from youngsters and oldsters. after the organization of Amvets, who
We
always
know when things go are American veterans of World War
wrong, so it is pleasant to know when Ii. It is a young and growing organization, and with active participation
they meet with your pleasure. .
The late James O’Connor, who was ‘by its members, is becoming known as
township supervisor for many years, a fast-growing national organization.
readers for what it is worth: “You
can catch more flies with honey than
you can with vinegar.”

14—
Post

in

Masonic

TUESDAY, April 15—
6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Deerfield and
nockburn village elections.

Interesting Bits
Here and There

He

1947

2

Chestnut St., Deerfield,
Illinois
Ruth Pettis, Editor
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday

pillow?

10,

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

745

Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate— $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave,
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone H.P.
4500

April

“We

waited

together,

now

let’s work

of Illinois; and an alumnus of Phi
Delta Theta fraternity of Lombard
college, Galesburg, Ill.
Mrs. King was born and reared in
Dwight, Ill. Her father is a dentist.
Mr. King, born in Chicago, went to
live

in

Danville,

Ill.,

when

he

was

Masonic

lodge.

THURSDAY, April 17—
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
1 p.m. Presbyterian Woman’s association.
2:30 p.m. Deerfield school PTA.
Sam Campbell’s lecture.
8 p.m. Amvets Auxiliary in school.
} 8 pam. Eastern
Star
in
Masonic
Temple.
FRIDAY,

8

p.m.

April

18~—

Amvets

Post

in

Masonic

Temple.

MONDAY, April 21—
8 p.m. Legion auxiliary.
TUESDAY, April 22—
1 p.m. Woman’s club annual
.9
eon.

years old and where he grew up.
Villagers are herewith introduced

to Mr. King as a candidate for village
trustee for the Deerfield village election on April 15. With Homer Cazel
and Eric C. Banfield as his running
mates for the three offices of trustees
and Daniel Hunt as candidate for
re-election as police magistrate, the
Citizens party ticket is unopposed.

Ban-

WEDNESDAY, April .23—
9 a.m. Presbyterian rummage
in church.

lunch-

sale

THURSDAY, April 24—
9 am. Presbyterian rummage sale.
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce ladies’
night dinner at St. Paul’s church.
FRIDAY, April 25—
9 a.m. Presbyterian rummage sale.
8 p.m. Holy Cross card party in
parish hall.
8 p.m. Stagers Play (2 nights).

and their families, hospitalized veterans,—the needy, and stand ready to
aid the Amvets to transmute into
reality their aims and purposes.
Future Events
May 3—High school spring concert.
Membership to the Amvets auxilMay 6—Wilmot
Mothers’
club
iary is limited to mothers, wives,
daughters, sisters, and foster parents luncheon-bridge party.
May ‘10—Firemen-Amvets dance at
of regular, members of: the Amvets,
and of deceased veterans who would Briergate clubhouse.
July 11-12-13—Firemen-Amvets carhave been eligible to join.
Local auxiliary meetings are held nival.
August 15-16-17—Legion carnival.
the first and third Thursday evenings
of each month in the Deerfield Gram- |Master
Plan
for Deerfield
and
a
mar school. Prospective members are committee comprising Vernon Meintinvited to be guests at these meet- zer, Edward Horenberger, and Harry
ings.
Mrs. Ruth Hoffman Sternberg Allsbrow, will. report their
, findings
is president.
on the survey.
Also.on the agenda will be the selection
of representatives
for
the
Amvets Post Plans
annual state convention; preparation
for the Firemen’s Amvets’ dance to be
held May 10; and the carnival on
Amvets have their monthly meet- July 11, 12, 13.
At a previous meeting the Amvets
ings and activities planned for the

together” best expresses the goal of
the Amvets’ auxiliary, with the welfare of the veterans and the’people,
as a whole, as objectives.
The Deerfield Amvets post 63, Deerfield, held a special meeting on October 17, 1946, for the purpose of outlining the organization of a woman’s
auxiliary.
While the national and state de- balance of 1947. The first Friday of
partments are in the initial stages of each month is to be a business meetconstruction, preparing procedure and ing and the third Friday will be a
programs, local groups have had to social affair, ranging from movies

Many Events for Year

organize

by

themselves,

taking

the | to dances
tainment.

initiative, while waiting for instructions from headquarters.
Deerfield’s Amvets’ auxiliary has
planned its second social event, a box
social and dance, but social affairs

will not be the main

interest of the

women.
.
The auxiliary plans to cooperate
with other groups in helping veterans

and

Membership
and

other

is

growing

representation

is improving

forms

at

slowly,

the

but

of

enter-

steadily
meetings

surely,

it is

reported.

Commander Lewis Thompson states
that the meeting on April 11 has some
important

Post

63 has

matters

to

been

asked

be

discussed.

to study

the

went

on

record

as

manufacturing
for
reservations
as to
factories.

approving

light

Deerfield,
with
the location of

Eugene Finley Is Member
Of Shattuck Relay Team
Eugene Finley ran for the Shattuck
relay team in the relay races held last
Saturday in the
Chicago
stadium.
Three military academies had been
invited to participate in this event—
Culver, St. John’s, and Shattuck. The
Shattuck team “lost by an eyelash”
to Culver.

�:

Thursday, April 10, 1947

Page

5

“Home Ec” Student Prepared to Manage Own Home
200 Girls Practise Homemaking
In New High School Apartment
By T. Louse Anneaux
(Part

IV

of

a

Series)

The prime object of the Home Economics course at Highland Park High
school is to thoroughly familiarize the
student with that highest of all feminine arts, the creating and maintaining of a home for gracious living.
Two

hundred

girls

are

enrolled

in

the
Home
Economics
department,
which occupies the entire second floor
of the Industrial Arts building.
Most outstanding feature and one
that

plays

a

most

important

part

in

the training given each student, is
the newly completed spacious fiveroom apartment.
Equipped with the
latest

in home

furnishings,

ment

includes

a

room,

bedroom,

Through

the

living
and

apart-

dining

and_

bath.

kitchen

care

the

room,

canning of fruits and making jelly.
The student also receives a unit on
nutrition, learns
to plan
balanced
meals and also studies diets for children.
She receives a course in consumer education, how to select fruits,
vegetables,
etc., plans
and prepares
entire meals, serves them, and at the
same time is taught table etiquette.

Home Economics II takes up the
study of clothing. The girl is taught
good grooming
and studies
color,
design and textiles.
She learns how
to thread and operate both electric
and pedal sewing machines.
Pattern
study and the actual making of a
garment is also included in the second
year course.
The
Economics
complete
Home
grocery orders for the entire department, supervise the cook’s duties and
order the groceries for the depart-

maintenance

of this “home,”
the student
learns
to be a homemaker by doing the job

ment.

herself.
In

addition

complete
electric,
nursery

to

kitchen

the

apartment,

units,

one

gas,

HOUSEKEEPER A has charge of
the laundry. In this station she first
learns, then instructs other students

two

one

a laundry, sewing room and
are
modernly
equipped

in,

throughout and given over to the
teaching of the homemaking activity
program.
The
complete
Home
Economics
course, which is the first of its kind
to be offered
schools, was

in Chicago or suburban
instituted in the local

school
this year
and
planned
by
Gladys Cairncross, head of the Home
Economics
department,
and A. E.
Wolters, principal of the school. The
course is planned for seven periods
per week.
The student studies three
days

one

periods.
Home
—covers
includes
ervation

period,

and

two

days

operating

a washing

machine

and

the laundering of all types of materials. She studies the fibers of each.
HOUSEKEEPER B has charge of
all ironing.
She learns to operate an
ironer and also how to iron the different fibers by both hand iron and
ironer.
The station as NURSE and assistant

presents

a

thorough

understand-

ing of the changing of bed linens
while a patient is in bed, how to give
bed baths, how to feed a patient in
bed, the taking of temperatures and
other

two

Economics I—the first year
the study of foods.
This
laboratory procedure, presand storage of food, the
course is planned in “stations” in
which the student rotates throughout
the

semesters.

These include the part of HOSTESS, whose duties include the greeting

of

ment
tours.

guests

and

who

taking

She

takes

visit

them
care

the

in

depart-

inspection

of the

general

running of the apartment and checks
on the different stations.
The HOME
MANAGER and. her
assistant take care of the cleaning
of the apartment, defrost the refrigerator,

dust,

run

the

vacuum

cleaner,

etc. She has a certain day set aside
for each cleaning duty.
The
WAITRESS
and = assistant
learns to set a table for formal and
informal dinners, and buffet and tea

All

Photos

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

Above, Pat Petersen is running a towel through the mangel in
the laundry of the new Domestc Science apartment at the high
school while Elaine Pellegrini holds other articles to be ironed.
Marjorie Hurt is seen laying a plate on the dining room table
in the center picture as Betty Seiffert lights the candles.
;
In the kitchen, top rght, Mary Manasse and Gladys Grant. look
on as Yvonne Charney puts a pan of cookies in the oven to bake.

service. Their. duties also include the
furnishing of a center piece for the
dining room table each week.
The COOK and SUPERVISORY
COOK are over each group of four
to six cooks during the class time.
They make arrangements with the
waitress and together they plan the
serving and setting of the table.
A NURSERY COOK has the responsibility of preparing all foods for
the nursery school which
has an
enrollment of 11 pre-school children.
The DIETITION: and assistant plan
all meals for the nursery, check all

beside

duties.

The NURSERY SCHOOL
station
enables a student to become familiar
with the care of a child between 2%
and 4 years old.
She observes the
behavior of a child for two weeks,
then assists in the actual care of the
little ones, leading the group in songs,
planning the day for them and feeding

them.

When assigned the station of LIBRARIAN or assistant, the student
must keep an account of all foods
for the entire Home Economics department, check all bills and statements for each month.
She keeps a
folder on each student which includes
the teacher’s estimates of the pupil’s
work

and

also

student

reports

on

her

work.
She gives each a rating. The
librarian also keeps recipes used in the

department.

The DESIGNING course at Highland Park- High school, lasts from
four

to

eight

weeks.

The

girls

study

materials, color design and plan and
construct a garment of some kind
made of rayon or silk material.
In
the spring, the department sponsors
a style show and tea, mothers are
invited, and the students model their
completed garments.
HEAD
DESIGNER helps supervise the department

and

demonstrates

the

use

of

sewing machines and other equipment
in the department.
This department
boasts an original plan of locker
space
for each
student’s
working
materials.
The clothing department
(Continued

on

page

36)

�- Sam Campbell, Author,
_ Naturalist-Lecturer
Sam Campbell, the well known author, naturalist, and lecturer is again
Grammar
to the Deerfield
coming
school by the arrangement of the Deerfield PTA. He will show his fascinating and beautiful moving picture “Get-

ting Close to Heaven in Cool Colorado”
on Thursday, April 17, at 2:30 p.m. in
_ the gymnasium.
All of the Deerfield Grammar school
children will be present and students of
Bannockburn, Holy Cross, and Wilmot
schools from ftfth through the eighth
grades are invited to attend. Unfortunately, because of the limited seating
- capacity, the only adults invited are

.

parents

the
school

of

Deerfield

Grammar

children.

There will be no regular PTA business meeting and no admission fee,
since Mr. Campbell is sent to Deerfield.
through the courtesy of the Chicago
and Northwestern railway system.
Mr. Campbell, widely known as the
_ “Philosopher of the Forest,” is now in
his 14th year of lectures for the Northwestern. He has piven more than
5,200 lectures to audiences of more
than 4 million persons.
Considered by many to be America’s
foremost interpreter of nature, he is
the author of numerous books, including “How’s Inky?”; “Too Much Salt
and Pepper’; “Eeny, Meeny, Miney
Mo, and Still Mo”; and “A Tippy
Canoe, and Canada Too.”

__Ex-try!
Ex-try! Read all-1 about
it! ... Yep, ladies and gentlemen,
the Circus is coming to Deerfield!!
Not just an ordinary circus, under- stand, but a smash hit—bang-up affair entirely produced by the Cub
Scouts of Deerfield. Saturday, May
10 is the date while the exact time
and place will be announced later.

Admission will be free but there'll
be very nominal charges for side
shows, refreshments, etc. Any -money
made
under
the big top will go
toward the entertainment
expenses
of the cubs next year, Boy! oh boy!
will this be sumpin! Clowns, freaks,
animal acts, and plenty of surprizes
for all! Mark your calendars now,
ladies and gentlemen . . . Come early to avoid the rush!!

- Last Monday night a whole flock

of

parents

met

at

Paul

Zartler’s

home on Wilmot road to make final
arrangements for the exciting day.
And, golly, it seemed they were* as
thrilled as the kids, but, after all,
who wouldn’t be .. ? Gee! A circus
in Deerfield!!

DEN 1—

Den

News

While
Timothy
Silence is on a
trailer trip thru the south Johnny
Wolter is filling in as reporter. Johnny tells me they have another new
member in No, 1... Phil Schliser
is the boy and he’s a peach of a
fellow.
Bob Hinchsliff left for Washington

ee

KNOW YOUR SCHOOL

Second Grade
Miss

Marjorie

Skogstrom

Second grade is a continuation of
the first grade program in many ways,
one of them reading.
Here
the
children
continue
with the broader
experiences of the
already
familiar
story book characters,

but

ona

steadily advancing
level.
Vocabularies of written
work
_ increase
along with more
fluency and story
retention.
Work
books
and library books supplement the text
books and there is increased use of
the phonetic analysis of words.
In arithmetic the meaning of number combinations in addition
is
stressed. The children begin to learn
to

tell

time,

use

calendars,

and

to

understand how they arrive at answers to problems.
Creative arts are correlated with
the other subjects and aimed at the
development of imagination.
Painting, drawing, and room decorating are
encouraged but not bound to rules
which result in a sameness of each
child’s achievement.
Manuscript writing continues with
more refinement, leading to readiness
for longhand.
Social studies are further developed
by sharing a group of interests with
beginning awareness of the individual’s position in his own
various
groups, such as family, school, town,
state,

country,

etc.

Story writing begins here, also, and
a feeling for music is encouraged.
Music technique is taught in the music
department.

Are On Vacation

Youth Radio Programs

Deerfield Grammar school teachers
are enjoying their spring vacations—
and so are the children.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Hultgren of
Central
avenue
are spending
the
Easter week with Mrs. Hultgren’s
parents, Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Kent in
Streator, Ill. Mrs. Hultgren is the
kindergarten teacher.
Miss
Betty
Webb,
first
grade
teacher, is with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Webb
of ‘“Webb-Wood

Fourteen were present for the
Deerfield Grammar school PTA executive -board meeting Thursday eve-—
ning with Mrs.
Robert
O. Clark,
president, presiding.
In respense to inquiries as to the
method of securing more good radio
programs for children and fewer of

Hill”

dent

or...

well,

leaving he
the presi-

bust!

DEN 2—
Through
an error we announced
last week that the den chief had
nothing to do with the swell Indian
play this gang put on, but Greg Armstrong did have a hand in it...
Sorry, Greg.
Did you know that this crowd is
so popular with Paul Zartler’s mom
that

she

insists

upon

keeping

the

den

meetings at her house permanently!
I think she deserves a big round of
applause for this, gang... and you
boys really rate one, too. If you
didn’t cooperate like true cub scouts
she wouldn’t feel free to do so.
Congratulations, all!
DEN 3—
Melville Steed’s mom reports that
Richard Loarie is just two points
from his silver arrow... Nice going, Richard.
John Robertson and Ronnie Kloepfer figured out a new password for
this tribe, but that’s a secret so don’t
ask questions.
Billy Powell was elected Keeper of

in

Bushnell,

Il,

for

the

week.

Miss Marjorie Skogstrom, second
grade, who commutes to and from
Chicago each day will be with her
parents
Miss

in that city.
Beth
Andrew,

fourth

grade

teacher,
is spending the week
in
Argyle, IIl.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
Frick
will
divide their Easter holiday time between
Mrs. Frick’s parents’ home
in Jefferson, Wis., and at their home
on Rosemary terrace. Mrs. Frick is
fifth grade instructor.
Miss

is

Bertha

in

Croftchik,

Ashley,

vacation

Mich.,

with

her

for

sixth

grade,

the

spring

parents.

‘Flandreau, S. Dak., was the destination of Miss Olivia Clark, seventh
grade,

Fern
L.

to

be

with

Styuske
Paul

her

for the

Brown,

mother,

Mrs.

week.

music

supervisor,

left on April 6 for Indianapolis, Ind.,
where
he is attending a four-day
Music Educators’ National Conference.
Other faculty members are remaining at home in Deerfield. Dewey Deal,
custodian,

will

be

working

in

the

school, building all week, making it
ready for the reopening next Monday.

the Buckskin and
a neat job. Boy!
DEN 4—
Kenneth

is

George’s

he

ever

dad

doing

took

this

entire den on a trip to Portage
last

Saturday.

What

fun

this

Park
bunch

has!
Aa
Last week the fellows had a contest to see who could color the fanciest Easter egg. Randall Vanderbeek won by turning out a beauty.
Richard Pagel was on the sick list,
but

last Thursday and before
announced that he’d see

ges

Deerfield Teachers i |PTA Board Discusses

A series of informative talks by the
teachers of the Deerfield Grammar
school, District 109, very briefly summarized, will be presented in the
Deerfield Review for the next several
months.
These articles, have been
condensed from their talks before the
Deerfield board of education given
earlier in the school year.
This is the third article in the series.
By

ae

we

hope

he was

well

enough

for

the excursion.
P
..Where is Ronald Spahn these
days? The boys miss you, Ronald.
DEN 5—
This bunch of cubs is figuring out
its Own stunts for the circus and are
they ever coming out with some good
ideas!
Tommy
Salyards
is champ
“idea man” so far, but with den chief
Dickie Johnson as an adviser there’s
no telling what next week will produce.
Eddie Patton and John Wachholder expect a couple of fancy badges
at that pack meeting, but I’m wonder-

ing how Mr. Nelson will ever be able
to recognize his cubs. He may find
himself pinning badges on animals or
freaks! Zowie!
Special

Notice

Don’t forget, cubs, tell everyone
about our circus if you want, but
don’t say a word about the acts.
This will be the surprize of the year
so let’s not spoil it. And, remember,
awards will be passed out just after
the entertainment so keep working
on those achievements. This will be
your last chance for badges and arrows until fall.

What’s

that motto again .. ? Oh,
4

3

the

less

decided

parents

desirable

that

ones,

the best

the

advice

board

was

for

to write to the broadcasting

companies, complimenting them on
their better programs.
This positive
approach is advocated as being more
Helpful in securing paid sponsors—
than that of a few complaints against
specific children’s stories which are
less desirable, but easier to sell.
It was also decided that this meeting to make available to the teaching
staff a list of parents who are willing
to drive the children on supervised
field trips when a teacher wishes to
take her group on an _ educational
expedition.
The president announced that there
will be an important state-wide meeting of the Illinois Congress of Parents and Teachers held in Peoria
from April 25 to 27 and she urged
that any interested parents who could
attend, get in touch with her. Reservations must be made not later than
April 15.
Present for these vital discussions
were
Mrs.
Clark, president;
Mrs.
Lewis Hayner, vice president; Mrs.
Edward E. Cazel, secretary; Mrs. A.
F. Sturm,
treasurer; Mrs.
W.
F.
Steed, membership; Mrs. James Collins, hospitality; Mrs. J. W. King,
ways and means; Mrs. Henning Hermanson, legislation; Mrs. Herman
Frank, Mrs. J. B. Carson, and Mrs.
N. C. Lane, room mothers; Mrs. Vernon Giss, spring program; W.
E.
Sheehan, superintendent; Mrs. R. G.
Heupel, publicity.

—

NOTICE
OF SPECIAL
ELECTION
THE
LEGAL
VOTERS
OF
SCHOOL
DISTRICT
NO.
110,
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS:
NOTICE
is hereby
given
that on the
19th day of April, 1947, a special election
will be held in and for School District No.
110, Lake County, Illinois, for the purpose
of submitting to the legal voters of said
School District the following propositions:
1. To authorize the Board of School Directors of the School Directors of District No.
110, Lake
County, Illinois,
to construct an addition to the present grade school building in and for
said School District.
- To authorize the Board of School Directors of the School Directors of District No.
110, Lake County, Illinois,
to
issue
School
Building
Bonds
Of
said
School
Districtto the amount
of $80,000, said
bonds
to be dated
April
1,
1947,
bear interest
at the
rate
of
2%%
per
annum,
payable
December
1, 1948, and semi-annually
thereafter on June
1 and
December
1 of each year, to be numbered from
1 to 80, inclusive, of $1,000 denomination, and to mature
serially $2,000
on December
1, 1948; $5,000 on December 1 of each of the years 1949
through
1955;
$6,000
on
December
1 of each of the years 1956 through
1961;
and
$7,000
on
December
1,
TO

1962.

The polls will be open at twelve o’clock
noon and close at seven o’clock p.m. of
said day.
For the purpose of said special election
the corporate limits of said School District
shall constitute the boundaries of a single
election
precinct
and
the
polling
place
designated for said special election as as
follows:
Wilmot
Deerfield,
Illinois,
School,
in
said School District.
WHEREFORE,
this
Notice
given
by
order
of the Board
of School
Directors
of the
School
Directors
of District No.
110, Lake County, Illinois, is dated this
10th day of April, 1947.
MRS. MARTHA
MARX,
President, Board of School Directors
WARREN
C. DARLING,
Clerk, Board of School Directors.
x
(Apr. 10, 1947.)

yes, “Do Your Best!” You don’t want ©
to forget that—ever!

�Phursday, April 10,
Here’s the Inside Story

Alden

Harris

Photography

MANNED ONLY FOR EMERGENCY CALLS, the switchboards at
the local telephone building looked like this during the first hours of
the strike siege Monday morning. While regular operators picketed
the exchange on the sidewalks outside (see opposite page), emergency
operators and supervisors took over.

Dr. MacCorquodale
Address Kiwanians

Post 145 to Hold
Initiation Tonight

to

“Chemistry in Medicine” will be the
subject of Dr. D. W. MacCorquodale
in a talk before members of the Kiwanis club of Highland Park Monday
evening, April 14, at Sunset Valley
club. Mr. MacCorquodale will be the
guest

of

Louis

McOmber.

Masonic Women

7:30

Wednesday,

p.m.

with

April

worthy

gion

hall

tonight

bers are urged

at 8 o’clock.

Mem-

to attend this meeting

and become acquainted with
Legionnaires.
Refreshments

the new
will be

served during the usual social gathering following the meeting.

Meet

Campbell Chapter,
Order
of the
Eastern Star, will hold their regular
meeting

Highland Park Post No. 145 of the
American Legion will hold an initiation of all new members at the Le-

16,

matrons

at

and

Sunset Terrace Will
Hear Talk on Birds

worthy patrons from other chapters
in charge of the meeting.
Refreshments and a social hour will follow

The Sunset Terrace association will
hear a talk by Paul Downing, whose

the meeting.

at the community center Friday evening, April 18, at 8:30 o’clock.
Mr.
Downing. is to discuss some of the
unusual
migratory
habits of “our

ANNOUNCE

ENGAGEMENT

Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Dinelli of 1302
Clavey road recently announced the
engagement

Louise,

to

of

and

Mr.

of

their

Paul
Mrs.

daughter,

Parker
Paul

is bird

feathered

banding,

at

its meeting

friends.”

Mary

Haines,
K.

hobby

Haines

son

1805

Pleasant

of

been

set for

avenue.

the

No

date

has

wedding.
7

You Are Invited to Study
The Bible and the

Christian Science Textbook
Thousands are finding health and peace far
beyond their expectation.
You may investigate
Christian Science at no cost to yourself. The

BIBLE, the CHRISTIAN SCIENCE textbook and periodicals containing testimonies of
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�Page

8

Hear

Thursday,

Ye!

Hear Ye!

Presbyterian Women

Bannockburn Club
Wins Two Prizes at
“Fashions in Flowers”

Old Time Box Social
And Dance; April 12

The Amvets’ auxiliary will hold an
Bannockburn Garden club entered
old fashioned box social and dance in three exhibits in “Fashions in Flowthe Deerfield Grammar school gymna- ers,” the annual flower show of the
sium on Saturday, April 12, at 8 p.m., Garden Club of. Illinois at Marshall
the second social event planned by this Field’s March 24 to April 5, and received two prizes.
group of active women.
A blue ribbon, first prize, was reThe Old Time Pteasure club of
for their
Outside
Window
Morton Grove will furnish the music ceived
for ballroom and old-time dancing, Planting exhibit, containing camellias,
with Noble Finnell of Crystal Lake, azaleas, and an unusual vine proformerly
of
Deerfield,
calling
the nounced “hoya.” For their flower arrangement
—
dramatic,
in uniform
square dances.
containers, they received third prize,
“Because many of the younger gena gold ribbon.
The
square
crystal
eration are not familiar with box soglass containers, one large and one
cials, samples of gavly decorated boxes
small, of the same square design, conare on display in many of the local tained yellow calla lilies and purple
store

windows”,

Mrs.

Eric

Banfield,

anemone,

publicity.
chairman,
reports.
“Girls
should fill the pretty boxes with lunch
for two, and place their names inside
the box, so that the man who bids the
highest, will know with whom he is
to share the delicious repast.” Coffee
will be served by the auxiliary.
The public is invited.

The Amvets

auxiliary will

meeting

on Thursday,

April 17, at 8 p.m. in the Deerfield
Grammar school.
Mrs. Carl Scheer, an untiring
worker for the men in service during
the war, will bring with her to the
meeting a “Gray Lady” of the American Red Cross.
Both will tell of the
Opportunities open to this group of
women to help in the post-war period.
Mrs.

Scheer,

a resident

of Deérfield,

is also active in Legion auxiliary circles, and will tell of the women’s work
at North Chicago hospital.

Wilmot Mothers’ Club ‘
Plans for Party, May 6
The Wilmot Mothers’ club will give
a dessert-luncheon bridge party
on
Tuesday, May 6, at the school. Mrs.
Harry L. Thomson, the president, has
appointed the following chairmen. for
her committees:
Tickets,

Mrs.

Harry

Williams,

Mrs.

Fred

Baarsch.

Refreshments,
Mrs.
G.
E.
Holmquist,
Mrs. W. C. Darling, Mrs. Arthur Wolter,
and Mrs. John Silence.
Tables, Mrs. Baarsch, Mrs. Robert Alexander.

Cards, Mrs. Kenneth Hall.
Table prizes and decorations, Mrs. Lloyd
Rudolph, Mrs. John Kinzie.
Door prizes, Mrs. H. L. Thomson.

Initial

arrangements

for

this

lunch-

eon were made Thursday evening at
the home of Mrs. Thomson on Saunders

arranged

Visit

Elmhurst

People

their

arrangement

in

Elects New Officers
|»

to be served

here

since remodeling began last October.
Mrs. Charles Johns, chairman, and
members of Circle 1 will serve the
luncheon, Reservations for the luncheon may be made with any of the
Mrs.
circle chairmen: Mrs. Johns;
Frank Glotfelty, Circle 2; Mrs. E. M.
L. De
Davis, Circle 3; Mrs. W.
Freitas, Circle 4; or Mrs. Winston
Porter, Circle 5.
Mrs. Walter Lige, newly elected
president, will preside. Retiring presiThe
dent is Mrs. E. W. Lademann.
devotional part of the program js
being

arranged

by

Mrs.

Frank

Glot-

felty and members of Circle 2.
Mrs. Chester Wolf, program chairman, will introduce the guest speaker,
the Rev. William O. McGill, minister
of the

Marlboro

Presbyterian

Deerfield Activities
Back from a vacation-trip in New
Orleans, Frank Hempstead of Waukegan road, finds the weather here
quite different from Louisiana.
Mrs. J. C. Fuller of Meadowbrook
lane is visiting at the Charles Lehman

home

Mrs

home at Hialeah, Fla., and with friends

Harry L. Thomson, to formulate plans
for the year’s work.
It is centennial

at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., also.
Mrs.
Fuller is Mrs. F. W. Nolde’s mother.

year

for

the

new

Wilmot

president,

Grammar

school,

founded in 1847.
Officers are: Mrs. H. L. Thomson,
president; Mrs. Fred Baarsch, vice
president;

Mrs.

Arthur

Wolter,

re-

A guest this past week at the Walter Lige home on Forest avenue was
Pfc. Richard
stationed
at

Brown
Lowry

of Butler, Ind.,
Field,
Denver,

cording secretary; Mrs. Eldon Holmquist, corresponding secretary; Mrs.

Colo.

Harry

Thomas
Shelven of Des Plaines,
Ill., spent Monday with Robert Pettis
Jr. of Chestnut street.
Tom is haying his vacation from Maine Township High school.
The Shelvens are
former Deerfield residents.

Williams,

treasurer;

and

Mrs.

John Silence, publicity. “Mrs. Robert
Newell is the retiring president.
The cover of next week’s Review
will picture the Wilmot Mothers’ club
officers, past and present.

Mie Engaged ss

Wd

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Behrens of
River Woods road announce the engagement
of their daughter, Miss
Mary
C.
Behrens,
to William
S.
Amendt,

son

of

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Wil-

liam Amendt of Cary, Ill, formerly
of Deerfield. The wedding will take
place on May 31.
Miss

Behrens,

an

alumna

o

fthe

Highland
Park
High
school, was
graduated
from
West
Suburban
School of Nursing at Oak Park and
is now at Hines hospital. Her fiance
was
graduated
from
Loras
High
school in Dubuque, Ia., and served
in the army for 21 months overseds
in the European theater of war.
Home

From

College

For Vacation

church,

Chicago, who will speak of “Co-operative Christianity.”

The Wilmot Mothers’ club held its
annual election of officers last Tuesday at the school.
The executive
board met Thursday evening in the
of

eed

Miss

Constance

Koebelin,

senior

court.

RUMMAGE

SALE

Presbyterian women are planning a
rummage sale in the basement of the
newly remodeled church parlors on
Wednesday, Thursday,
and Friday,
April 23, 24, and 25.
Mrs. Albert
Arentz

is

chairman

of

arrangements

and will be assisted by circle chairmen
and members.

English

Bride-to-Be

Arrives Here By Plane
Miss Margaret Harris came in by
plane from England to Washington,
D. C., and by plane to Chicago last
Saturday, arriving a day ahead of
schedule. Her marriage to Dale Berning

place

of

Osterman

Saturday

at

avenue,

St.

will

take

Paul’s church.

Amvets Auxiliary Awards
Prizes for Best Posters
Announcing Box Social
Children of the seventh and eighth
grades of the local schools were invited to participate in the making of
posters for the coming event,—the
Amvets’ auxiliary box social and old
fashioned dancing party at the Deerfield Grammar
school on Saturday,
April 12.
Winners were Sue
Jacob,
first;
Charles

Russell,

second;

Margaret

workshop

for

theatricals,

and will have refreshments.
Rev.
Leinberger is an alumnus of Elmhurst
college. .

Woman’s Club Spring Luncheon
Will Conclude Year’s Events
The annual spring luncheon
and
election of officers of the Deerfield
Woman’s club will be held Tuesday,
April 22. Time and place will be announced

next

Turkey

Dinner

week.

Women of St. Paul’s church served
a turkey dinner on Tuesday evening
for a meeting of the executives of the
North Shore Area Boy Scout council,
in

the

church’ parlors.

Alden

Harris

Photography

ST. PAUL’S CONFIRMATION CLASS
St. Paul’s twelve young people, who were confirmed on Palm
Sunday are left to right:
First row—Arliss Johnson, Nancy Antes,
Barbara Kapschull, Jean Ullman, and Janet Antes.
Second
row—
Robert Daniels, Norman Peterson, Harold Visoky, Henry Tuttle, and
Robert Adamson.
‘Third row—James Reagan, Rev. Hugo Leinberger
and

Donald

Grabo.

at

Eastman school of music, College of
Rochester, N. Y., was home for the
Easter holidays with her mother, Mrs.
Edwin
Koebelin
and
her
grandmother, Mrs. Jacob Ott of Sunset

College

About 25 young people of high
school age from St. Paul’s church,
with their pastor, Rev. Hugo Leinberger, are planning to attend a performance of “The Royal Family” to
be given Friday evening, April 25, by
the Elmhurst College Theater group
at Elmhurst.
After the show, they will be invited back stage to meet the group,
to see

the dramatic

uniform glass containers; Mrs. A. G.
Wegner and Mrs. E. L. Gage, the
Wash of the Sea; and Mrs. R. N.
Gauger, the window planting.

first luncheon

ips

1947

Wiltam S. Amende

The Deerfield Presbyterian Woman’s association will hold its luncheon
meeting on Thursday, April 17, in the
newly remodeled church parlors.
It
is the

Pi

10,

Stein, third; Donald Peterson, fourth;
and Lucinda Thompson, fifth.
Today’s cover of the Review shows the
prize winning poster of Sue Jacob.

road.

St. Paul’s Young
To

leaves.

Wilmot Mothers’ Club

Woman’s

its regular

calla

Their third exhibit was a still life
picture, featuring Wash of the Sea,
with plant material.
Mrs. W. L. Keady is president of
the club. Mrs. A. J. McMaster, Mrs.
W. W. Sims, and Mrs. E. L. Hall

Mrs. Carl Scheer to
Be Guest Speaker at
Amvets’ Auxiliary
hold

and

Mary

To Hold Luncheon in
Remodeled Basement

April

�A Blindfolded Driver and No

Mrs. Ma venta Davies,
80, Dies at Hospital

Gas in the Tank: What a Ride!
The rains came, but even the rain
stopped and held its breath when
Harlan Tarbell, who will give a oneman show of magic at the auditorium
of Highland Park High school under

Services April 13

auspices

First
field

of

the

Kiwanis

club

tomor-

row night, took Highland Park by
storm Saturday morning in a reasondefying
demonstration
of “miracle
vision”.
Unaided by man but undoubtedly

aided

Sydney

by

God,

Mr.

Graham’s

car

Tarbell

drove

through

un-

familiar local streets on an extensive
tour of the city. He was completely
blindfolded! The heavy black blindfold,
on

which
the

can

be

opposite

seen

page,

the
community
center
drive by the passengers
Chief

of

Police

Rex

in

was

pictures
tested

before
in the

Andrews,

at

the
car,

Free

Yet Tarbell then
fold, went out to
of
children
and

Tickets
donned the blindthe large throng
adults
who
had

gathered to watch the unique demonstration, ahd easily “read” numbers
held out to him by eager children
who received free tickets to his performance for their trouble.
Although the magician has driven
blindfolded through
Chicago’s
loop
and other crowded centers, Highland
Park
offered mental
hazards that
gave

him

some

trouble,

for

land

will

be

held

April

13

in

Presbyterian Church
of Deerfor Harold E. Huhn, 32, who

died March 27 in Tucson, Ariz., following a long illness. Interment will
follow

in

Northfield,
Mr.

Huhn

Union

cemetery,

North

Il.
was

employed

by

Haw-

thorne-Mellody dairy and Bowman
dairy before going to Tucson. He was
born

in

Deerfield

and

was

Park

hospital

following

a brief

illness.

graduated

from Deerfield grammar school and
Highland Park High school.
Survivors include his wife, Frances
nee Jenkins, a daughter, Priscilla, two
sons, Donald and Richard, his father,

She was ict in Chicago, April 26,
1867, and had been a Highland Park
resident for 49 years. At the time of
her death she was making her home

Dice

nce

335 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
Phone 4579

with her daughter, Mrs. Robert W.
Pease, 934 North St. Johns avenue.

Besides Mrs. Pease she is survived
by two other daughters, Mrs. Jesse
Ham
of Highland Park and
Mrs.
Norman Appleton, Lake Bluff, and
three grandchildren.
Services were held yesterday at the
Kelley chapel in’ charge of the Rev.
Louis W. Sherwin. Burial was in the
North Shore Garden of Memories.
John Huhn
er,

Andrew,

William Penn 5th. ........ $3.39
IMPERIAL 5th ............ $3.39
50 GRAND 5th ............ $3.39
Calvert Reserve
SURE esos $3.89
Fleischmann’s
Preferred

of Deerfield, and a brothof

Sth fdas $3.78

Racine.

boys

on

LORD CALVERT

ACCIDENT
Midnight, March

Sth tad

REPORT
Mar. 30—Apr.
0
0
0

6, 1946

hurt

one

of

them,

yes.

Mr.

Tarbell

also

drove

$3.90
PRIVILEGE

Blend

of

Straight

Whiskies

DR eo ccndiornears
enone $442
FOUR . ROSES 5th ............ $4.25
HUNTER’S 5th ................ $4.23

Contributed weekly by the
Highland Park Police Department

Seagram's 7 Crown 5th $3.94

OLD UNDEROOF
Sth ie oe a. $4.09
HILL

of Wholesome, Nourishing

&amp;

HILL

«nace neneoge $4.09

RED HEART DOG FOOD 39°

—

Sunnybrook
sesostenteeseene $4.09

BLACK GOLD

BR

the strain of this unforeseen handicap
left him a tired magician at the end
of the drive.
Oh,

Reserve

Ur

Total 1947
66
9
re

and

os

cae,

$4.09

FINE ART
Blend

of Straight
Whiskies
proof, Sth $4.46

90

the

car without gas! Before the parade
was well under way, the gauge flatly said “Empty”, yet the drive proceeded as planned, gasoline or no

$4.52

Schenley

29, to Midnight, April 5

Mar. 29—Apr. 5, 1947
Non-Injury Accidents
2
Injury Accidents
0
Fatal Accidents
0

bicycles persistently wove back’ and
forth in front of the car; he told
passengers he feared he might inadvertently

FRIENDLY ». SERVICE

Presi-

dent Harold Finch of the Kiwanis
club, Mrs. Lester Olson of The Highland Park Press and June Jackman
of this newspaper. All declared they
could not see through it.
Gives

Mrs.
Margaret
M.
Davies,
80,
widow of the late Rowland W. Davies, died Monday morning at High-

For Harold Huhn
Services

|

Guess What ['m Thinking?

OLD GRAND
Bonded,

ok

Bonded,

gasoline.

Eee

$425

....................

$675

OLD TAYLOR
5th

FLEISCHMANN’S

Bend:

bie

$635

2.255.

TAYLO R’S

APRIL BIRTHSTONE
DIAMOND

New

York

State

PETRI
California

Gti aes.
CHRISTIAN
California

BUR:
F.

hein
|.

Wine

$0.68

BROS.

Wine

eas . $1.75

Port, Sherry,
Muscatel
;

Ye gal. ............ $2.39
Special Values in Diamonds
Price Comparison Invited
¥%

Carats set in 14 and 18-k
hand made ring, $285.00. ReRE
WO cohen sinricien cies $215.00
$200.00 rings reduced to $148.00
$125.00 rings reduced to $85.00

Of course there’s a gleam in her eye! She's thinking
of her summer wardrobe and how soon it will be
she’ll be wearing her summer things. Be smart too,
send your summer garments to Reliable today.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.

CREDIT TERMS

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Jewelers &amp; Opticians
Across from the Bank
Same location 35 years
Tel. Highland Park 630

618

N. Green

Bay Rd.
Highland Park

Ae

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Case:

BRAU

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0

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PASEO

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ies ee i ee

BLUE

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$370

ss

RIBBON

3.75.55

Phone 4579
FREE DELIVERY

$360

�High School District in Need
Of Money to Retain Teachers
Voters Asked to Approve Tax
Rate Adjustment Saturday
The
Deerfield-Shields
Township
High School district has reached the
limit of its taxing power. It must
have

more

money

in

order

to

retain

its teachers. It is believed that the
method chosen
to accomplish this
end is the best one for the situation,
under the law as it now exists.’
Up to the present time, property
has been assessed one-fifth of its
full value and the tax rate limitation
for

educational

$1.50
the

Make time your slave!
Disregard the time of day!
Wh
f it’s mid-morning or
late night, you can still get
exciting pictures with Ansco
Superpan Press film.
The extreme speed of Superan Press even makes it easy
or you to shoot scenes indoors, at night, or any time.
Stop in today. You'll find a
roll to fit your camera—and a
prompt, courteous finishin
service waiting to develop ‘td
print your exposed film.

COMMUNITY
6 North Sheridan

CAMERA
Road

on

the

Butler

purposes

one-fifth
bills,

has

been

this

value.
rate

Under

is

cut

in

half but property is being taxed on
its full 100 per cent value. As the
one-half, that is, 75 cents tax rate
limit, is more than the high school
needs, they are asking for only a 50
cent tax rate limit. It is believed this
will be sufficient for some years to
come. This is the top limit the public
is being

asked. to

not

asked

be

limitations

approve.

for,

of

the

Less

because
Butler

can-

of
bill.

the
The

board wishes to emphasize that the
acutal tax rate passed on to the taxpayers will not be as much as 50
cents. It will be determined by the

EXCHANGE
Highland

JOHN
RUGS

Park 206

*

-

FURNITURE

LIFE-TIME
717

MORAN

Glencoe

-

CARPETING

MOTHPROOFING
Tel.

H.

is

exclusive

P.

1137

Round Steak
Club Steak
Porterhouse Steak
Pot Roast
Rib Roast of Beef
Ground Beef

Deerfield and Green Bay Roaas
Highland Park 2uz
Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison,
Pastor

Rt.

Rev.

Rev.

Rev.

Edmund

John

J.

Skoner,

P. O’Connell,

M.A.,

M.A.,

S.T.u.

S.T.D.

MASSES:
Sundays—6
:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00
and 12 noon.
Weekdays—6 :30 - 8:15.
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays
eves. of First Fridays ane
Holy Days
4:00 and 7:30 p.m

administrative

and

to

continue

to

operate

Head

of

Lake

Forest,

the

grammar

schools in Highwood, Bannoekburn
and Deerfield, and in the auditorium
foyer of Highland Park High school.
See advertisement in this issue for
names
of
organizations
endorsing
this

much

needed

proposition.

N.S. Vassar Club to Meet
The North Shore Vassar club will
meet on Tuesday, April 15, at 2 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Alonzo: Davis,
1031
Michigan
avenue,
Evanston.
Mrs. Keith Preston will talk on “Current Topics in Education.”

CLEANERS
CARPETING CLEANED
bell]
® Rugs
@ Carpets
@

Lettuce

GREAT-NORTHERN
GROCERY &amp; MARKET

375

ROGER WILLIAMS AVE., RAVINIA
Highland Park 6585

on

cash basis.
The polls will be open from 12
o'clock
noon
to 7 p.m. Saturday,
April 12. They are located in the
village hall of Lake Bluff, the city

RETTIG BROS.
FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES
Extra Fancy Strawberries
Large Florida Oranges
Washed Spinach
California Carrots
Green Asparagus

posi-

a

hall

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

of

tions.
Both elementary school districts in
Highland Park have voted the maximum tax rate allowed by law. The
public has
been made
more than
aware of the need through the press
of the country. This is your opportunity to act for the high school.
Approval of this measure will permit
the high school to retain an efficient
staff

CLEANED

Ave.

actual amount
of
r
budget
for
each year.
Members of your board of education always have been conscientious
of their responsibility in the handling
of public funds. They regard it as
their obligation to see that the funds
are used judiciously to provide the
best education possible for the children of the district.
Teaching is regarded as a profession, engaged in by those who are
motivated by a love of their work,
raising it above a job level. Outstanding ability among teachers must be
recognized. The salary schedule must
at least meet the schedules of high
schools in comparable suburbs in this
area.
The
board
recognizes
that
teachers have been underpaid and
wishes to rectify that discrepancy.
At present the minimum salary is
$2,400 and the average $3,675. This

Furniture

MOTHPROOFING
“The

Time to Buy
Is Before They Fly”

P. 676

�"Deerfield

Hall, Wall!

‘THE JUKE BOX
961

i

HOLY

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
Rev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.
Sunday Masses: 7, 8:30, 10, 11:30.
Daily Masses: 6 :30 and 8 15 a.m.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Confessions.
FRIDAY,
April 25—
8 p.m. Card party at parish hall.

:
,

Mr. and Mrs.
Morgan
place,
parents

of

Joseph Rafferty,
Highwood,
are

a daughter

born at.

son

was

born

Anthony

McGuire,

Highland

Park

to

Mr.

and

549 Elm

hospital

on

SUNDAES
SODAS

Mrs.

place,

Ave.,

Highland

Park

NOW OPEN

High-

land Park hospital on Friday, April 4.
A

Waukegan

211
the

i

SANDWICHES
PIES

a

at

—

Phone 1508

Saturday,

April 5.

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
f-sntte Boelter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace
SUNDAY,
April 13—
‘
9:45
a.m.
Church
school.
There
are
classes for all age groups.
10:55 a.m. Morning worship.
The pastor speaks on the theme: “The Walk to
Emmaus.”
Mrs. Harold Schmidt,
sololist
of
First
Evangelical
United
Brethren
_ church of Naperville will sing.
TUESDAY, April 15—
The Mothers’ club meet at the home of
Mrs. Howard
Stryker.
The theme:
“The
Child at Kindergarten”
will be discussed
by Mrs. L. W. Hultgren.
Mrs. Helmuth
Fiepenbrok
is
in
charge
of
the
devotionals.
WEDNESDAY, April 16—
8 p.m. The choir will meet.
THURSDAY,
April 17—
a
6:45 p.m. The Bethlehem Bowling league.

Mr, and Mrs. Peter Fabbri, 504
North Central avenue, Highwood, are
the parents of a daughter born at
Highland Park hospital on Saturday,
April 6.

and

A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
I. Frank Jacks, 840 Taylor avenue,
at Highland Park hospital on Sunday,
April 6.

RUGS

Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Haas, 2116
Grove road, are the parents of a son
born at Highland Park hospital on
Monday, April 7.

Cleaned By
FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek, Minister
Manse:
1024
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
SUNDAY,
April 13—
9:30 a.m. Church school.
11 a.m. Sunday
Kindergarten
for children
ages 3-5.
1 a.m. Morning worship.
7 p.m. Tuxis society.
MONDAY,
April 14—
Boy and Girl Scouts are scheduled.
WEDNESDAY, April 16—
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY, April 17—
1 p.m.
Woman’s
Association
luncheon
meeting.

ST.

tisms of:
Edith Ann Pasley,
daughter of Mr. and
of

Somerset

THURSDAY,

10:30

Mrs.

acm.

Arthur

April

Sewing

17—

circle

Johnson,

at

hostess.

the

was

Mrs.

born September 24,
and Mrs. Lyle Root
Sponsor was Miss
of Mrs. Root.

DUFFY &amp; DUFFY|
CLEANERS
HIGHLAND PARK

AUCTION
‘THURSDAY and FRIDAY
April 10th and 11th

LIQUOR

Household Goods, Art Goods,
General

Merchandise

(Come
be

North

First

CANADIAN
oth

CLUB

$555

CHAPIN
5 yr. old

Straight

&amp; GORE
Kentucky

Bourbon

Sth $495

St.

and
go
anytime
sure to come.)

\ ALUES!

ie

THE DEALERS
OF HIGHLAND PARK
32-34

“WINNETKA

MONEY- SAVING

From 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
7 p.m. to Midnight

church.

SATURDAY, April 19—
8 p.m. Golden Band meets at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. David Lundquist.
WEDNESDAY, April 23—
1:15 p.m. Circle 2 at home of Mrs. Floyd
Bock in Highland Park.
SATURDAY, April 26—
8 p.m. Fellowship club at home of. Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Brandwein,
with Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Bock as assisting hosts.
Membership |
Twelve adult members were received in
the church on Easter.
Baptisms
Rev. Leinberger
officiated at the bap-

Sponsor

Public

EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH
638 Waukegan Road
Phone
Deerfield
858
Rev. Hugo Leinberger,
Pastor

FRIDAY, April 11—
1:30 p.m. Sodality at the home of Mrs.
Martin Murphy, Highland Park, Il.
SUNDAY,
April 13—
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
7:30 p.m. Junior Youth Fellowship.
MONDAY,
April
14—
8 p.m. Sunday
School Teachers’
meeting at the home
of Miss
Helene
Meyer,
_ Hazel avenue.

May
11, 1944,
Forrest Pasley

Ate

PAUL’S

{

avenue.

Nancy O’Neill.
Nancy Jeanne Root,
1946, daughter of Mr.
of Greenwood avenue.
Frances Bevins, sister

born
Mrs.

CINZANO
but

FRENCH

VERMOUTH

French Import 3402

Bottle

$2.98

OLD SMUGGLER SCOTCH ........... Sth See
HEUBLEIN’S DAIQUIRI COCKTAILS
Sth $3.50
PETRI SWEET WINES
Taga Sth 98¢

~.

ot

HOW

ARE YOUR

SCREENS?

Closed
Phone

.

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combin-

i
’

_
ie

Or

ation screen and storm sash.
eS
.
e

z%

CALL

FOR

ESTIMATE
WHISKEY~A BLEND J

H. N. GAMLIN
|

A fine general
service whiskey
both light and
full flavored.

if you prefer we will rewire your present
screens with bronze or galvanized wire.

ae

poi

Saturday Afternoon for Election.
Open in the Evening.
Orders (Strike Permitting) Accepted

150 S. First St.

F. H. A.

.

Terms

Deerfield 416

H. P. 5102

LIQUOR

86.8 Proof
60% Grain Neutral
Spirits

5th $399

SERVICE

337 WAUKEGAN

COMPANY

AVE. — HIGHWOOD

Phone HIGHLAND PARK 1500

—

�ies _pohnston
i: Th

BK

At
her

Barbara

sister,

:

Sp Leia iioed:

Thinity,

Miss

Vous

Mrs.

April
Bowes
Charles

yas,

has

chosen

M.

Dering

Jr., to be matron of honor at her
wedding on Friday, April 25, when
she will become

the bride

of S. Park-

er Johnston Jr. at 4:30 p.m. in Highland Park Trinity Episcopal church.
As bridesmaids
Miss Bowes will
have Miss Margaret Johnston, sister
of the bridegroom, Mrs. Jerome P.
Bowes III of Glenview, sister-in-law
of the bride, Miss Elizabeth Bard
Farrington of Winnetka and Miss
Betty-Leigh Nesbit of Lynchburgh,
-Va., cousins of the bride, Mrs. Kent
Blatchford of Northbrook and Miss
Elizabeth Mahan of La Grange. The
bride’s young sister, Courtney Curtis Bowes, will be junior bridesmaid.
John Dingle of Highland Park will
serve as best man and ushers will
‘include
the
bridegroom’s
brother,
Robert; the bride’s brother, James
-P. Bowes III; John Quincy Adams
Jr., of Lake Forest, cousin of the
ek
bridegroom;
Frederick
Asher, Arthur Emerson Jr. and John Mercer.
Many parties are being held in
- honor of the young couple. The bride
is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerome P. Bowes Jr. of Highland
Park and the bridegroom is the son

Pit

of the S. P. Johnstons

~ fand Park.

also of High-

Engagement of Miss Walton to
George Bichler Is Announced
Mr.

and

Mrs.

‘Milwaukee,
Wis.,
-gagement of their

James

Walton

of

announce the endaughter, Mary, to

George
Clark Bichler, son of the
Gustav Bichlers of Highland Park.
Miss Walton
and
her fiance
are
studying
at
De
Pauw _ university,
_ Greencastle,
Ind.,
where
she
is a
member of Kappa Alpha Theta and
he
a Delta
Upsilon.
Mr.
Bichler
served with the army overseas during the recent war. No date has been
set for the wedding.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Wennberg of
Highland Park announce the engagement of their daughter,
Sallie, to
Richard W. Anderson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Victor R. Anderson of Chicago.
Mr. Anderson served three and onehalf years as a petty officer in the
_ Naval Air corps during the recent war.
' Both Miss Wennberg and Mr. Anderson are attending the Chicago Academy
of Fine Arts.

e

Miss Knox and Classmate
Spend Spring Vacation Here
Miss Bunny Knox daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward M. Knox of 2296.
Lakeside
place
and Miss
Eleanor
Maroney of Rutherford, N J., arrived in Highland Park last Thursday on spring vacation from Western
- college, Oxford, Ohio, where they are
classmates.

Coasiford Rily Vous

Mare Treasures Are Added to
Collection for Antique Show
The Collectors’ Study group is working hard to complete al! arrangements
for the antique show it is sponsoring
at the Highland Park Woman’s club
on Tuesday and Wednesday, April 15
and 16. Hours are planned from 11
am. to 10 p.m. so that husbands as
well as wives may enjoy the show.
There will be exhibits to interest
every taste, including fine glass, china
in variety, prints, pewter, copper and
silver,
dolls,
furniture,
hand
made
wooden
items, _ trivets,
silhouettes,
lamps, samplers, painted tin, stoneware,
Cte;

A. long list of exhibitors with their
contributions appeared in The News
last week. Since that time the following have been added:
Mrs.

Kent

Wonnell

.......... Majolica

pitchers.
: Mrs.

LR,

McClure

Staffordshire

figurines,
Mrs. Wm. D. Sawler.. ..Liverpool jugs
Mrs. Arthur Ropiequet
Heirloom
silver,

Mrs.

Ernest

“Ear”

Sundell

... . Staffordshire

vases.

Clocks by various famous makers will
be shown by Mesdames Charles G.
Mason,
George
Crittenton,
Mason
Smith and T. L. Osborn.
The public is cordialy invited to attend. A small fee will be charged to
cover expenses.
The Collectors’ Study group wishes
to make

jt clear

that

this is an

exhibit,

not a sale—an exhibit such as the public is rarely permitted to view. All

Exchanged

‘Information, Please
At Ravinia Garder
Club Is Tomorrow
A garden

“Information,

4i

Please” is

the fun in store for members of the
Ravinia Garden club when they meet
on Friday, April 11, at the home o*
Mrs.

Roy

Mrs.

Nereim,

Leroy

247 Central

Harza,

as

avenue.

moderator,

has arranged an interesting panel of
experts, namely: Mrs. Fred H. Clutton who is an accredited judge, as
well as a member, of the American
Iris Society, and who grows and
hybridizes

her own

iris; Mrs. Edelbert

Leonard who has successfully made
new and improved old gardens in our
soil for 20 years; and Mrs. Clara
Weinberg, a well known
landscape
architect,

who

has

done

many

beauti-

ful and outstanding gardens on the
North Shore.
Members are asked to bring two
written questions as an entrance fee,
and with these as a basis for discussion, the program is expected to provide
an
instructive
and_ practical
afternoon for all.
After the meeting tea will be served
with Mrs. Judson Cross, Mrs. Robert
Glasgow, Mrs. C. W. Haupt, and Mrs.
Frank Straight assisting the hostess.

Kappa Delta Mothers to Hold
_ Annual Dessert Bridge Thursday

such
real and rare ocseasion when
treasurers are collected under one roof.
It is hoped that all who appreciate
beautiful things wil! take advantage of

The Kappa Delta Mother’s club of
Northwestern university will hold its
annual
dessert
bridge
Thursday,
April 17, at 1:30 p.m. in the chapter
house. Proceeds are to be used to
increase the scholarship fund,
and
for entertainment of the June graduates. Mrs. A. S. Jorgensen of Chi-

this opportunity.

cago

items
loaned

private
from
your pleasure,

are
for

collections,
and it is a

is

chairman

of

Miss Katherine ~.awford and Sam
uel Rady of Gibson City, Ill, wer
married Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in th
Highland Park Presbyterian church
the Rev. Lewis W. Sherwin
offi
clating.
Following a short wedding trip tq
Florida, the couple will return te
Highland Park where Mrs. Rady wil
continue teaching at Ravinia school.

Woman’s

Members of the social service committee of the Highland Park Woman’s club visited Ridge Farm Wednes
day

of last

Theta Alumnae Hear
Talk on Holland

Mrs.

her

Dr. Johanna Hudig, a native of Holland, was guest speaker at the meeting
of the Evanston-North Shore ‘Alutibiap
of Kappa Alpha Theta, Friday, April
of Mrs.

Frank

Suttle of

Wilmette, retiring president of the organization.
Members of the Theta Alumnae have
been busy preparing boxes of clothing
for the children of Rotterdam to be
shipped from Chicago on May 1. In
her

talk,

Dr.

Hudig

stressed

the

need

for warm underclothing because of the
damp
piercing
climate of Holland.
Shoes are also needed she said and
suggested

that

everyone

contributing

clothing might tuck in a few spools of
thread which is not available in Holland

at

the

present

time.

Members in charge of the project
request that anyone having clothing
they would like to have aboard the
ship sailing on the above date, send it
to Mrs. Tusten Ackerman, 3005 Har-

zell

avenue,

Evanston,

Mrs.

H.

A.

Visit with

Judson

Wells

of

J.

son,

A.

Judson

Wells

the

late

afternoon by the girl Scouts as
of their hostess badge work.

tories.

Tea

part

Honor

Jr., and

his

Roll

Thomas
McEwen,
a _ sophomore
student at Lake Forest college, appears on the lower honor roll for the
first semester of the 1946-47 year with
a 2.00 average.

He

is the

and Mrs. Thomas
Naida terrace.
At Arrowhead

son

McEwen

Hot

of

Mr.

of

448

Springs

Paul B. Zeisler Jr., who is a student
at Stanford university, spent a recent
weekend

with

his

parents,

the

senior

Mr. and Mrs. Zeisler of 1239 South
Sheridan road, at Arrowheard Hot
Spring, Cal.
Fischer, 104 Garrison
or Mrs. John Kuiper,
road, Highland Park,
April meeting of the

was

No Guests

served

in

Invited to Novel

Party Saturday at Sunset Ridge
A novel “All Member
Party” ig
planned at Sunset
Ridge Countr
club Saturday night, starting off with
a steak dinner and continuing wit
games and dancing. No guests wil
be invited and members unable ta
attend are requested by Chairma
F. C. Strodel of Winnetka to send
in either,a written excuse or a picture
of themselves for a rogues’ galler
panel to be hung in the lounge.
Among
the large committee who
will be serving as hosts and hostesses
will be Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Johuaes
of

Highland

Park.
tis

ANNOUNCE

ENGAGEMENT

“%

The engagement of Miss Elizabeth
Loeb to Joseph E. Nathan, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Nathan of Chihas

been

announced

Mr./’and

Mrs.

by

Ernest

he
G

Bob and Dick Warner Home
From Hobart for Vacation

Bob and Dick Warner, sons of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond C. Warner, 735
South Sheridan road, flew home from
Hobart

on

mend

Highland

family for two weeks.
Judson is a
research supervisor with the Du Pont
company.
Appears

to sew, make,

Loeb of 621 Waverly road. The young
couple will be married June 28.

Son

Park returned last Thursday from
Wilmington, Del., where she visited »

At April 4 Meeting

4, at the home

From

week

and mark clothes and items for thd
children and for the different dormi

parents,
Returns

Club Social Service

Group Sews at Ridge Farm

cago,

arrangements.

Sunday

avenue, Wilmette,
251 Lambert Tree
or bring it to the
organization.

college,

Geneva,

N.

Y.,

to

spend their Easter vacation.
Dick
recently was initiated into Sigma Phil
fraternity.
Bob, a Phi Kappa Psi,
enjoys house privileges at the Sigma
Phi house in Geneva.
Franklyn Chaffees Return
From Florida Vacation
Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn W. Chaffee
of 437 Egandale road returned to
Highland Park Saturday evening fol
lowing a long planned trip to Florida,
in time to be on hand for the city
election Tuesday.
Goes

to

Switzerland

John M. Montgomery of 265 Prospeat istreet sailed yesterday’ from
New York City on the Queen Eliza-

beth

for

a 5-week

Switzerland.
gn

business

trip to
:

�us

Our Weekly Story of

RIGID FRE

Report for the week March 29 to April 4 inclusive
Last

Week

This

Emergencies:
attended
.........-52..-0.2,.....04a
20
PRR,
SCTEOG hs i
acu ene
cee
7
Overmations performed «.:.:....2.5......4000 ie.
25
Perry OROMINATIONS “si... .06.23 6h
54
«Laboratory examinations .................2...--------- 325
ful
tion

PUBLIC LIBRARY
RECENT
Journey

ADDITIONS

Through

My

Years,

by

James M. Cox
This is the story of a full and exciting life. James M. Cox was a newspaper publisher at 28,
preceding World War

a congressman
I, governor of

Ohio during war years, and in the
crucial period
of adjustment
that
followed. He was a presidential candidate, and observer at close range
of most of the events and personali-

ties which shaped the destiny of the
United States for nearly fifty years.
The Randolphs, the Story of a Virginia Family, by H. J. Eckenrode
The Randolphs, the Adamses and
to some extent the Lees. represent
an

eighteenth-century

tradition.

to

view

hind

him,

Harvey

cal tug of war

between

executive

and

legislative arms of the Federal government. The author shows how this
conflict, inherent in the separation
of

powers,

has

been

resolved

by

strong Presidential and party leadership.
Philosopher’s Quest, by Irwin Edman
In these delightful pages of personal

recollection,

a

philosopher

and

teacher who is also a man of the
world speculates on the process of
finding one’s beliefs.
This Is My Story, by L. F. Budenz
The story of one American’s personal disillusionment with the Communist party in the United States,
and his repudiation of its principles.
Former managing editor of the Daily
Worker and member of the power-

the

force

it

is

secret

of

his

tremendous

charting a little
human brain. The
tematic

turn

books

Your

JUST

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papers has been an almost unparalleled wealth of biographical material. This has been condensed into
a single volume which medical student
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interesting and
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WITH
LODGES

6:30

club,

Sunset

A NEW

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full
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Home

(Lowest

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Highland Park
FOR DEERFIELD

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A historical analysis of the politi-

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Harvey Cushing, by J. F. Fulton
The story of a great medical pioneer is the biography of Harvey Cushing. Born of pioneering stock, with
three generations of physicians be-

though their dominance lingered well
into the nineteenth century it was |
essentially a product of an earlier|
day.;Dr. Eckenrode’s study of the
Randolphs
has
in addition
to the
intrinsic
interest
of
its
subject
a
keen analysis of the time when pat-

Central

Budenz

Y ss

Year

239
131
257
“GEER
3,814

Communist

Louis

Highland Park

-

preezert—£
FOOD aan
ei

HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL

hotel,

12:15

Valley

club,

Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield,

Ill.

p.m.

Loyal Order of Moose, No. 446, Witten

hall,

360

Central

avenue,

8 p.m.

TUESDAY
Elks Lodge No. 1362, Elks home,
McGovern and Laurel, 8:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
;
A. O. Fay Lodge No. 676, A.F. and
A.M., 8 p.m. Masonic temple.
THURSDAY
Lions club, Sunset Valley club, 12:15
a.m.

PERCY H. PRIOR,
Photographer

Jr.

Learn

Specializing
in natural
unposed pictures of your
party, wedding or reception

Tel. H. P. 3199

Highland

Park,

Ill.

To Heat Without Worry

With Oil

“The Fuel of Freedom”

We Proudly Announce
Photography's Newest

Oil Burners Can

Be Purchased NOW!

Advancement!
Pictures taken in 1/5000 of a second . . . No expression can escape the camera's eye . . . Studio or
home appointments . .

HEATING
Oil

ALDEN

HARRIS

BRAUN

Photography
7

S. ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND PARK

SERVICE CO., Inc.
Burner

Central

of

BROS. OIL CO.

Carl

360

Division

F. Casel, Mgr.
Lake County

Ave.

Tel. H. P. 3804

Highland

Park

�LOOK AT THESE 10
TERRIFIC VALUES
FROM FELL’S
These Bargains Speak for
Themselves!

Unique Program Is Engineered
By Commissioner Oliver Turner
A unique cooperative program between the city and business establishments in Highland Park, designed to
insure

the

1. Sox Special Group

4

Earl
Louis

Pairs $] 00

Overalls

manager,

Values to $45.00

eer

6.

21

7

and

co.;

Borchardt,

C.

Edw.

Thorney,

assistant

the

system-

proposed

by

department

for

removal work.
such an arrangement

worked

out,”

said

Mr.

prompt

can

Turner,

be
“we

Worried About

FLASH BULBS ?
THE

MEN’S

SHOP

8. Sox Values to 65c
Paj jamas

4, Pairs $] 00

Knitted Top, EMoneratte

$5.00 Value

response

the Men’s

Shop

Bottom

:

technical

development

in

the serious amateur
to take professional

to many

requests

and

Shop

Shoe

A new

photography makes
it possible for

10. 12 Leather Jackets $39 values |

ae

Ferdinand

street

snow
“Tf

. 35 Blouses Values to $5

9,

Dairy

Values to $50

Coats

FROM

\

Bowman

to vice president, of the North Shore
line; Phillip. Cole, city engineer and
Andrew C. Beck, superintendent of
the street department.
To Equip Trucks With Plows

the

14 Raincoats $17.95 Values

snow

Commissioner Turner a number of
heavy-duty trucks owned and operated by private concerns who use
the city’s streets, would be equipped
with snow plows and together with
operators will be made available to

FROM THE WOMEN’S SHOP Second Floor
&gt;

of

Fuel co.; C. H. Perry, division engineer, C. &amp; N. W. Ry.; Frank S.
Kramer, maintenance of way engin-.

Under

12 Suits

removal

Sheahen,
Mutual
Coal
co.;
Taziola and Joseph Menoni,

contractors;

2, 22 Spring Coats Values to $14.95 .... $1 Q

4.

prompt

during heavy storms, was discussed
in a meeting called by Commissioner
Oliver S. Turner at the city hall,
Thursday evening, April 3.
Representatives participating in the
conference, in addition to Commissioner Turner, were Robert Denzel
of the Highland Park Fuel co.; L. C.
Nusser,

FROM THE CHILDREN’S SHOP

3. Corduroy

City and
a Taal Industry Get
Together on Snow Removal Plan

from

pictures.
Indoors, outdoors,
night or day,

our customers,

will be open

on Monday evenings.

from

7- 7

pictures are yours
with the new
Wabash

Strobe-o-Lite.

Come

Cameras,

FELLS$
Highland Park 5300

in

for

demonstration

have every reason to believe that the
entire 115 miles of streets in Highland Park can be cleared.of snow
with a record time after each storm.” —
The problem of snow clearance is
a difficult one. In addition to the
more
than
one hundred
miles of
streets in Highland Park there are
many miles of sidewalks. Many cities
enforce. ordinances requiring citizens
to keep
their own
walks free of —
snow and ice. Such a system has not
been

adopted

in Highland

Park,

Department

Is

Handicapped

In this work the street department
is confronted with serious handicaps
such as the all-night parking of automobiles on public streets and in
parking areas adjacent to railroad
stations. When piles of snow and ice
accumulate
on
otherwise
cleared
streets it is due to inability of plows
to operate because of these parked
cars. An appeal is made to residents
of Highland Park to avoid the practise
of all-night
parking
on the
streets.

Negotiations are being conducted
with the railroads to permit the city
to plow station parking areas, on a
fee basis, and to try out a new plan
for guidance and control of traffic
and parking at these locations.
“Availability of funds, shortage of
equipment
and
budgetary
factors
create situations that must be met
in this snow clearance work,” re(Continued on page 27)
&gt;

Mid
CATALOG

OFFICE

a
today!

Supplies

Equipment

ALDEN HARRIS.
Photography

7 S. ST. JOHNS

ac-

cording to the commissioner, because
of limitations imposed by state laws
and the fact that the city has always
approached the problem on the assumption that citizens of the community would like to have such service performed for them by the municipality.
The first effort of the street department, he explained, is to remove
snow from the streets. This is essential because of the heavy volume of
vehicular
traffic
upon
which
our
citizens are dependent for transportation and delivery of the everyday
necessities of life.

WARD
WEEK
is

COMING!

28 N. FIRST ST.
TELEPHONE 4800

�Plan Public Rally in
oe

%
te

OC

ain

7

od
i

‘f

ta

Brett

ees

:

?

ie

pans

lighwood

Tomorrow for Community Genter
People’s Committee to Present
Facts on Purchase of Building

Highland

The final meeting of the People’s
committee of Highwood
supporting
purchase of the available USO facilities before the general rally tomor‘row at the USO building, was held
Tuesday night at the home of Mrs.
Sam Somenzi, North avenue, Highwood.
All

arrangements

for

a

complete

program
tomorrow
are being prepared
under
the
chairmanship
of
will
Speakers
C. Benson.
Edgar
include
Mayor
Thomas
Mussatto;
Mr. Slezak, director of the Winnetka

Community

house;

Vic

Killian, who

was chairman of the board of the
Winnetka center; Mr. “X” of the
Highland
Park
Community
center,
and the Rev. James D. Gleeson of
St. James church.
The meeting is scheduled to start
promptly at 8 p.m., and the citizens
of Highwood are urged to be on hand
early.
Steps

are being taken

Bowling
Highland
Bros.

be

Pin Ladies League

Garage

L.

........-..---------

28

Larson Bros. Garage ......-..---------+cece cnn spenerenectsed
5.-2.nc.n
Willa | Moderne

29
31

Sieh ete eS FaAL 5. ec cacck cams eaennupoase—aest
as
Gas
Shore
North
oe
Somenzi &amp; Son .......
Ta tr RiaTE hin nn ennnkch qua easeas &lt;oigsy
Santi’a Dow: House | .iits.s-.cnciese-s

32
37
38
44
44

Bneel’s

My

Oak

Tavern:

i2..20..5...0e..2cenpoee--s

Inn

Favorite

Agency

Ins.

31

AT

..........-.------++----+-

.....---.-------

47

.....--.:..---------

42

Beverage

Terrace

Anchor

Dealers of Highland
Park
....-....:.-.-------0--+
Store
Men
Fell’s
Russell’s Huddle
........--...
The New
Secretary
:
High Series
Mary Allen. ........--::---:-s-:eseceeeeneeeeeeeenescceee
Edith Mansfield
Helen
Maestri
Betty Sahnle ..... Sep

program

Paganelli Groc. &amp; Mkt. .....-..-----....
Garino Accordion: School
a
Esthers Tavern .........-----..---North Shore Buick ......-..-.-.-.---.-+...-..-.-----------+++
Decorators
Modern
Giangorgi Gros. &amp; Mkt. ......-----........------Funeral Home
Seguins
ne soe esc san ge
Del’ Rio -GHUE oss
Manhatten Hat &amp; Shoe .....-...----oo.c.. cic escee cece geonec odes
Bros.”
Onesti:

outlining the steps necessary to finance the project. The activities then
can

Ten

News
a

Marchi

by the com-

a complete

to prepare

mittee

Ten Pin

(Continued

on page

53
55
59
69
542

L.
32
32
32
38
39
39
40
41
44
44

45
44
43
40
40

16)

[X] E. J. MORONEY, SR.

enjoyed.

In
tion

a referendum held in conjuncwith
the
aldermanic
election
Tuesday, April 15, the voters of Highwood will decide whether or not this
property shall be purchased for use
as a civic community house.

Home

Illinois
831

Owners

Boxes

Juke

Attention
for

Your

Distributing

Co.

Available
Now
Room
Rumpus

Simplex

COMMISSIONER

CITY

of

Exclusive Wurlitzer Distributor
Wabash 4090
S. Wabash Ave.
Chicago 5, Illinois

HIGHLAND

PARK

Paving
DRIVEWAYS
Now

is the time

PARKING AREAS

Don’t
to get an estimate.
the rush season is here.

Macadam

and

Asphalt

—

Paving —

wait

Surface

until

Treatment

SKOKIE VALLEY ASPHALT CO., Inc.
1228 Harding

Ave.,

Des

Plaines

Phone

Des

Plaines

1165

Ed Moroney has a thorough

IT’S SPRING
SPRAY TIME

knowledge of Highland
and its problems.

TREES &amp; SHRUBS
-

For the city’s good—let’s keep

him on the job.

May we figure with you on Spraying, Feeding,
Trimming, Removing or other tree services you
may

Park

require.

HOYT TREE EXPERT CO.
515

Highland

S. ST.
6047

Park

JOHNS AVE., HIGHLAND PARK
N. MENARD, CHICAGO 30

535

Newcastle

This

4140

Ad

Paid

for

by Friends

of

Ed

Moroney

�It’s a Busy April for Scout —

Council; Many Events Planned
Annual Regional Meeting at
Stevens Hotel April 22

Ten Pin
(Continued

from page

15)

Scouts and officials of the North
Shore
Area
Scout council will be
busy all through the month of April
with an exceptionally heavy schedule of events planned as follows:
April 2 and 9—Scout leaders’ training course at Round lake.
April
10— Winnetka
Boy
Scout
show at community house.
April 5, 12, 19 and 26—Scout Red:

Northbrook Tavern
Meyer &amp; Brother
Contri

Bros.

Russell’s

Tavern

SOSOsABOZRPMD

Fred’s
Tavern
Farmers
Beverage
C. Crovetti
Paganelli

Somenzi
Grandi

.

FOR

CITY

highest

Six years’

vote

in primary

experience

in

and

years.

resident

of

Highland

Park

Legion

Tower

Bowling

at

6, 1947

Casino

Siljestrom

Coal

while

for

18

Print

Shop

Tommy’s
Service Station
.
Duffy &amp; Duffy Cleaners
...
A. G. McPherson
Anchor Insurance
Labor Temple
Tavern
....
Highwood
Bump
Shop
........
Glader
Tazioli
Excavating

Manhattan Hat
John
B. Nash
Joe’s Tavern
Onesti
Bros.

Shoe

Service

....

242

|Hy-Way
OFENTIRE

Deerfield.

District

court

of

at

Vogue Cleaners
Washington
Gardens
Press

government

ing at Scout office. Northwest district Scouts swim at Great Lakes.
April 8—Executive board meeting

Azzi

April

Election.

municipal

Cross swim instruction at Glenview.
April 7—Finance
committee meet-

Preti
Brugioni

American

Village Attorney for a suburban community.
Practicing attorney with offices at one address in
Chicago for 24 years.
Veteran of World War |. Instructor in Civilian Defense
Program during World War II.
Active in civic, church and educational programs of
Highland Park.
- Home-owner

Jorgenson
Piazzi
Crovetti

COMMISSIONER

x] A. GORDON HUMPHREY
Given

Bousson
Valentini
Ceccotti

207

Hank

—
Ne

MOOV

SY

. Blection — Tuesday April 15, 1947

a bird dog’s gift of scent nor a
retriever’s
intellect—yet
they’re
all smart enough to flock to Za-

zalia’s “station

for

changes.”

their

oil

Zagalia’s Service Station
401 Waukegan

NOW

P. (Paddy)
Candidate

POLICE

White

for

Paradiso

Johnson

.

Faoro

Santi
.

Ffister

OPEN

FOR

John

Ave., Highwood

BUSINESS

@ Wall Papers
® Venetian Blinds
®

Lighting Fixtures

MAGISTRATE

Sales and
Installation

will devote full time to the office.

Your

vote

will

be

appreciated.

THE HIGHWOOD GLASS AND PAINT CO.
“HOOKER PAINTS”
961% Waukegan Ave.

Be Sure to Vote April 15
HIGHLAND

PARK,

ILL.

honor

Lincoln school, Mundelein.
April 9—Camporal committee meeting at Scout office.
April 10—District first aid meet at
Lincoln school, Mundelein.
April 11 and 18—Cub leaders’ training course at Gages Lake.
April
14—Libertyville
Troop
71
father-son dinner. Libertyville-Mundelein Scouts swim at Great Lakes.
April 20—Senior
Scouts at Glenview gym and swimming pool.
April 21—Highland Park-Highwood
Scouts swim at Great Lakes.
April 22—Regional annual meeting
at Stevens hotel, Chicago.
April 23—District meeting at Diamond Lake school.
April 24—Wilmette
district court
of honor. District board of review
at Libertyville.

PHONE

531

�Town Talk

Rotarians Attend
Troop 30 Honor
Court, Demonstration
Parents,

friends

and

APRIL

members

of

the Highland Park Rotary club were
present Sunday afternoon when Rotarian
Troop
30, Boy
Scouts
of
America,
presented
various
Scout
skills at the Elm Place school gym.
The boys put on demonstrations in
cooking,
camping, leathercraft, ang-

ling, pioneering,
radio,
metalwork,
coin collecting and other Scouting
activities. Movies of Camp Ma-KaJa-Wan

were

shown

by

Assistant

Scout Executive Arnie Makela,
Highlight of the afternoon was the
court of honor
during
which the
Eagle rank was received by Henry
Peddle. The court was in charge of
Raymond
J. Ryan, troop chairman.
Mr. Peddle has been with the troop
since October,
1943, and at present

is a junior
assistant
Scoutmaster.
During this time he has held offices
from Den Chief through to his present position and has had a perfect
attendance
record
for
four
years,

attending

Camp

years. He
by George

Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

was presented the
Boardman,
Scout

two

award
execu-

COMES

Club.

Always

the

same

crowd

smart North Shore Folk for Lunch
and for Dinner. Food is always “out
of
this
world”.
Henri
Gendron’s
Orchestra with Dancing after Nine.
Emil, the genial Head Waiter will
give you the best table and service.
Skokie at Country Line.
TELL ME YOU LOVE ME

“Je Vous Aime”,
Style with Four

Pretty
Lamps,
with old, dull

Till-

man and Ralph Trieschmann. Life,
James Bartoli. Bronze Palm, Rony
Adler.
The following boys received a total
of 54 merit badges: James Bartoli,
Henry Peddle, Bob-Leminen, Mickey
Bowes,
Bob Risdon, Charles
Winkler,
Andy
Beck,
Jack
Beck,
Bob
Mitchell, Louis Sassorossi, Joe Tomei,

Pat Montgomery, Walter Jastrazemski, Ralph Treischmann, Don Riddle,
John Behanna, Bob Denzel, Charles
Marty,

Mickey

Jerry Gillett,
Ostrander.

Hart,

Bill

John

Temple

Tillman,

and

Bill

Chicago Red Cross
Drive Goes Over !ts
Quota by 10 Per Cent

chairman

of

the

drive.

The

area

quoted was $2,550,000 of the $60,000,000
national goal.
Fetzer stated that a review of the
audit showed that the Chicago quota
on Friday, March 28,
was reached
three days ahead of the officially designated closing date, March 31. A new
record thus was set in the speedy attainment

of

a goal in a major

Chicago

drive in recent years,
“The total will be increased somewhat by subscriptions that are still in
the process of collection,” Mr. Fetzer
said.

“Despite

the

oversubscription

the

job is not finished for groups which
have not reached their quotas.”
“Our quota was reached just four
weeks after the start of the drive
March 1. The quick success of the
drive represented real team! work, and
who

gave

so unselfishly and liberally of
time and effort in aiding the

their
cam-

I

want

paign.”

to

thank

all

those

and

around
looking

Funeral

your
home,
Shades. Too

Parchment,

Gold

and

Paper,

out design.

ay

EON

Directors
All

563

with

Lincoln,

Winn.

or

building
phere,

of
is

Dinner.

This

Early

American

set

in

20

acres

Furth

Phone

will open it’s attractiveDining Room sometime

to

the

for dogs

ness.

Big

Licensed

2810 W.

good

grounds

health

Ruth

ANNOUNCEMENT

directors.

RE-ROOFING
ROOF REPAIRS
SIDING-CAULKING
Cleaned,

Coated

Wikia!

ALL

THE

Highland

SUBURBS

Park

1767

HAVE ALL THE SOFT WATER YOU NEED
AT THE TURN OF A FAUCET WITH—

and

|.

happi-

for their playtime.

Veterinarian

Park

0700

Butterworth, Ken-

nels to Board while they go vacationing. These Kennels are large and
airy and have all the modern equipment

of

SERVING

before May Ist. For the past several
weeks the Cocktail Lounge has been
doing a very nice business. Do dtop
in and get acquainted. On Skokie,
500 ft. south Villa Modern (former
Tick-Tock).
They
will also
serve
American Food at modest prices.
PLAN FOR YOUR DOG
The best North Shore families send
Dogs

Chicago

SUBURBAN ROOFING CO.

Steaks,

LOVERS OF ITALIAN FOOD
Will be interested in knowing “The

their

RAG

Gutters Repaired,

Chops, Lobster Tails etc. Hildegarde
at the Hammond
Organ
in the Old
English Lounge. Waukegan Rd. at Lake.

Commadore”
ly decorated

staff

ade

atmosground

Featuring

Street

OF
RECORD
PROFESSIONAL
AN OUTSTANDING
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

with
wooded
ravines.
On a_ bluff
overlooking Lake Michigan. A splendid Chef serves Lunch from 80c. Dinner from $1.85. Weekly reservations
at appealing prices. 801 Sheridan Rd.
GOING OUT TO DINNER
What
more
interesting
diversion?
People “in the know” want to learn
all the worth while places to dine.
May we suggest the Glenview Coun-

Sun., and Holidays.

LAr
eS S

Kenwood

‘IMPORTANT

charming
of

Phones

,

We
offer complete
and
highly adequate
facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known

popular

many

936 E. 47th

2 age
ANG

and

GOLDEN
SUN LITE DAYS
STAR SPANGLED NITES
A wonderful time to take a long drive
and finish at the Moraine Hotel for
Lunch

H. P. 6443

Advisers

try House, as one of the top flight
spots. Dinner served from 4 p.m. on
Week Days. From 12 Noon on Sat.,

The Chicago Area Red Cross fund
campaign was 10 per cent over the top
last week with total receipts of $2,805,125, it was announced by Wade Fetzer
Jr.,

Silk,

Service

FURTH &amp; COMPANY

a tremendously large assortment of
beautiful
Shades.
Made
in
many
Silver

Cleaning

J. MOONEY
Tel.

Grace
Herbst,
Interior Furnishings,
has many charming Lamp Bases, and

styles.

Redecorating

JAMES

has “Cherrio” in same languages. Also
a “He Loves Me—He Loves Me Not”
with tiny silver arrow to spin on
heart shape bangle. Believe it or not
—they are only $1.00 each at Chandler’s, in Evanston. Davis &amp; Sherman.
I WANT TO MAKE YOU
LAMP CONSCIOUS

punched

John

and

Basement

“Ti Amo Tante” etc.
Leaf Clover bangle

Bob

Temple,

Complete

Not as intricate as it sounds! The
most adorable Silver Chain Bracelets
with big round bangle inscribed with

bad, when a good Lamp goes so far
toward making any room attractive.

Bill

WATERPROOFED

of

tive of the North Shore Area council.
Other Scouts receiving awards at
the meeting Sunday were: Tenderfoot, Bud Bock, Dick Riddle and Tom
Bahr. Second class, James Kilpatrick,
Jim
Lencioni and
Laury
LeVally.
First class, Mickey Bowes, Bob Lempinen
and Pat
Montgomery.
Star,
Denzel,

BASEMENTS

AGAIN

AS APRIL ALWAYS WILL
Frank Hutchins is most sincere when
he -invites you to make
his Villa
Moderne your year ‘round Country

in

attendance.

yh
a he

Ave. H. P. 2967.

Wakefield
Kenilworth

366 Central Avenue—Highland Park
Highland Park
2207

342

�Page

18

Thursday,

Starting Monday, April 14, the
new hours for filling out bonus applications at the American Legion
hall, 21 North Sheridan road, will be
as follows:
Tuesday and Thursday, 7:30 to 9
p.m.
Every afternoon including Saturday, 1:30 to 5 p.m.
DeWitt J. Manasse
Service Officer
Highland Park Post 145
American Legion

Pictures

1947

Photographer

Taken
TEL.

10,

Apartment to Be Completed Here January 1

Post 145 Bonus Aid

KILCOYNE,

April

H.

in

Your

Home

P. 4470

Deerfield

a

678

lial

RAVINIA MOTORS
USED

INC.

CARS

Architect’s'

VETERANS
building at 323

Bought

built here since

Sold

the war, the building will contain 12 5-room

apartments

.

Good Selection Now

22 So. First Street

before

Drawing

AS RESIDENTS
of this large, modern
apartment
was broken March 30. First apartment
house to be

and will be finished
with red face brick. Forced hot water heat is planned, with each apartment to
have
trol. Play rooms will be constructed in the basement, and there will be a play yard its own heat confor children and
parking facilities for 12 cars.
Joseph A. Nelson of 1916 Flora place is architect and builder. According to Mr.
Nelson, completion date is January 1, 1948.

§
cil

RAVINIA MOTORS

WILL BE GIVEN PREFERENCE
Central avenue for which ground

Pick

INC.

Up and

Lions to Hear Chicagoan

Delivery

RADIO SERVICE

Roy F. Healy of Chicago will give
an
interesting
talk
on
“Veteran
Housing—Fact Not Fiction” at the
regular weekly meeting of the Lions
club, Thursday, April 10, to be held
at 12:15 p.m. at the Moraine hotel.

Husenetter &amp; Cronkhite
365

Roger

Ravinia,

Williams

Ill.

Ave.
H.

P.

609

HIGH SCHOOL ELECTION
SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1947
12 Noon to 7 P.M.
Shall the maximum

tax rate for the

YES

educational fund of Township High
School District Number 113, Lake
County, Illinois, be established at .50

NO

per cent on full, fair cash value?
PARTIAL

LIST

OF

ENDORSEES:

Flying Carruths
Try the Airwaves
Hill

and

Beverly

Carruth,

residents

of Winnetka, comprise one of the North
Shore’s most enthusiastic flying couples,
When
FM
radio
station’
WEAW
opened in Evanston, they inaugurated
the

first

aviation

news

program

on

the station for this area. Sky Harbor
airport is sponsoring the program and
has been a sorce of much of the personality material used by the young reporters.

The interest shown in their FM
program led them to audition for the
Chicago station, WAIT. The tryout has
proved successful and the Carruths will
be heard every Saturday night at 6:30
over WAIT as well as at 5:45 p.m.
on the Evanston station, WEAW, on
Friday nights.
During the war Mrs. Carruth, the
former Beverly Frisbie of Highland
Park, flew B-25’s in the WASP. Mr.
Carruth was a parachute field artillery
spotter pilot.
Currently, Mrs. Carruth is appearing
in the Chicago Sun’s aviation comic
strip, Ayer Lane, as a flying reporter.

Service League Board of Lake Forest High School
P.T.A. Board of Highland Park High School
P.T.A.

Board of Ravinia

School

Highland Park Woman’s

Ravinia Woman’s
Deerfield-Northbrook
Deerfield
Highland

Amvets

Club

Club
Rotary

Club

By

Park Post of American

Kiwanis

Club

of

Typewriters

Post

Highland

League of Women
League of Women

All Work

Legion
Park

League of Women Voters of Lake Bluff
Voters of Highland
Voters of Lake

Park

Forest

Expert

You

Repaired
Repairmen

—

Guaranteed

We Sell Them
We Repair Them
We Buy Them
can depend on our

25

years experience in typewriter
repairing.

CHANDLER'S
525

Central Ave.

�Thursday,

April

10,

Page

1947

I

New Officers of VEW

19

REDAL E
MOVING

AND

PACKING

OF HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

®

AGENT ALLIED VAN

LINES

STORAGE
374 Central Ave., Highland

Park

H. P. 181

Jiullilin

Veokly

heclon
Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.

PICTURED
Park

post

of

HERE

ARE

Veterans

of

THE

P hoto

NEW

Foreign

OFFICERS

of

by

James

the

Kilcoyne

Highland

Invite the Crowd In

Wars.

Front row: Harry Eaton, quartermaster; ‘Hi Nichols, senior vice
commander; Ray Mann, commander; Emmett (Bud) Moroney, junior
vice commander; Hugo Schneider, chaplain.
Back row: Dr. Irwin Wallis, post surgeon; Allen Gerken, trustee;
Bill Hennig, trustee; Harry Skidmore, post advocate, and Mike Moon,

Whether you're a teen-ager, a bride, or more experienced in life, it’s fun to be able to invite the
crowd in at a moment’s notice, Easy, too, when

you keep tested recipes
“quick eats” on hand.

trustee.

Chicago Commons
Group Plans Spring
Rummage Sale at “Y”

those

articles

at

ledged youngster

summer

camp

ing summer.

only

the

helping

attend

“lift”

and

to

will’

this

com-

that

to

grass

play

be

the Commons

is often

see

and

lasting

underprivi-

in Michigan
This

opportunity

flowers

sale,

some

garden

spot

in

child’s

and

unhampered

by

concrete

help

Philathea

which

Class to Meet

Meierhoff

Home

Laurel

is

of

at

The Philathea class of Bethany
angelical church will meet Tuesday

Eveve-

ning, April 15, at 8 o’clock at the home
of Mrs, Walter Meierhoff, 445 Glencoe
avenue.
William

Assisting hostesses are Mrs.
Drake, Mrs. Walter Zieseke

and Miss Sadie Wessling. All members
are

urged

to

be

present.
1

HAS

Michigan.

members

avenue,

with

of

auxiliary

the

all

the

South

St.

Johns

avenue,

active

assisting.

Articles can be left at the
the president, Mrs. Dudley

of

in

the

month,

i{
i

the

&gt;|

CIGAR

Yy tbsp.

UNTOUCHED BY |
"| HUMAN HANDs-.. |

!
1
1

auxiliary

322 N. First St.

Tel. H:-P. 77

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A SPECIALTY

AMERICAN

salad,

cozy

Serves

and Radio Vee

eet
305

WAUKEGAN AVE.
=
PHONE HIGHLAND

a

ie)

LU Re
Ue
PARK 1533

Uae aL Te by

oe

is browned

top. Bake

coffee

Sunday

. . . and

evening

all’s ready

chat.

A

oes eT ee

a

ae

i

and cheese

in a moderate oven, 350°F.,

for 30 minutes and it’s ready
table. Tasty! Different!

for the

for a

grand

Fresh pineapple or strawberries will
lend a Spring touch to the fruit salad.
Top with zesty honey French dressing
for extra thanks.

ULE

ee ee

5.

combination, too, for the family lunch.

TORT

NO

Meanwhile cut
5 buns in half and toast. Place half of a toasted bun, cut side
down, on the cheese and with a pancake turner flip the sandwich,
bun side down, onto a serving plate. Top with other half of bun or not

Delicious Mor cheeseburgers, a fruit

We don’t “monkey” around. When
we fix a thing we fix it. All work
is guaranteed at Columbia Household Appliances.

NE

CHEESE

Double Duty Menu

many clubs which erfijoy the hospitality of the Settlement daily, with
membership ranging from tiny nursery school tots to elderly men and
women.
In the friendly atmosphere

ee SO

BAKE-RITE

is softened.

Taylor and her staff of workers, be
their luncheon guests, and visit the

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION

a

Continue cooking until second side of MOR

as preferred.

will visit the Commons
on Grand
avenue, Chicago, to meet Miss Lea

ee ee

WILSON’S

CERTIFIED

1}

CO.

Se

Turn and cover each two slices of MOR with a square slice of

I

the

*

Cut 1 can MOR into 10 slices
Pan-fry on one side in

;
;

past president, Mrs. Frank Venning,
341 Woodland
avenue, on or before
rioon, Wednesday,
April 16.
Later

MOR
Cheeseburgers

i

home of
Hall, 824

or

for

Tuesday

The sale will be held at 9 a.m.
Thursday, April 17, at the local “Y”
on

makings

benefit.

the dangers of city streets in the cool
woods and along the quiet brook in
this

the

of this settlement, these people from
the lower income group get a spiritual

Anyone who gives articles for the
spring rummage sale of the - Helen
Taylor
Carr
auxiliary
of Chicago
Commons, and all those who purchase
materially

and

Supper Special
Certified Corned Beef Hash pie,
ready in a wink, will star on any supper menu. Spread half of a can of
Certified Corned Beef Hash on the
bottom and sides of a casserole to resemble a pie crust. Fill ‘‘crust”” with
two cups of cooked cabbage mixed
with one and a half cups of white
sauce. Crumble remaining half can of
Certified Corned Beef Hash into
small pieces and sprinkle over the

Dutch Treat
Right for either, lunch or dinner is
tempting Rivel Soup, an interesting
oldtime Pennsylvania Dutch favorite.
Make this deliciously different soup
with Wilson’s B-V and it’s done ina
jiffy. Here’s how:
Combine 1 cup flour, 1% tsp. salt, 1
beaten egg, and blend until pieces are
slightly larger than rice kernels. Add
mixture slowly to boiling broth made
of 4 cups hot. water, 2 tbsp. Certified
Margarine and 2 tsp. Wilson’s B-V.
Cover, simmer 12 to 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, and 4 generous serv-.
ings are ready.
Yours
NN
WILSON &amp; Co.
Winco

for flavor,

George Rector

�YOUR VOTE
ON APRIL 15TH
“—

will decide Highland Park's Future

FOR

THE

NEXT

FOUR

Highland Park, like all cities and businesses, faces a trying
period in the immediate future. Operation expenses are rising as a
result of general economic conditions ...and income is limited. Resourcefulness, vigorous thinking and an attitude that ue I “it can be done’ a
despite all apparent difficulties, is essential if the new Highland Park
administration is to continue present operations and is to cope with both
old and new problems which demand attention and action.

Fortunately
candidates

for Highland

Park we have a number of outstanding

for city commissioner

... but in one particular candidate

... CLAYTON F. LUNDQUIST . . . we have the rare combination of
experience and youth, a man of mature judgment imbued with constructive thoughts of getting the job done. Successful in business he
has also contributed liberally of his time to community affairs. His
election will bring to the city council not only new energy, a forward
attitude but also a penetrating knowledge of city affairs
gained
through actual participation.

CLAYTON F. LUNDQUIST’S
AIMS
A

.

INCLUDE:

sound,

business

INDIVIDUAL ABILITY WITH

COOPERATIVE

like administration

for Highland Park ... A practical
‘unit at a time’ solution to the ageold storm and sanitary sewer problem
so that corrective action can be started

_ at once under current city income...
A solution to the accute parking facilities in the business section . . . An
expanded traffic safety program .. .
Demands that the state share with

the city part of the subsantial
tax collected

in Highland

Park.

sales

ATTITUDE

“Clayton Pisces has the fine gift of
translating good purpose into action,”
the

“American

Insurance

Digest,”

oldest insurance paper in the United
States, states in commenting upon
Mr. Lundquist’s selection as a candidate for Highland Park commissioner.
‘He will find the best way to do things
and, having discovered that, will bring

value to Highland Park in its municipal affairs that will cause others to
also do their very best at all times.”

CLAYTON F. LUNDQUIST.
Born in Chicago 39 years
ago, Clayton F. Lundquist attended
the
Chicago
Public
Schools,

Lake

Forest

tensive

business

background

which will be of great assistance in providing Highland
Park with a strong city administration.

GREATER HIGHLAND PARK COMMITTEE FOR

CLAYT
~

For Highland

College

and had some additional work
at Northwestern University and
Y.M.C.A. College Night school.
He has lived in Highland Park
more than a decade and has
been active in civic affairs,
_ serving on the Ration Board,
in Community Chest and Red
Cross drives. His service as a
member of the Highland Park
Zoning Committee for the last
year and a half has given him
broad experience in city needs
and affairs.
Mr.
Lundquist’s
extended
experience in insurance underwriting and his current position
as Sales Manager for the long
established Fred §. James &amp;
Co., provides him with an ex-

F. LUNDQUIS
Park Commissioner

�Thursday,

April

10,

1947

Page

Learns Tax Problems

League of
Women Voters

To Local Committee

HEALTH OR DISEASE?
IT’S UP TO US
III.
For several years
Women Voters
has
public

health

They

now

A

problems

in our
a

county.

post

war

plan for health, by the establishment
of a County Health Department.
If you are a Mother or Father, a
county health department will:
1. Take up where you leave off
in

protecting

when

they

your

children’s

go outside

. 2. Safeguard

health

of your

and

milk that you and your children
sume,

con-

over

food,

home.

water

3. Watch

the

the

tions of the places

sanitary

condi-

of recreation

they

frequent, the swimming pools, camps,
parks, theatres, restaurants etc.

4. Assist the school authorities in
making schools sanitary.
5. Isolate all children with communicable disease and thereby protect your children.
6. Promote
widespread immunization against communicable
diseases
so that the entire community is “fireproofed”

against

7. Visit

not

pre-election

the League of
been studying

recommend

fact

heretofore

News

newborn

baby

consultation with you,
and
stration of proper
care, if
desire.

who has law
is a candidate

for

commissioner,

the

office

of

city

Since

that

time

Mr.

Humphrey

During Mr. Humphrey’s
village attorney

of

Palatine,

prevention,

4061

has

Ill., he be-

for

demonyou
so

etc.

community
and

— New Address —
62 E. VAN BUREN ST.
HARRISON 3747-3748

ROOM

more

generally

progressive.

FEATURING

MEL

BRANDT

2

and

Chi Omega Mother’s Club to
Elect Officers on Tuesday
Annual business meeting and election of officers for the Chi Omega
Mother’s club of Northwestern university will be held at thé chapter
house
Tuesday,
April
15, at 2:30
o’clock in.the afternoon.
Following
the
business
session,
Miss Marilyn Gernhardt, a member
of the local chapter, will present a
program of vocal selections. Tea will
after

and

came familiar with all matters that
come before a village board. The period
of his service was. marked by total
absence of litigation.

For Unlimited Engagement

served

1830

Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

six years as

tection,

be

Telephone

P. 64

special work, he believes, has made him
thoroughly familiar with the tax delinquency program and tax problems of
Highland Park.

Now

cleaner,

H

prepared forms used by other attorneys
in representing property owners who
are
salvaging
their
properties.
This

conditions,
2. Throw around you an unobtrusive protection, of which you may not
be aware, but which is as important
to you as fire protection, police pro-

safer,

Central

worked with the Highland Park Tax
Delinquency committee as legal consultant several years ago. In 1945 he
was requested to prepare a 150 page
complaint to foreclose the Lien of General Taxes against more than 1900
pieces of property.

surance”
at a small tax “premium”
against
communicable
diseases
and
diseases caused by bad food, water,
milk,
sewage, and other
unsanitary

your

372

304 Railway Ave., Highwood

STONE

is that

A. Gordon Humphrey,
offices in Chicago and

If you are just Mr. and Mrs. John
Q. Public, a county health department will:
1. Provide you with a sort of “in-

flood

in

&amp;

epidemics.

your

3. Make

HILL

discussed

issues of The

ELVIRA
HEALTH
SALON

INSURANCE

As Legal Consultant

the

program.

Highwood Legion Will
Hold Dance April 12
The
Highwood American
Legion
Post No. 501 will sponsor a dance on
Saturday, April
12, at the Labor
temple. Music for dancing will be
furnished by Louis Garino and his
orchestra. Feature of the evening will
be the giving away of a Mixmaster,
a GE iron and electric heating pad.
Dancing will begin promptly at 8:45
p.m.
Legion members are asked to turn
in their dance tickets to the ticket
chairman, Steve Kolasa, at the dance
er by calling H.P. 1572.

his

505 FIFERS
Dancing

Every

Afternoon
2:30

P.

M.

aoe

DEL

RENE

and His Orchestra
Marianne Fedele, Lyric Soprano
Seldon Reed, Irish Tenor
Open Sundays at 4:30 P ™M.

Fashion
‘and

Parade

Dansant

W ednesduy and Sat-

Tone and Tweed... by

IZOD

OF

LONDON

‘Basie and beautifully British in its simplicity. This
Izod-tailored dress of rayon crepe—the companion
jacket of Willoughbypoint, a birdseye tweed. Important enough for town — casual enough for country
living and typical of the interlocking Izod styles to
be found in his new spring collection. Griffon grey,
Beckett brown and Bolton blue. Sizes 10 to 18, $90

urday at 2:30 P.M.

HOTEL

505_N. MICHIGAN AVE.

atthe Weathered Shope |
THE

DRAKE

THE

950

THE
THE

SHOP

SHOP
OAK

”
e

EVANSTON _
NEW

21

PARK

IN
950

SHOP
SHOP

THE
N.

DRAKE
MICHIGAN

e

1636.

e

730

HOTEL
AVE.

ORRINGTON
LAKE

STREET

�‘ Page 22

‘Arvid Magnuson
Publishes Volume

Of Piano Music
Arvid Magnuson of Ravinia Park
road recently published 25 of his
compositions for piano in one volume
in order that the music, which he
believes is of some value, would not

be lost. The collection has been placed!
on sale at a local stationery store.
Mr. Magnuson studied harmony at
the American Conservatory of Music,

the composer came to Highland Park
in 1897. At that time the land which
is now Ravinia park was owned by
his
relatives,
the
Daggitt
family.

Chicago, and also is the holder
certificates from the Berlitz School

When
were

Languages

for

having

passed

of
of

exam-

inations in the translation of seven
languages into English.
Born on a farm in Sunne, Sweden,

this. tract was sold, four acres
reserved
for
Mr.
Magnuson’s

brother-in-law, Albert Daggitt, who
built a home on the site. Land and
home both later were purchased by
Mr. Magnuson, who still lives there.

Retired from the post office six
years ago after serving as a postal
clerk for 37 years, he now is at work
arranging other piano. compositions
for another volume which he intends
to publish at a later date.
The recent volume is dedicated to
the

memory

of

Mr.

Magnuson’s

Lloyd, who died in action
February 15, 1943.

(QU MERCURY
SERVICE

Sw

me,

—

oe
\

Were pretty proud of our up-to-date service facilities.

We've made a big investment in time and effort to bring Lincoln and
Mercury owners of this city the kind of service they have a right to expect

RS.

... service that is courteous, fast

and trustworthy. It’s our way of
making

friends—to

serve

your

.

ner that will always
glad to deal with us.

.

make

Why

DAYS are coming fast.

not bring your car in soon

for a service check-up? Fix the

every motoring need in a man.

TOURING
1

al

?

:

little troubles now, before they grow into big
ones. Then you'll drive with confidence, get
more real motoring satisfaction every day.

you

HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN-MERCURY INC.
108 N. First St.
Tt"

Tel. H. P. 1777
s

OoOuUR

WAY

or

MAKING

Highland Park
FRIEND S

son,

in Tunisia,

�YOUNG
MEN.
VETERANS

2h

e Will J Maris Gives |

Corp. R. B. Smith, a

Professional Touch |
To Men’s Club Show

Produces Air Shows

For Station Hospitals

What
amateur

a professional
talent will be

by

J.

Technician Fifth Grade Russell B.
Smith Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Smith of 879 Ridgewood drive,. was
recently selected to write and produce

27,

news

programs

Sill.

Okta..

The wife of Alfred Runkel, who
survives, Mrs. Runkel moved to De-

Will

theatrical

Harris,

producer,

can do with
demonstrated

nationally

who

known

is acting

as

producer-director
of
the
musical
revue, “Hips,
Hips, Hooray”
to be
staged by the Men’s club of North

Shore

Congregation

auditorium of Central
coe, April 22 and 23.

Israel

at

school,

the
Glen-

for patients

station

the
courtesy
of
Radio service, as

Former Resident
Dies in Decatur

at the Fort

hospital,

through

the
Armed
a feature of

Forces
the In-

formation and Education section of the
US Army.
Corporal Smith originates and announces two 15 minute shows, a review
of news and sports given every day,

and
a
weekly.

program

Assigned

to

of
the

popular

music

Information

and

Education office of the Artillery center, Fort Sill, the corporal entered the
service in April, 1946. He is a graduate
of
Highland
Park
High
school,
a

former student of Northwestern university and a member of Sigma Nu
fraternity.
Fred

Waring,

Harlow,

Bob

reports

he

Hope
has

the “new Jack Benny”
Men’s club tryouts.
“As

WILL J. HARRIS
Rehearsals for the musical are in
progress, with more than 50 members
of the club
Although

Harris
recent

included in the cast.
a veteran showman,

has devoted
years to the

Mr.

much
time
production

in
of

amateur
directed

revues. During the war he
and produced
shows
for a

number
Service

of large industrial firms, the
Club
of Chicago and the

American Legion. The producer, who
has supervised the personal appearance of such stars as Ginger Rogers,

a

matter

of

fact,”

and
not

(yet)
Mr.

Jean
found

at

the

Harris

said, “we have found a number of
persons with a surprising amount of
singing and dancing ability.”
Harry
Schultz,
president
of the
Men’s club, announced that there are
still parts available for persons interested. Rehearsals are being held
currently at the Temple auditorium,
he said.

-A former Highland Parker, Mrs.
Eleanor Runkel, 67, died March 25
at her home in Decatur, Ill. Following funeral services Thursday, March

burial

took

cemetery,

catur

place

in

Fairlawn

Decatur.

with

her

jhusband

years ago, more
Highland
Park
Decatur last year.
of First Church
here and of the
Boston, Mass.

about

30

recently moving to
and _ returning to
She was a member
of Christ Scientist
Mother

church

in

Besides her husband, she leaves a
daughter,
Mrs.
Pauline
McKelvey,
and a sister, Mrs. Roy Smith, both
of
Decatur.
There
also
are
three
grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren.

Scout Age Boys Are Invited
To Model Plane Club Meetings
All

Highland

age are
ings
of

Park

boys

of

Scout

invited to attend the meetthe
Model
Plane
club
at

Community
center every Thursday
night at 7 p.m. The club is sponsored
by Playground and Recreation board,
Gervase Brown Jr. is adult leader.

AIR

Are
Seeking

APPRENTICE
MOULDERS
Young men 20 to 35 years of
age, who want to learn a good
trade and earn good compensation while doing so, would
do well to investigate what
we have to offer.

THE CHICAGO HARDWARE
MAJ.

All Sizes

Murphy and Miller,

We

FOUNDRY COMPANY

FILTERS

1” and 2” —

|’

Inc.

Phone Winnetka 4166.
932 Linden Ave., Winnetka

Take North Shore to North
Chicago Junction and walk one
block west.

MOTORS

OLDEN

\

owe

rn a

}

HM

APPROVED

404142
ey

U. S. Government report:
“Moths are present im practically

EV ERY

_ household.”

... but you don’t worry after your
nome furnishings are Duraproofed.
e Effectiveness guaranteed 4 yrs.
protects against
e Duraproofing
moths ... carpet beetles...
mildew.
e A nation-wide service rendered
right in your home.
|
@ Upholstery and carpetings may
.., at the same time... be
America’s foreDuracleaned.
most furniture and department
stores recommend Duracleaning
for SAFE cleaning.

..

Division
HOME

Co.

of

SERVICE

CoO.

839 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield

&gt;

*Excellent Equipment
*Body - Fender Work
*Painting
‘Delivery Service
~

Call

3222

. AMBassador

Duraclean
‘

Mechanics

444

Deerfield
Chicago

rysler - Plymout
‘Trained

577

NORTH CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

HIGHLAND

PARK

2500

�Page

24

Thursday,

FLOORS
AND

SANDED

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

SHELBY

STEWART

101 8S. PARKWAY
PROSPECT HEIGHTS,
Phone

Arlington

Heights

CENTRAL
Ask

I have
of the
Shore.

for

Mrs.

ILL.
7120-M

5218
Stewart

sanded
and finished
finest
homes
along

over 1000
the North

Elect Mrs. Martin President
Of St. George Mother’s Club
Mrs. Samuel Martin Jr. of Highland Park recently was elected president of the .Mother’s club of St.
George High school, Evanston.
Other officers were elected as follows:
Mrs.
Carleton
Healy,
Evanston,
first vice president; Mrs. Alfred E.
Austin, Chicago, second vice president; Mrs. John Minogue, Evanston,

treasurer;

SEALTEST

Mrs.

Paul

C.

Tuohy,

Chi-

cago,
corresponding secretary, and
Mrs. George
C. Armitage, Skokie,
recording secretary.
All will take
office

for

in

May.

Mrs, Austin is completing plans
the musicale to be given at the

annual

spring

luncheon

to

be _ held

at
Edgewater
Beach
hotel.
Mrs.
Tuohy is in charge of reservations
and will be assisted by Mrs. James
H.

Coffey,

Evanston,

and

Mrs.

ry Schermerhorn, Wilmette, who
take North Shore reservations.

FLAVOR-OF-THE-MONTH

Har-

will

April

10,

1947

Don’t Do This Tuesday, or
You'll Be Wasting Your Time
In the Deerfield Township election
April 1, four persons in Precinct 8
used a check mark
instead
of a
cross,

and

one

person

voted

for

If

in

doubt,

marking

see

ballots

New

proper

on

method

Page

Glencoe Bank

-

“Early unsolicited subscriptions to
the capital stock of the proposed new
Glencoe National bank have been. most
gratifying,” says Herbert C. Paschen,
attorney and Glencoe resident who has
been appointed trustee for all stock
subscribers. The great need and unusually promising future for a bank in
the Glencoe area has been recognized
for years. While some large subscriptions have already been received, they
have been accepted by the committee
subject

to

reduction

in

the

event

the

stock

as

widely

as

possible

among

residents of the Nortn Shore. In line
with this thought, subscriptions of 100
shares or less (10 to 100 shares) are
being given special preference.

Re ao
Peach

All subscriptions to the capital stock
are being placed by Mr. Paschen in a
special escrow account in a loop bank,
subject

to

release

only

upon

the

ter

entire

The

granted.

subscription

amount goes directly to the capital account of the bank when opened, there
being no commission or underwriting
fees of any nature allowed.
Reservation for safe deposit boxes,
of which the bank has only a limited
number, are now also being accepted.
Both subscriptions for capital stock and
reservations

You'll hit a new high in family festivity
when you bring home this Sealtest
Flavor-of-the-Month. It’s Real Peach
Ice Cream—velvety-smooth ...rich and
creamy—with that honest-to-goodness
peaches and cream flavor. Makes every
occasion a special occasion—sets off a party
mood every time it’s served. Enjoy it

tonight and throughout the month. But,
be sure—look for the familiar red emblem
of quality.

for

safe

deposit

facilities

are now being accepted at the office
of the Glencoe National Bank Organization committee in Room 205 of the
Bank building by Mr. O’Melia, who is
in active

charge

of

the

proposed

bank.

The phone number is Glencoe 1100.
Due to uncertainty of delivery of
necessary supplies, a tentative opening
date of May 3 hag been set.

Stamp Club Will Be Host to

Waukegan

Collectors

Saturday

Highland Park Junior Stamp club
will be host to the stamp clubs of the
Waukegan
city schools
at a joint
meeting to be held in Community
center, Saturday, April 12, at 2 p.m.
A special program is being
ranged for the meeting and an
portunity
collectors

CREAM
BY

ANY

ap-

proval and direction of the United
States Comptroller of Currency when
the total capital is subscribed and char-

Ice Cream

BEST

of

over-subscription because it is the earnest desire of the committee to spread

sealtest

ICE

of

4.

Being Organized

high note
for goodness!

both

candidates for supervisor! In other
words, five voters might as well have
stayed away from the polls because
their ballots were invalidated by their
own hands.

TEST

will be given
the
to
trade
stamps.

arop-

young
Bevier

Butts,
recreation
director
for the
Waukegan
Playground and Recreation board, will accompany the Waukegan
boys
to
Highland
Park.
Charles Sanborn is adult leader of the
Highland Park club.
All Waukegan and Highland Park
boys and girls who are interested in
collecting stamps are invited to attend the meeting. They need not be
members of either club.

�Thursday,

April

10,

Page

1947

Every Magic Show Features a
Rabbit; Even Tarbell Has One

VOTE
for

OLIVER
TURNER
for

COMMISSIONER
TARBELL
“Even
says

a

rabbit

has

his

problems,”
famous

world

Tarbell,

Harlan

AND

magician, and teacher of magicians,
who is appearing at the auditorium of

Whiskers.

slightly

A

man

you,”

ungracious

said

the

rabbit.

man.

“A

most

that

I’ve

RS
eae

ee
ee

Dae.

Why Not Do Business

ed

39 South LaSalle St., Chicago3

PCE

ELL

from

for

a

The

rabbit.

Chinese

(Continued

on

page

say

26)

Wer

Dia’

Return TURNER
to the City Council

FOR

WARD
WEEK

LG

Be

bring

that one miracle is equal to ten thousand sermons, but I guess a rabbit
is still more important in a magic
show than a miracle.”
Dr. Tarbell ought to know, for
dramatic critics from coast to coast
say “Even a ‘piece of magical apparatus which might be a trick in

WATCH

Ta

I

look

Now

DT

mysteries

gave

a)
ae

many

back

given you a carrot tell me where the
boss is.”
The rabbit looked’ up at
him for a minute and then went on
eating. The man turned away in dis“Must be a deaf and dumb
gust.
rabbit.”
Dr. Tarbell says that his rabbit is a
first cousin of Frank Fay’s “Harvey”

TT

how

and

inebriated,

the rabbit a carrot.
Peter looked up
at the man and then started nibbling
the
carrot.
“He
doesn’t
even
say

thank

and while not six feet high is certainly just as important.
“No matter

came

auspices of the local Kiwanis club.
“Take for instance my magic rabbit
stage,

RABBIT

India, China and Egypt, or the wonders I may present in Miracle Vision,
in which I see more with my eyes
sealed than most people do with their
eyes open, people from five to one
hundred and five years of age, still

Highland Park “High school tomorrow
night in a benefit magic show under

Peter

HIS

AT

ELECTION

DAY

Tuesday, April loth

OUR

CATALOG
28 N.

OFFICE
FIRST

TELEPHONE

ST.
4800

POLLS

OPEN

6 A.M. TO

5 P.M.

25

�Cr

( Bonus Assistance for |

Highwood Veterans
Friends

_ Highwood veterans are invited to
consult Ray Suzzi, service officer of
the Highwood American Legion post,

of

Walter E. Meierhoff
invite

for

assistance

for
be
hall
day

the Illinois bonus. Mr. Suzzi will
available at the Highwood city
from 6:30 until 9 o’clock Thursand Friday nights. Inquiries may

7

made

by

with

their

calling

H.

to his

7

Candidacy

for

Coming

Election

no
it presents
society,
points the way toward

but
solution,
better under-

standing.
Legion auxiliary, was one of the repThis challenging book will be
resentatives of more than 700 units in
Illinois attending the annual Patriotic | viewed by Mrs. George W. Carr
conference sponsored by the Illinois
department of the American Legion
auxiliary.
The conference
was held at the
Palmer House in Chicago March 24.
representatives
Riddle,
Mrs.

Leslie McCaffrey, Mrs. Philip Cole and
Mrs. Henry Eitner.

Roland

Maus

according

TRAVEL
5

OZARK
SMOKIES

Tours

CALIFORNIA

to:

MEXICO

ing

of

the

to

Inter-Faith

local

be

at this

presented

meeting.

As always, discussion will follow the
program, and interested members of
the community are welcome to attend.

Show
from page 25)

most cases become a miracle in Dr.
Tarbell’s hands.
He can take an
object that you know has no magic
and it suddenly
becomes
endowed
with seemingly impossible power. For
instance a simple piece of soft white
clothes-line seven or eight feet in
length turned into a Hindu
Rope
Miracle which has baffled not only
laymen but magicians as well, and
became world famous over night. As
Bill Ladd, dramatic
critic for the
Louisville
Courier-Journal
recently
said, “A nickel’s worth of rope plus
Dr. Tarbell and you have a million
dollar miracle.”

GUATEMALA
7-Day

GREAT

Cruise

on

LAKES

From $98.50
H. and R. ANSPACH
TRAVEL BUREAU
370%
Central
Avenue
George L. Lundberg, Manager
Phone: Highland Park 1211
Book Now and Avoid Disappointment

CLOSED SATURDAY

Y.W.C.A.

Calendar

TUESDAY, April 15,
10 a.m. Interfaith group.
WEDNESDAY, April 16,
10 a.m. Sewing group.
THURSDAY, April 17,
10 a.m. Creative Writers.
7:30 p.m. Painting class.

“WHITTAKER

MICRO |
IG

APRIL 12 FROM

SNAPSHOT CAMERA

NOON

UNTIL 6 P. M.

THE BIGGEST LITTLE
CAMERA SENSATION

Sy

IN YEARS!

e COMPACT, CONVENIENT

LIEBSCHUTZ LIQUOR CO.
317 Waukegan

Ave.,

Highwood

Daily Free Fast Delivery
TEL. HIGHLAND

PARK 443

group,

Tuesday, April 15, at the “Y” on Laurel
avenue, promptly at 10 a.m. Nominations for next year’s officers will also

(Continued

Roland
G. Maus
of 2254 South
Green Bay road has been re-elected
vice
president
of
the
Americancompany,

reand
Mrs. Sidney Mandel at the April meet-

Magic

Re-Elected

Without A Care!
SPRING AND SUMMER

ELECTION

popularity.

attained. instant

it

Mrs. Edwin Gilroy, president of the
Highland: Park unit of the American

Marietta

DUE TO SCHOOL BOARD

on

Legion Auxiliary
Attend Conference

President Grover M. Hermann.
Mr. Maus will continue to iaake
his
headquarters
at
the
Chicago
executive offices of the company .

_||

a novel

interested in a working democracy get
together. Printed as a serial in one of

where

of

To Office in Company
in the

Agreement”,

‘Dealing frankly with the more subtle
forms of antisemitic feeling, with the
attitudes of Jews and Christians toward each other in our present day

Other
Highland
Park
included
Mrs.
Joseph

City Commissioner

“Gentleman’s

antisemitism by Laura Z. Hobson, is
one of the most widely discussed novels
of today when men and women really
the leading magazines in the country,
it,-has since been issued in book form

P. 4279,

Loeat Members

Your Attention

applications

luter-Faith vue
To Hear Review of
Widely Read Novel

Smaller than a package of
cigarettes . . . weighs less than
9 ounces. Carry it SA
ikon
in pocket or purse , . . all metal.

e EASY TO LOAD!
e EASY TO USE!
No focusing
no timing.
Find your picture in the viewfinder
.°. . snap it! Takes
black-and-white or full color.

(450

Includes

Phone

Excise

or Mail

Tax

Orders

CAMERA CO.
EVANSTON
STORE
1:
Orrington Ave.
Davis 2363
:30
- 5:30.
Mon. &amp; Thurs. to 9 P.M.
Chicuge Store
34 N. Clark St.
Phone: Fra. 2230-1

.

�Thursday,

April

10,

Page

1947

Highland Park and Highwood
Women Unite for Poppy Day
Members of Legion Auxiliaries
Combine Efforts for May 26 Sale
Highland
Park
and
Highwood,
along, with cities throughout the U.S.,
will observe Poppy Day May 26, when
everyone will be asked to wear a
memorial poppy in honor of the dead
of the two world wars and to make
a contribution for the welfare of the
disabled veterans, their families and
families of the dead.
Local volunteers from the auxiliary
and young women’s groups, headed
by Mrs. Edwin Gilroy and Mrs. Mat
Maiman, will distribute the flowers
on the streets throughout the day.
Plans are being made to cover the
cities completely so that everyone
will have an opportunity to honor and

Snow

from page

Commissioner

14)

Turner.

“Fur-

ther
difficulties
are
encountered
through inability to secure part-time
workers, on short notice and who are
experienced
in operating expensive
snow removal equipment.”
Did

A

Good

“It is gratifying

Job

to know,

is forced

to work,

the
the

Highland

Park performed an equally good, or
better, job during the past winter
than most of our neighboring cities,
including
Chicago. And, we might
add, at much less cost than most of
them.”
:
Turner said that under the cooperative City and Industry plan it will
be possible to assign definite sidestreet areas to private operators of
trucks

and

equipment
used

on

which,

owned
heavily

together

by

the

with

city to be

traveled

main

thor-

oughfares, will give Highland Park
a prompt and efficient snow removal
program

of

inestimable

Representatives
concerns

are

who

reported

ingness

to

to have

details

with

Tribute

the

business
meeting

indicated
the

necessary

two

to War

conflicts.
Dead

Poppy Day has béen observed in
all parts of the country for many
years.
The flowers have been worn
in memory of the war dead ever
since the close of World War I. They
are replicas of the wild flowers which
grew on the battlefields of France
and Belgium, but they have come to
symbolize memory for those who died
in any part of the world.
The poppies which the local Auxiliary will distribute are all handmade,
shaped from crepe paper by disabled
veterans working in hospitals and
convalescent
the country.

workshops
throughout
The disabled men take

much

needed

earnings.

at

Ill,

Downey,

and

at

Great

meeting

which
a

short

will

be

The

Tailor

ALTERATIONS

Men’‘s and

17

Women’é

Clothes

(ar

Without
Suits Made

}

Delay
to Order

Also Cleaning and Pressing
@
Pick up Tuesday before
10:00 a.m. and Delivered
on Fridays

&amp;§

8 N.

Second

St.

H.

BECKER ROOFING CO.
970 LINDEN AVE.
HUBBARD WOODS

Lakes
Ph.,
H.

J.

Noble,

Mar.

WINNETKA 742; Night Ph., GREENLEAF 4585
SERVING THE NORTH SHORE FOR 40 YEARS

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE
We
To

city,

willand

For Real

OIL HEATING
COMFORT

Have All New
Equipment
Your Work Right

Do

Use Sinclair Super Flame Fuel Ou

Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements

Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well

We

Seasoned

Fire

ECONOMICAL - - - TOO!

CALL
TODAY

Gives maximum heat
save you money.

GLENCOE

Wood

358

or

HIGHLAND

per

gallon

PARK

to

359

Build Lawns and
Driveways
TRY US OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137.N. Second,

All Phones

to carryscheduled

3785

...

VOTE

FOR...

Z|WILLIAM C.
HEINRICHS

time.

for

COMMISSIONER
Highland Park, Illinois

AT YOUR SERVICE...
At Capital Airlines ticket office
in North Shore Hotel, inquiries
are courteously answered and
reservations secured for air
travel,

ANYWHERE

Tuesday, Apr. 15, 1947
More than 30 years practical experience in business administration and
accounting.

CALL pEARBORN 5711 OR
YOUR

Bs

and Delivery Service
Highland Park 455

DeLuxe

Cleaners

454 Waukegan Ave.
ATS
LLL EAL

TRAVEL

AGENT...

down-

town ticket offices in 112 W. Adams
St. (Field Bldg.) and Hotel Stevens

“That’s
right!
Tell
everybody
aobut that super cleaning at De
Luxe Cleaners.”
Pick Up
Phone

P.

ANOTHER NORTH SHORE OFFICE
To Serve You Better With
Roof Repairs — New Roofs
Siding and Home Insulation
Free Inspection and Estimates
QUICKLY FURNISHED

The

purchase poppies May 26.
Legion auxiliary women

when they
The same

to

7

Girls

Woods—for

Nestled in the pines
of Northern Wisconsin, altitude 1750 ft.
above sea level offers
a
real
camp
life.
Canoeing,
Horseback
riding,
Adventuresome
trips,
nature
lore, health and character
building,
fine
staff, Posture correc-~
tion.
Write
J.
A.
Mors, 228 N. La Salle
St., Chicago
1, Ill.

manufacture of the poppies is one of
the few ways in which they can earn
the little spending money that all
need.
Help Pack Poppies
Citizens of the two communities
will be contributing to the hospitals

ing out the program are being studied
for
consideration
at
another
within

North

Camp

special pride in making the flowers
to honor their fallen comrades and
the work is valuable to them as occupational
therapy,
besides
bringing

value.

local

attended

work

numerous

of

of the

~ WALTER

however,”

he continued “that even with
severe handicaps under
which
city staff

veterans

them

Removal

(Continued
ported

aid

who will be selling them have been
working at Downey for the past two
months, helping veterans to pack and
count the flowers in preparation for
Poppy day.
If the poppy you receive is imperfectly made, they say, you will know
yours was created with great effort
by one of the more seriously handicapped veterans.

Highwood
PT
A

Capital

Graduate
Capable
World
A Local

Accountant
- Experienced

War

I Veteran

Business

IRLINES
Known for Years as “PCA”...One
of America’s Pioneer Airlines

Man
Endorsed

Highland

27

Park

Veterans
John

By

and

A. Peters,

Citizens
Chairman

Committee

1712

�White sidewall tires, as illustrated, will be
supplied at extra cost as soon as available.

\ \ ho says you’re only young once P
Take a look at this trim, new Buick
— or better, take its wheel — and see
just how wrong that old saw is!
One look at these sleek lines, the
long, taste-of-tomorrow fenders —

and just watch yourself start getting
young

ideas.

Find an open road, gun this beauty
just a bit — and see how the spirit of
springtime wells up in your soul and
sets the red blood coursing.
Good road or bad, on these soft allcoil springs you take everything with
youthful zip and zest, quite freed
from jar or jolt.
City street or country road, with all
this poised and husky roadweight
beneath you, you travel your level
courseg steady and non-swerving:
even

on

curves.

Pull up somewhere — and see how
people turn to note the Very

Tune in HENRY J. TAYLOR

Important Person who’s

arriving.

Take it through the tangle of traffic
and see how nimbly it maneuvers —
check it at a boulevard stop and see
howsureand positive its controls are.
In all truth, here’s a car that’s any
man’s darling, every man’s pride. A
car that not only meets your needs
for transportation, but satisfies
your every hankering for size and
power, style and room, solid
worth and top-dollar value.

bile, in fact. Definitely not the number to be picked up off the counter
any time, anywhere.
That’s why forethought pays and
prompt decision gets results. You
are simply playing safe when you
get your order in now!

Naturally, it’s a much wanted car.
America’s most wanted automo-

When better
automobiles are built

1th le

will build them

on the air twice weekly

NORTH SHORE BUICK CO., INC.
110 S. First St.

Highland

Park,

Illinois

�“SPRING FOOTBALL OPENS TUESDAY
ae

“Batter

Honor Sixty In
Annual Letter
Award Meeting

Urge All Boys
To Report For
\Spring Training

Up!”

EY's-SEEWaeRe
\

will

KNocK

,

A. E. Wolters Addresses Meeting
Of Basketball, Swimming Teams

Need Experience and Training
For Next Fall Says Dave Floyd

By Steve Herz

By Ray Geract

With

the basketball

season

over,

the

and

annual

swimming

letter

Highland Park High school’s spring
next
football
training
will
begin

award

meeting was. held at the Highland’
Park high school on Tuesday night,
April 1, in the English club room.
Letters were presented by the in«dividual coaches
to sixty members
of the swimming,
basketball,
and
cheerleading
squads.
Eight
certificates were also presented to eight
members

of

the

Frosh-Soph

Tuesday, it was announced last week
by Coach Dave Floyd. The spring
drills are expected to last into the
month of May.
Tough Schedule

cheer-

leading
squad.
Light
refreshments
were served.
Mr. A. E. Wolters, principal, and
Mr.
Robert
S.
Kendig,
Athletic
director, and coach of the varsity
swimming team were the principle
speakers. Mr. Carlkon and Mr. Danakas,
ball

varsity and Frosh-Soph
coaches,
Mr.
Panther,

‘Soph

swimming

pender,

c

cheerleading

swimming

Oak

director,

each

teams

completed

a

Frosh-

the

while

Park,

Soph swimmers placed fifth in the
final
standings.
In
basketball
the
varsity won only two games, while
losing

twelve,

to

end

up

in

the

cellar

in the final standings. The FroshSoph
cagers won a meager three
ganies, while losing eleven to rank
in seventh place in the Suburban
league.
The 1947 letter winners for basketball, swimming, and cheerleading are
as follows:
Varsity Swimming

Kiley,
Carky

Eugene
Rosenheim,
John
Bob Kohn, Warner Rosenthal,
Rubens,

John

Pete

Weber,

Haupt,

Metzenberg,
Bob
Wright,
William
Eubanks,
Dick
Zahnle,
Lawrence
Wilson Grady, Jim Allison, Jim Thorsen. Managers—Ronald Baily, Victor
Lubke, and Alan Culhbetson.
Varsity
Joe

DeBartolo,

Basketball
Jim

Goldman,

Nels

Loizzo,
Bill Kelly, Tony
Johnson,
Melchiorre,
Deno
McCarthy,
Jim
Bill Murphy, Bob Plummer, Ed PiaManagers—
Taussig.
Pete
centini,
Richard

Richard

«

Sheridan,

Art

Fuller,

and

Flynn.
Frosh-Soph

Swimming

Kean Block, Kenny Cahn Clarence
Donbeck, Charles Heimerdinger, Dick
McCulloch, Dick
Loewenthal, Dave
Murphy,
Weil, Tom
Roscoe, Tom
Ken Ray, and Todd Griffith.
Frosh-Soph

Basketball

Coleman,
Dan
Lenzini,
Bernard
Don Coleman, Eugene Tagliapietra,
Joel Siegle, Neil Sheahan, Bob Batt,
Rothbart, Ed
Behr, Charles
Steve
Marvine, Jim Brown, and managers

he

NA

tals,

have

4.000
people.
Yet,
Highland
Park
students are kept handicaped by what

become ‘a major

past few years everywhere else, at
Highland Park High school they have
dropped like the temperature at the

land
that

North

sports,

Pole.
Poor

Why?
of
on

Facilities

Well in the first place, much

the emphasis that should be put
athletics is not, and as a result

even the students have grown to not
care. It is not their fault entirely
that sports are not up to the standards they should be. Take basketball
as an example. First look at the
facilities that the more modern up
to date
neighboring
high
schools
offer their students, then look at
what Highland Park students have
to contend
sults
that

achieve

with.
Now
the
up
to

with

Park

has

those

achieved.

compare
redate
schools

that

Highland

Another

sport

that needs better facilities is Track.
Did you ever see where Highland
Park holds its indoor practice? How
can anyone expect boys of this high

terest

in

High

Park.
they

school

sports

in High-

Other communities
are
interested
in

but

Highland

Park

show
prep

shows

no

interest at all. When a school is high
athletically it is also high scholasticly.
It’s time sports took its rightful
place at Highland Park High school.
There is nothing more American than
the American Sports. Come
land
Parkers,
GET

on HighSPORTS

MINDED.

Jerry

Walz,

and Frank Rushowitz.
Cheerleading
Varsity—Gorgianne Glader, Emily

Brande,

Lee

Bruno,

Anne

Martin,

and Norine Harrison.
Frosh-Soph
Certificates—Nancy
Bernardi, Barbara Button, Dorothy
Frolich, Virginia Loeb, Gloria Dennis,
Dexter Guantlett, Carol Metzenberg,
Marcia Riggs.

possible

In League Opener
The

Highland

baseball
Grover,
schedule

Park

High

school

team, coached
by George
will open its 1947 league
Monday afternoon at 4:00

p.m. against New Trier
school Athletic Field.

New

Trier defeated

another

opportunity

tough

Today

team

Face
Little

the

as

in

spring

of

report

gaining

at

the

High

Highland

Park

this

Niles
Giants

training

Exhibition

much

the

coach

year.
will

travel

Game

These drills will consist of learning
new plays and working on the old
ones. Scrimmages will also be on
order with possibly a few games. Mr.
Floyd stated he would like to end
the spring training with an exhibition
intra-squad game, possible for the
elementary schools of Highland Park.
Spring training is the time when
a boy can gain for himself valuable
experience for next fall. This is an
opportunity that no boy will want
to miss. Report for Spring football
next Tuesday, April 15.
HIGHLAND PARK
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE—1947
(Suburban

H. P. Nine Face
New Trier Here

school to even come close to the boys
twice last year in league competition.
of other schools where facilities are
are expected to have
|The
Terriers
so much better?

Need New Gym
A certain small downstate
town
with a population of approximately
3,000 is building a new gym for its
high school which will seat close to

as

has more
time and assistance
to
offer a boy. Every boy, who is not
now participating in another sport,
or who is not a senior is urged to
come out for spring drills. A position
on the team can be gained only thru
hard work and experience.

is quite
frequently referred to as
Highland
Park’s
“Cracker-box” or
part of American education, and have’ “Match-box”’.
boomed up so tremendously in the
There is also not enough adult insports

should

boys

needed football knowledge and ex-—
perience. It also offers an opportunity to learn the essential fundamen-

Sports On Decline At HPHS
While No One Seems To Care
While

many

cellent

i”

By Ray Geraci
Sports Editor

fall’s
tough
seen why as

Tuesday. Practice suits will be issued.
Spring training offers a boy an ex-

ol

coach, and Mr. Car-

successful season, while the basketball teams: had one of their worst
seasons in years. The varsity swimming team took third in the Suburban League, losing’ only to New Trier
and

W777

basketFrosh-

spoke briefly about this year’s season
before awarding the letters.
This
year’s
varsity
and
FroshSoph

APir

next
Looking
over
schedule, it is clearly.

League)

Sat,
Sat.,
Sat.,
Sat.,

October 4
October 11
October 18
October 25

‘Morton
(There)
New Trier (Here)
Thornton
(Here)
Evanston (There)

Sat.,

November

1

Proviso

Sat., November

8

Wauk’s’n

(Here)

(There)

Virginia Ugolini Dies
Following Operation
Funeral
James

services

church,

were

Saturday

held

at

St.

at 10:30 a.m.,

for Virginia Faith Ugolini, 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Amerigo Ugolini of Great

Lakes,

IIl.

to Niles High school to face the Trojans in a non-league game. On Sat-

Virginia died on Thursday, April 3,
in St. Therese hospital in Waukegan

urday, April 12,
end it’s practice

following an operation.
Besides
her parents,

Highland Park will
games with a game

against Northbrook.
Suburban League Schedule
Mon., April 14 New Trier (Here)
Fri., April 18 Evanston
(Here)
Tues., May 13 Waukegan
(Here)
Sat., Apr. 26 Proviso (Here, 2 games)
Sat., May 3 Morton (Here, 2 games)
Tues.,

Sat.,

May

May

6

Evanston

10 Oak

Park

(There)

(There)

she

vived by two brothers.
Burial was in St. Mary’s
Highland Park.

is

sur-

cemetery,

(2 Games)
Tues., May 13 Waukean
Sat., May 17 Thornton
(2 Games)
Tues., May 20 New Trier

(Here)
(Here)
(There)
£

|
4"

�High School Activities

pena

Girl’s Club To Hold Candy ets

Service

EXCAVATING.
;

@

®

LOUIS
DAY

AND
“A

Wild

Brass

Rods

for

Veteran

our

H. P. 4662

Foreign

Wars”

of

Squirrelproof

Birds Add

PHONE

Feeders

Charm

are

now

to

Your

as

Ave.

feeding.
$5.50

the easy B-v way

Feoge Reclon
Food Consultant to
Wilson &amp; Co,

no

April

Township

high

tickets

of

will

be

student

if
is

follows:

the

close

of

the

junior

year.

Like

one

will

Plans

rd Plans Last
chool Year

for

the

Junior

Prom,

which

understood,

has

been

secured

to

sup-

ply the music.
A
contest
dance will be

for
held

the name
of the
in the near future.

(More High School
News on Page 32 and 34)

Prices

Phone Maj. 1067

Ger

B-V GRAVy—
2 tbsp. fat or
+++ 2 tbsp. flou
drippingo
se
r ee. 1 lou
i i
wit o
e
&lt;n pe
es
: 3+ Mele fat
cra blend
.
wel]. Add Wa ,
guid cen
smooth, When
ho
taddB
as been dissol
ich
ved i
of the hot
oe
mixture,
;

F

Mec

CATALOG

Honors

4

A’s,

Barnard

Barnes,

Al

Baum,

Patricia
Bartel,
Hartman
Canon,
Mary Compere, Carol Coppens, Jerry Darby, Kenneth
Harder, Charlotte Harris,
Bob
Haskins,
Susan
Lautman, Sam McMaster, Jean Miller, Patty. Peterson,
Jay
Plotkin,
Louise Pollack, William
Ruehberg,
Wendy Savin, Annabeth Sears, Barbara Tuerk, Barbara Wagner, John
Weber, Nan Wiener.
3 A’s-2 B’s, Ronald
Bailey
and:
Winogene Sturgis.
3 A’s-1 B, Barbara Alexander, Connie Alexander, Jim Aronson, Joan
Avery, Carolyn Baird, Kate Becker,
Marilyn Berg, Jeanne Bertrand, Kean
Block, Bernadine
Booth,
Marjorie
Brown, Joverne Bulmer, Nancy Ca-

hill, Joan Clemence, Jack Close, Rae
Collard, Margie Demichelis, Richard
Rosalind

Fox,

Barbara

Halsted,

Nancy Johnson, Barbara Lasier, Ann
Lawton,
Frances
Manfredini,
Bill
Notz,
Evelyn
Pritchard,
Adrienne
Rebechini, Warner Rosenthal, Janice
Schick, Sue Straus, Delores Strauss,
Peter Taussig, Nancy Thorsen, Caryl
Wagner, Jerry Walecha, Ellen Whitney, Guy Wilbor, Regina Wirth and
Maruyn Wittelle.
2

A’s-3

B’s,

Nancy

Kilpatrick, John
Smith.
2

A’s-2

B’s,

Howe,

Rosenheim
Portia

Patty

and Joan

Allen,

Willard

Allen, Peter Armstrong, Sue Barker,
Nancy Bartell, Stephen Behr, Jessie
Belmonte, Lee Bruno, John Cleary,
Caroline
Cronkhite,
Aldo
Crovetti,
Pat D’Sinter, Mike Farrell, Gordon
Garrett, Gertrude
Goodman,
Elsie
Greco, Hein Juergensen, Paula Kuhn,
Richard

Loewenthal,

Patricia

Lynn,

Joan Mandel, Bruce McClure, Beverly Mett,
Elaine
Mrazek,
Edward
(Continued on page 34)

OFFICE

Soe

ec

e

e

:

Some

Wilson’s B-V gs

ee ot

@ deli
centrated meat extr cious blend of con.
act and Select
ed vegetable flavors,

a

5 A’s, Geraldine Bailey and Matilda
Saphir.
4 A’s-1 B, Mary J. Eriksen, Ned
Greenberg, JoAnne Myer, Ruth Rogan.

Flinn,

| will be held Saturday, June 7, are
being formulated.
George
Burnett’s orchestra, it is

CEMETERY

Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

GRAVY

and

Junior B
Dance of

A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited

%oe Richer

Trier

the first test in April, this
be held at New Trier.

" Northshore Garden of Memories

Very Reasonable

New

reading,
math
reading,
chemistry,
biology, and physics.
On June 7, the college entrance
examination
board
will
administer
tests for colleges that requires tests
at

Tel. Glencoe 1559

THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN

the

examina-

Saturday,

comprehensive, social studies, French
reading,
German
readjng,
Spanish

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS
Drexel

at

board

on

8 :45—Scholastic aptitude test.
8:45—Comprehensive
math,
plus
short form of verbal section of the
scholastic aptitude test.
1:45—Achievement
test
(student
may take from one to three of the
following
tests
offered:
English

audubon yy workshop
520

entrance

will be held

First

admitted without this ticket, or
he comes late.
The schedule for the mornin

Audubon
Feeders
keep
birds
in full view while
SQUIRREL’S
DEFEAT
;
AUTOMATIC
FEEDER
SQUIRRELPROOF
“EYE-SAFE”
FEEDER
"“EYE-SAFE” FEEDER
ORANGE . FEEDER
f
Squirrelproof Stands for feeders
ATTRACTIVE
RUSTIC BIRDHOUSES

A

The following students at Highland
Park High school have been named
to the two honor rolls for the fourth
six weeks’ period:

College Board Exams
To Be Held at NTTHS
Saturday Morning

admission,

Garden

Se

First Honors, 82.

school in Winnetka.
Students must present

available

th

Second Honors at High School

12,

TAZIOLI
NIGHT

Award 119

College

&amp;

BSE

#

tions

AND TRENCH WORK
BLACK DIRT
FILLING DIRT
DRIVEWAYS BUILT

aR

LOOK
OUR

FOR
BIG

WARD
WEEK -

40°

G

yP

CIRCULAR
28 N. FIRST ST.
TELEPHONE 4800

beni
dell!

Sos

\
ee

‘Immediate

Typewriters, Adding Machines,
ut Pee Iculators, Registers,
\
Pj ck up and delivery.
511 Waukegan,
Tel. H. P. Highwood
3505

.

om as ta

ges

{

z
hla

Be

¥

Sales at Style Show, Operetta

Candy
sales will be held under
auspices of ‘the Girl’s club at the
Home Economics style show May 7
and the operetta May 3, it was announced this week. Contributions of
sweet wares for the two sales are
to be brought from their own homes
by the members.
The club has found such activities
profitable. The candy sale held during the spring play netted the organization approximately $50.

etd

�Me: std Stra. eas pe
oe shal
little daughter, Karen Sue, who had
been living in Winnetka, spent the
past two weeks with Mr. Willman’s
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alexander

Willman of Waukegan

road, and are

now living in their apartment in the
veterans’ quarters at Great Lakes.
Donna Marie Clavey, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Burr Clavey
of Highland Park was christened on
Sunday,
March
23 at Immaculate
Conception church with the Rev. John
P. O’Connell officiating.
Sponsors
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coleman
of Deerfield road.
Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Heinl and Mrs.
all of Highland
Elmer L. Clavey,
Park. Both Karen Sue Willman and
Donna Marie Clavey are great grandchildren of Burr H. Kress of Hazel
avenue, Deerfield.

Miss

Mary

Jane

is a teacher,

she

where

Mo.,

Groves,

was

Webster

Hall,

Nerinx

from

home

Greenslade

spending the Easter holiday with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greenslade and with her grandfather, B.
H. Kress, of 801 Hazel avenue.

"apis

Phone

Res.

Phone,

Deerfield

RELIABLE
708

Waukegan
J.

&amp;

C.,

Mrs.

W.

Wood

Dr. and
daughters,
spending
lowa, with
and Mrs.

St. Patl’s

stated.

home of their uncle and aunt, Mr. an
ox

this. week

Mrs.
J.
here from

Beverly

L.

5869

704

\-

POKORNY

Jr.’s

Bayard

Lillian.

Elmwood

Bowling

Waukegan

is

sister

the

at

visit

a

for

on

road.

Academy

Rd.—Deerfield

Tel. Deerfield
Open
Saturdays

Deerfield,

nieces,

place.

Hawaii

Bayard: home

Mrs.

are

Leonard Zangs and her two
and
the
Misses
Margaret

of

Circle

1 at dessert luncheon

at 1:15 p.m.

Mrs. R. G. Heupel and two
Suzanne and Betty, are
Easter
week
in Clinton,
Dr. Heupel’s parents, Mr.
G. W. Heupel.

Ozarks

the

“In

GARAGE

Road,

MILDRED

Park

and 7, are spending this week at the

Vacationing in the East are Mr.
hip last fall, is able to be up and
and Mrs. William Hinchsliff and their
around the house now.
The E. A. Wood family, formerly son, Robert, of Stratford road.
of 938 Rosemary terrace, moved away
after the beginning of the war. Their
Sunday guests at the Carl Horenson, Edwin, now;
married C and living berger home on Wilmot road were
in New York, is back with the mer- | Mr. x and Mrs. Thomas
Moran and
chant marine service.
In the navy, children of Mundelein, Mr. and Mrs.
prior to the war, he was taken a Jap Arthur Grundeis of Highland Park,
prisoner at Guam on the very first and Mr. and Mrs. George Horen-}
day and remained
in a camp
at berger and children of Deerfield road.
Zentsuga, Japan, until after hostilities |.
had ceased.
Mrs. Robert Herrmann of Wilmot
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Hansen (Jane
Wood) are still in Washington, D. road is hostess today to members of

Deerfield

250

Highland

- Donald and Richard Huhn, ages 8-

aZeaZeaZenZenTenZenTerTeaTenTenTenterTealerlen
tener len Ten Len sen sensor sen sen sen cen sen sen sea sense ase sen sen sen sea sea sea sey sen senor 64, SS

Lang,

of Evanston
Wood
Mrs. Edwin
at the home of
sperit Wednesday
Mrs. Lewis Ashman of Deerfield road.
Mrs. Ashman, who received a broken

Activities

Mr. and Mrs. Milton O. Olson and
son, Robert, of Lincolnshire Estates,
Crete,

Ill.,

visited

in

Deerfield

on

Sunday with their former neighbors,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wolf of West
Deerfield road and attended services
at the Presbyterian
church where
they had been members.
They were
dinner guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. E. Barrette of Warrington
road.
Mr. Olson served as attorney
of the village before they moved from
Deerfield.

GILLWEVE

BEAUTY

SALON

Miss Dorothy,

Mr.

Mr.

Gillen,

Weve

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling
and Shaping
Free Consultation

90

Bowling
and Sundays

762 Waukegan Rd.

Mrs. Andrew Huhn in Racine, Wis.
The Jerry Bryant family will be
moving to Duffy lane in.a month or

so.from Sauganash, Ill. They have
bought the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Rossman
to Westinaion.
Mr.

‘who

and

Mrs.

moved

months

Sunday at
man home

We

Franklin

Grimes

Waukegan

field road
two sons,
brides.

Tel.

Mrs.
;

Alex
i

Allan of Elm

POWDER

;

BOX BEAUTY

;

623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Frank
and daughter,
Julia
Expert
Permanent
Wavers
Try
our Circlette Wave
that is sprayed into your hair,

- Mr.

DEERFIELD

NEWS

NEWSPAPERS
Home Delivery

CIGARS

AGENCY

|

MAGAZINES
Service

(PENGUIN-DELL)
CIGARETTES

BOOKS

SOFT

758 Waukegan Rd.

DRINKS

Deerfield 175
&amp;

H.

SELIG

i

-

Road, Deerfield, Ill.

Selig
Haroid
Tel. Deerfield 155

LUCIUS

R.

Vant

ERSKINE

:

DEERFIELD
808

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of appliances

Tel.

Waukegan

Deerfield

Road

- Tel.

562—Eri¢

Deerfield

Banfield,

CAKES
122

Prop.

ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION

ESTATE AND INSURANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Ill.

29

Mercer
Lumber

Lumber

Companies

- Building Materials
612 Railroad Ave.
Tel.

-

Coal

Illinois

Deerfield

O.D.

—

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
, Phone
674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Road

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Deerfield,

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

DR. G. C. PARKNEN,

BAKE SHOP

Waukegan
Deerfield

Me

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DIRECTORY

BUSINESS
FROST'S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

Deerfield

Deerfield

street,

REALTOR
-

95

Available

on

SHOP

&amp; Company

W. R. MITCHELL

Always

several
guests

is now occupied by their
John and Tom, and their
ds

764 Waukegan

760

REAL

dinner

Mrs. Josephine
Mentzer of Oak +
Park spent Sunday with her sister,

Edward

Accounts

Road,

were

Established 1925
REALTORS
Real Estate—Loans

THE GEORGIAN SHOP
DRY GOODS and GIFTS
816

Fordham,

Waukegan

VANT

Road
806

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.
Telephone Deerfield 33

D.

ae

Fordham’s apartment on West Deer- —

WALLDREN

invite Charge

are

the William A. Tenner-_
on Oakley avenue.
The ©

Women’s. Apparel
635
Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield

who

Lyle

to

ago,

POCKET

Deerfield 884

—

2

st
yo

KNAAK’S PHARMACY
/
‘THEO J. KNAAK, R. Ph.
Est. 1884
Phone

1

nh

Deerfield,

eines:

OPTOMETRIST

Sanitary and Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR
BETTER
HOMES
758

Deerfield

Road

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND
SAUSAGE MARKET

DR. R. D. MOORE

M, A. FRANTZ

Tel.

813

Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

‘
880

419

Teleshond:

Deerfield

and

Deerfield

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting

577

Waukegan

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.
756 Waukegan

Roads

ba

VANT &amp; SELIG
EST. 1925
INSURANCE
764

in

all

its

branches

Waukegan Road - Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 155

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

DEERFIELD
Inc.

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

TELEPHONE

Day

Road

and

TAXI

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

Night

81

Service

Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers

Drfld. &amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield.

Tools
Goods —

Deerfield,
Il.

Telephone

295

ROYAL BLUE STORE
722 Deerfield Road—Tel. 707
“Best

Quality

Always”

GROCERIES — MEATS
FRESH

FRUITS

|

&amp; VEGETABLES

:

�oot

DOWNING’S FLOOR

Zinser

373

Roger

Williams

Ave.

Floors and
Floor Coverings

Floor

Tel. H.

typing

PRESERVE

and
Your

Tile

Sanding
Finishing

Service
in

“Protect the Things You Own”

Linoleums, Asphalt
Rubber

instruction

Small classes —
rapid progress
Classes begin once a month
For additional information
Visit or write or telephone
79 West Monroe St., Chicago
RANDOLPH
2464

SHOP
\

Personnel

Intensified

Wood

Roof

with our scientific treatment
applied hot.
The shingles still
retain their natural appearance.

and

Repairs

made

Thrills Audience
At Lincoln

if needed.

period

at the

school.

Bergstrom

chalk”,

led

on

breath

a

through

his

the

and

his

“magic

enthusiastic

taking

upper

audience

picture

peninsula

trip

of

Mich-

igan, to the Lake Vermillion country
in Minnesota, on to the Grand Teton
area in Wyoming and to Mt. Rushmore in South Dakota. “With a soft
stroke

P. 566

At Boy’s Club Banquet

School

here

and

a bold

stroke

there”

a drab piece of construction paper
became
alive and
breathing
with
color. Red summac and sugar maples
—a
shimmering
lake—a
sunset—
snow

tipped

mountain

peaks—all

these and many more scenes
brought to life by the Chicago
who
derives his inspirations
“mother

totel Sovereign

“There's

Decorated
Ballroom
Rooms for Weddings,

quets

and

Business
NOW

Swimming

Pool

Phone:

the

Public

P. O. Box 103
Ist Nat'l. Bk. Bldg. H. P. 750

at Granville

BRlargate

in

Neighborhood”

Midwest Asphalt
Roofing: Corp.

Meetings.
to

a ‘Midwest’ Roof

Your

and
Ban-

OPEN

Available

Kenmore

Without Obligation

8000

Eddie
point

“is

achieved

definite

a.trée

in

said

by’
the

Mr.

Bergstrom,

having

something

foreground,

Wilfred

Johnson,

Lloyd

Nolan

enjoy

parents

had

the

FENDER

PAINTING

and

We Match

BODY

any

REPAIR

HELP

Color

Unmarried

Jerry Darby Wins
Merit Certificate
Jerry

Ray

to

and liberty
our belief in
through the
Coolidge.

WANTED
general

office work: stenography, typing and ability to handle figures.
Small
office,
vacation
with pay, excellent salary to experienced person.

Write Box C-45, Care of Higha

‘

These services combine to transform a battered and shattered
fender or body
dent into a

&gt;|

_

smooth,

shining

job.

|

and

land

you

Drive

of

the

in today

word

handsome

utmost

in

have

Have a more slender, graceful figure. No exercising. No laxatives.
Nodrugs. With the simple AYDS
Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan
you don’t cut out any meals,
starches, potatoes, meats or butter,§
you simply cut them down. It’s
easier when you enjoy delicious
(vitamin fortified) AYDS candy
before meals Absolutely harmless.

long

overdue beauty treatment on your car

YOUR

SATISFACTION

IS OUR

In clinical tests conducted by medidoctors, morethan 100 persons
lost 14 to 15 Ibs. average in a
few weeks with AYDS
Vitamin
Candy Reducing Plan.

AIM

80-day supply of AYDS only
with results. MONEY BACK

PULVER-NASH, Inc.
660

Vernon

Avenue

Glencoe

Get SLIMMER

this vitamin candy way

satisfaction.
that

FAT?

674

that

a

he

a certificate

senior

school,

had

of merit

at

today

been
by

the

fall.

9,157 of the nation’s
high schools
participated in this contest, which is
financed by the company as one of
its public services. Two thousand and
forty-six
Illinois students
from
363

private, and

$2.25. If not delighted
on very first box.
Phone

WIEBOLDT’S
Walgreen’s, Gsell Phcy, Ravinia &amp;
Highland Park, Laegeler in Highwood, Baxter &amp; Orr in Deerfield,
Druce in North Chicago and all
leading drug counters everywhere.

the

parochial

competition,

schools
Principal

Wolters said.
Highland Park High’s winner is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Darby
of 1223 Llewellyn avenue. Planning
to

specialize

in

music,

he

hopes

to

enter Northwestern university following his graduation in June. Jerry is
very active in music and in the Boy
Scouts.
The three full-tuition college scholarships granted in Illinois this year
were won by Albert Cappelen, a student at Northbrook High school
Northbrook;
Richard
Hampsten,.

senior

at

school,

Charleston;

Charleston

in
a

Senior

High

Frank

Mun-

and

ger,
a student
at Fenwick
High
school in Oak Park.
Principal Wolters reported that 12
outstanding
seniors
of
Highland
Park High school were elected by
their

T00

and

News.

|&lt;

Our Expert Mechanics and Painters along
with the very latest in Modern Equipment
assure

Park

16,

High

Pepsi-Cola
Scholarship
board
as
runner-up for one of the 126 fouryear
college
scholarships
being
granted this year. As a certificate of
merit winner, Jerry will receive fifty
dollars when he enters college next

public,

for

Darby,

Park

Highland Park High, who stated that
38,364 candidates elected to represent

opportunity

woman

lieuteni

entered

EXPERT REPAIR WORK

the

program:

the artist last week.

Our doctrine of equality
and humanity comes from
the brotherhood of man,
fatherhood of God.
—Calvin

portrayed

ant.

Announcement of the award was
made by A. E. Wolters, principal of

chairman
for
the
Lincoln
School
PTA, has been instrumental in bringing outstanding talent to the school
throughout the year. It was chiefly
through her efforts that the children
and

Whittaker,

as

such

or: a rock”,

Mrs.

C.

inspirational stories of our time. In
the motion picture, “Captain Eddie’,

received

as_

James

father-son banquet to be sponsored
by the Boy’s club in the Highland
Park High school cafetetia Thursday, April 17, starting at 6:30 p.m.
Lt. Whittaker is the author of the
book, “We Thought We Heard the
Angels Sing”, one of the greatest

awarded

comments

Lt.

Rickenbacker, will be the high
of the entertainment
at the

he

running

“Perspective”,

Estimates

by

Highland

nature”.

when using chalk as the medium, of
beginning with strong basic colors—
then filling in with light tones to
produce the high: lights.

SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
Baked Idaho Potato
Salad Bowl with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Newly
Private

were
artist
from

talk

one of the men who spent 22 days
on a raft in the Pacific with Captain

worked were pertinent
and instructive.
He
stressed
the
importance,

His
GENTLEMAN’S SPECIAL
DINNER $2.50

A

C. J. Bergstrom, chalk-talk artist,
was guest speaker at the meeting last
Wednesday
of the Lincoln school
PTA
during the regular assembly
Mr.

Shingle

Te Will Jamen
WAH
Speak April 17

| Chalk
Talk Artist

classmates

to

try

for

the

schol-

arships. They were: Ronald Bailey,
Charles Baker, Jerry Darby, Mary
Jane Eriksen, Arthur Kaatz, Barbara
Lasier,

Patricia

Lynn,

enberg, Jr., Donald
Ruekberg,
Richard
and

Margaret

Going

Robert

Metz-

Nash, William
Schimmelpfeng,

Wolf.

Away for
Summer?

the

Rent your home to respons-_
ible couple.
It will be kept in
perfect condition.
Your lawn
and grounds will receive best
care. Only interested in summer
rental!
Excellent
references
furnished.
Phone
or
write Mr. Shorr.
Bus—214
W.
Ontario St., Chicago, Phone—
Whitehall
6626.
Res. Phone—
Boulevard 8479.

Be

:

AS Ee os on ee

i

tgs

oS

�This Month

©

in Your

Sewtce
‘

BULLETIN

There

are stories of twelve more

historic spots illustrated by John
McKee. The cover, designed in
response to many reader requests
for a map showing locations of
“Our

Landmarks,’

shows

the

sites and (listing) of all 57
landmarks treated to date in
the Northern Illinois historical series.
As Entertaining as Your Favorite Magazine

THE

Sewcce BULLETIN

Demmond

Building

Joliet

West
West

LB| }
ee

W|) L2S)

er

Inn

Dundee

=
--

———
=

Dundee

———

See

Sf

pean

&lt;-&gt;

Arlington Hotel

Methodist Meeting House

German Lutheran Church

Waukegan

Arlington Heights

near Western Springs

PUBLIC

SERVICE

COMPANY

OF NORTHERN

ILLINOIS

�MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED
No

Experience

Necessary

To fabricate essential electrical
| equipment
required
construction.
@

in

home

Drilling
eo
Tapping
e@
Assembly Operations
Phone

Northbrook

THE M. B.
Shermer Rd.

715

AUSTIN CO.
Northbrook

\High :School Will
| Participate in
Mooseheart Relays

1 Bol

To Give Spring

Concert April 18

. Highland
Park High school will
participate in the Mooseheart Invitational Relays meet to be held at the

The high school band and chorus
will present their spring concert FriIllinois
Memorial
Stadium. field at day evening, April 18, at 8:15 o’clock.
Among the many new numbers beModseheart, Ill, May 3. Events relearned
for this
occasion are
quiring preliminaries will be held in ing
“Joseph’s Lovely Garden”, “Praise
the morning.
Six relays are on the program, to the Lord’, “O Bone Jest,” and
including the James J. Davis medley “Madame Jeanette”.
and

the

Moose

Distance

medley.

This

The

by

Elgin, St. Edward’s, Evanston, Geneva, Glen Ellyn, Hinsdale, Joliet, La
Grange, Maine Township, Marengo,
Marmion,
Mooseheart,
Naperville,
New Trier, Oak Park, Oswego, Proviso, Riverside,
St. Charles, SycaWest

Chicago,

Wheaton,

and

397

Service

Avenue—Room

Highland

month’s

of

Telephone

taxes—One

collections

of

Deno

aH ey

Central

P.

12

1553

“WE

HAVE

WHAT

YOU

Lewis’

orchestra

has

been

Melchiorre

and

Charles

Marty;

Youth Authority to
Speak at Assembly

the

two-cent sales tax amounted
to a record-breaking—$15,278,144.

on
the

floor show—Janice Schick and Sally
Lautman; tickets—Nancy Zipoy and
Fred Greco.

Park
H.

will. be held
April 19, in

secured to furnish the music, and the
committee promises a swell evening
of dancing. There will be a floor
show and refreshments.
The
following
committees
have
been
chosen:
music—Fred
Greco;
decorations—Don Nash, Don Ryan,
Eddie
Piacentini;
refreshments—

MUS
eee
oe
RN

sched-

boys’ gym.
The dance has been named
the
"Yts'a. its a
? is the question
that most of us are tryingto figure
out. Mystery surrounds its meaning.
Johnny

Quick

was

The annual Hobo Hop, sponsored
the Student Council of Highland

Park
high
school,
Saturday
evening,

York.
When the white man discovered this country, the Indians were running it. There
were no taxes. There was no
debt. The women did all the
work. ... The
white man
thought they could improve
on a system like that.

previously

High School Hobo Hop
To Be Held April 19

Batavia, Belvidere, Bloom Township,
Blue Island, DeKalb, Downers Grove,

more,

concert

uled for March 30, but because of
the district music contest the preceding day, it was cancelled.

special field events are 100 yard dash,
high jump, broad jump, pole vault,
shot put, discus, high and low hurdles and the Mooseheart Mile.
Other schools participating include
Argo, ‘Aurora (East), Aurora (West),

Speaking

Taek:
|
Roll |

ad Chorus

NEED”

Dr.
First

Carl

S. Winters,

Baptist

Church

pastor
of

Oak

of ‘the
Park,

ROOFING
@

Professional

@

Amateur

SIDING

@ Schools
Complete Stock:
® Grumbacher
@ DeVoe
@ Prang
® Milton Bradley
@

Favor

Picture

Gutters

&amp;

Ruhl

CAULKING
Repaired

Coated

Suburban Roofing Co.

Framing

LARSEN &amp; PETERSEN
.
PAINT CO.
Hubby:
“Darling, what’s
wrong? Why the bandage on
your eye?”
Wife: “Don’t be silly, that’s
my new hat.”

—

Cleaned,

Free Estimates
Highland Park 1767

120 N. Genesee
Majestic 27
Waukegan

ushs
a

ROSES ... ROSES ... ROSES

With the arrival of spring
hat season, we are reminded
—Natural Gas will soon be
here.

eeeeeaeoaeoee

1.80

P@ACO § oo cc vk 0d sce dsscwce’
Lowell Thomas ..........

Desire

B00
2.40

Specially

“The Friendly People”

EXTERIOR

60 Green

Treated

Varieties

Colonial

T. P. “Tom” CLARK
Div. Mgr.

eeeeeeeeeoeeeeae

ees

;
CLIMBING ROSES
Dr. Van Fleet...
Pauls Scarlet... -1.30
Blaze... .1.80
Crimson Rambler... .1.30
Primrose. .. .1.30
_ Common

North Shore Ga4 Co.

Katherine T. Marshall ... 2.40
Mme. Chaing Kai Shek .. 2.40
Mirandy

Bay Rd.

and

Weber,

Gretchen
Nancy

Winslow

Wiltberger,

Zipoy.

‘Whitman,

Theo

Zaeske,

|

- Second

Honors

1 A-4 B’s, Russell Clark, Barbara
Flynn, John Hill and Robert Peet.
1 A-3 B’s, Manly Anderson, Kenneth Arenberg, Louise Bertrand, Ann
Boyd, John Churchill, Barbara Clemence, Jim Dell, Patricia Dier, Marilyn
Erikson, Joanne Febel, May Ferguson, Claire Feuchtwanger, Alice Gilbert, George Glader, Edward Haup,
Bill

Hesler,

David

Hutchinson,

Toyoko

Wakumoto,

Hybrid

Garden
DECORATORS

Zahnle.

First -honors were
second honors by 82.

won.

by

Open Sundays

119,

Friday, April 25.
Dr. Winters, who was in charge of
the young people’s group in Chatauqua, New York, will base his talk
upon his studies and personal experiences in the field of youth work.

FOR

LOCAL
DELIVERIES
PROMPT
SERVICE
Phone
Highland Park 570

212 Railway

Ave.

Highwood

2.40

.1.30

“Glass Age”
MIRRORS AND GLASS

S

Strains

or.

&gt;

EXQUISITE DESIGN
Glenview,
Glenview

Winnetka

Bill

Wright.
:
3 A’s,
Marjorie
Baker,
Barbara
Britton,
Kenneth
Hirsch,
Kathie
Laing, Yvonne Luthy, Naomi Madson, Joseph Meggiorini, Philip Rennick, ‘Holly
Stair
and
Lawrence |

Glad Bulbs
New

Jerry

Juhrend, Helen Kee, Pat Kelley, Bob
Kohn,
Leo
Lenzini, Joyce
Lynch,
Charles Marty, Mary McNeal, Barbara Michaels,
Elizabeth
Newman,
Marilyn
Peterson,
Bob
Phillips,
George
Pope,
Adrienne
Porges,
Robert Rietz, Ronald Ringer, Barbara
Robert Reitz, Ronald Ringer, Barbara
Riskand, Robert Schaal, John Sears,
Anne Silverman, Sue Sparling, Bruce
Spencer, Joan St. Cyr, Jayne Swinea,
Barbara Weil, Roland Zagnoli.
4
B’s,
Jane
Barton,
Barbara
Bletsch, Adeline Cassel, Gloria Cortesi,
Robert
Demichelis,
Virginia
Freberg, John Gherardini, Lorraine
Hatch,
Arline
Johnson,
Virginia
Loeb, Mary Lomoro, Marjorie Marshall, Jill Moore, Bob Murphy, Don
Nash,
Edmond
Nichols,
Dorthea
Schwennecker, Philip Schwimmer,
May Selfridge, Carole Spachner, Dick

National Delivery
Service

1947 Winner Rubaiyat, $2.50
Hearts

Dorie

Vanoni,

Oak Park, Ill, and a minister of the
Oak Park Pulpit of the Air, will
speak .to the students of Highland
| Park high school in an assembly
Of course there have been
some
improvements.
Take
water heating, for instance,
the new fast Automatic Gas
Water heaters are not only
speedy,
but
they
will
be
cheap to operate with Natural Gas ... Ordered yours?

_ (Continued i pagerai
Neisser, Harold Nelson, Sue Ostrander, Ellen Pierce, Donald Piper, Pattie Porter, Helen Robertson, Laurel
Rosenthal, Janine Ross, Don Ryan,
Richard
Schimelpfeng, Freddie
Schweiger, Marilyn Sheahen, Richard
Sheridan, Nell Taussig, Jean Troxel,

132

III.
122R_

-

—

�WELCOME 10. CHURCH

God should have priority on your time.

Spend some hours in church

The Woman’s Society of Christian Service meets the THIRD TUESDAY
of each
month at the church at 8 p.m.
Mrs. L.
D. Fuller, president.

ZION

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
ge and High street
Highwood
Herbert W. Linden, Pastor
SUNDAY,
April 13,
9:30 a.m. Church school.
10:45
a.m. Morning
worship.
Anthem
by the choir.
Sermon theme: “The Risen
Lord Calls to Work.”
Rally or North Shore Luther leagues at
Immanuel
Lutheran
church,
Waukegan.
Sessions at 4 and 7 p.m.
Visit of Lutheran Brotherhood on Thursday
evening
this
week
to Albany
Park
Lutheran church in Chicago.
;
YWMS
meets on Tuesday,
April 15 at
the
home
of
Miss
Verna
Hobjer,
600
Sunderlin street, Waukegan at 8 p.m.

FIRST
South

UNITED EVANGELICAL CHURCH
“A Community: Gospel Church
Green Bay road and Laurel avenue
R. S. Wilson,
Pastor
Tel.

H.P.

1731

SUNDAY,
April 13,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school, classes for all
ages.
10:45
a.m.
Hour
of
worship.
“The
Effect of Sin On
Body
and
Mind.”
An
exposition of the latter part of the first
chapter of Romans.
7 p.m. Christian Endeavor for youth.
7:45 p.m. Evening Gospel service.
The
pastor
will
preach
on
the
“Amusement
Question.”
WEDNESDAY,
April 16,
8 p.m. Mid-week
service
of prayer at
the church.
THURSDAY, April 17,
8 p.m. The annual public birthday meeting
of the
Women’s
Missionary
society
will be held at the church.
Rev. William
Dillon of the Sunshine Gospel mission is
to be present and
show
his pictures
of
life on North Clark street in Chicago, as
well as summer
camp work done by the
mission for neglected children of the city.
Mr. Dillon showed
these pictures to the
Men’s
fellowship
meeting,
a month ago,
and
the
interest
in them
was
so great
that he is invited to return and
repeat
the showing for the benefit of those unable
to attend the Men’s fellowship.
Mr. Dillon is also a song composer and will pre-

THE

WESLEY
METHODIST
CHURCH
North avenue and Lauretta place
William G. Overend,
Minister
SUNDAY,
April 13,
9:45 a.m. Sunday: school for all departments.
Mrs. Ira Breakwell, superintendent,
Ruben
Olson, assistant superintendent.
7s 11 a.m. Morning worship.
Sermon topic:
Our Awful Responsibility.”
MONDAY,
April -14,
There will be no official board meeting.
TUESDAY,
April 15,
Woman’s
society
of Christian
Service
meeting at the church.
WEDNESDAY, April 16,
Dinner sponsored by WSCS.
THURSDAY,
April 17,
7:30 p.m. Choir practice.
The official board
meets
the SECOND
anes
of each
month
at the church
a
p.m.

of his own compositions

at this

CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
387
Hazel
avenue
This church is a branch of The Mother
Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Mass.
The
Sunday
morning
services
is held
at
11
o’clock
and
the
Wednesday
evening
meeting
which
includes
testimonies
of Christian Science healing is at 8 o’clock.
The subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all
Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday,
April 6, was:
“UNREALITY”
The Golden Text was:
“Every
tree that bringeth not forth
good fruit is hewn down, and cast into
the fire’ (Matt. 7:19).
Among
the
citatinos
which
comprised
the Lesson-Sermon was the following from
the Bible:
“Be
not thou
therefore
ashamed
of
the testimony
of our Lord, nor of me
his prisoner: but be thou partaker
of
the afflictions of the gospel according
to the power of God: Who
hath saved
us, and called us with an holy calliny,
not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which
was
given
us
in Christ
Jesus
before
the
world
began,
but
is
now.
made
manifest by the appearing of our Saviour
Jesus Christ who hath abolished death,
and hath brought life and immortality

|

WEEK

END

PRICES—THURSDAY,

HAMBURGER
Fresh

Fancy

Frying

Roasting

|

Chickens | Chickens

|

Ib. 39%
CHICKEN

89c

BREASTS

The pound

SHOULDER

Dressed

Chickens | Turkeys
Ib,

kb. AQ:

Fresh

29¢

AQ

2c |

bb. 39%

CHICKEN ‘LEGS AND
THIGME he

Rib

Rib Roast

Pork

BEEF

Roast

6th &amp; 7th

3-Ib. cuts

Rib

Ib. 39%

89c

Ib. 39%

LEG

'». 49c

EVISCERATED

0’

ee

LAMB

Ist to 5th
Ribs

Ib. 49%

re Ac

BEEF
Tenderloins

ere
BACON

HAMS

Ib. 59°

Ib. 59 VYre

Whole
Ib. 59°

1 9c

es

LAMB CHOPS». 29c DUCKLINGS '. 59¢|Frankfurters

COCKTAIL

CAMPBELL’

BLACK

VEGETABLE

JUICE

Grade

Limit

2 Cans

SOUP

BEAN

SALMON

FANCY

A

PEACHES

3%

2 Cans

Value

TTT

2 Cans

rT TTT TT TTT TTT ett ttt

Can

10c

Lasts

Eddy:
“This,

Scriptures”

is

Science:

the

by

Mary

doctrine

that divine

of

Love

While

Supply

Can

While

Supply

5c

Lasts

The Can
Lasts

—

Baker —

Christian

cannot

be de-

prived
of its manifestation,
or object;
that joy’ cannot be turned into sorrow,
for sorrow is not the master of joy; that
good can never produce evil; that matter
can never produce mind nor life result
in death . . . Suffering, sinning, dying
beliefs are unreal.
When divine Science
is universally understood, they will have
no power over man, for man is immortal
and
lives
by
divine
authority.”
(pp.
304, 76).

©

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION
CHURCH
Deerfield and Green Bay road
Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison, Pastor
Rev. Edmund J. Skoner,
Rev. John P. O’Connell, S.T.D.
MASSES
Sundays—6
:30, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 and 12
noon.
Week-days—6
:30, 8:15.
CONFESSIONS
and
Friday
first
of
eves
Saturdays,
Holidays, 4 and 7:30 p.m.
BAPTISMS
or at other times upon
Sundays—1:30,

Rt.

request.

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Laurel avenue and Mc
ern street
Lester H. Laubenstein, Minister
H.P. 3522
street—Phone
24 McGovern
SUNDAY, April 13,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school in all departments.
11 a.m. Divine worship; sermon by the
Rev. Lester H. Laubenstein, minister. The
Little Heralds will meet under the leadership of Helen Hecketsweiler.
3
7 p.m. Evangelical Youth Fellowship.
April

15,

THURSDAY,

April

17,

8 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal.
SATURDAY,
April 19,
10:30 a.m. Bethany Choristers

rehearsal,

REFORMED
EVANGELICAL
ST. JOHNS
avenue
Green Bay road and Homewood
Alvin S. Kniker, Pastor
April 13,
SUNDAY,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
April 14,
MONDAY,
7:80 p.m. Meeting of the Youth Fellowchurch. basement.
the
at
ship
THURSDAY, April 17,
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
awaits

welcome

A cordial
service.

you

our

all

at

EVAN. LUTHERAN CHURCH
West
Central avenue
K. Platzer, Pastor
Tel. H.P. 950
SUNDAY, April 13,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
\
The ser10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
mon text is Ephesians 3:14-21; “The Answer to Faul’s Prayer for Growth.” |
at
worship
morning
Early
a.m.
9:15
Lake Forest in the American Legion hall,
McKinley and Wisconsin avenues.
3:30 p.m. Walther League rally.
H.

;

16,

April

WEDNESDAY,

April

17,

Discussion

meeting

the

at

WELCOME
TO CHURCH
HIGHLAND PARK PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect avenues
Church Phone H.P. 263
Rev. Louis W. Sherwin, D.D., Minister
Miss Sallie Lee,
Director of Religious Education
SUNDAY,

9:30

April

a.m.

13,

Church

department,
Primary
ior department.

school.

Beginners

department

and

Jun-

9:55 a.m. Choir rehearsal.
11 a.m. Church school.
The Intermediate
department
(7th
and
8th
Grades)
meets
in
the
Parish
house;
the
High
school groups meet in the church.
11 a.m. Morning worship.
The church
as
always
welcomes
the
visitor
in our
service.

The

RED, 59c Value
Limit

FESTIVE

Supply

15 VALUE
Limit

CORONATION

While

the

8 p.m. Adult
parsonage.

Gal. 6 2c

The

39c Value

to

THURSDAY,

IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 25th SUMMER IN HIGHLAND PARK
WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING SUPER BARGAINS
V-8

Key

at Skokie, IL,
8 p.m. Circuit Meeting
Rev.
The
Niles Center and Lincoln place.
a demonstraconduct
will
Merkens
G.
A.
tion on visual education.

MILK

Whole

(II Tim.

REDEEMER

CHICKEN WINGS &amp;
NBO

gospel”

8 p.m. Monthly meeting of the Philathea
class in the home of Mae Meierhoff, 445
Glencoe avenue.
WEDNESDAY,
April 16,
Fellowship
Church
Mid-week
8 p.m.
Service under the leadership of Dr. E. D.
of the
meeting
postponed
The
Fritsch.
will be held after
officers
and
teachers
the devotional service.

SATURDAY

ALL BEEF
FRESH GROUND

Stewing

|

FRIDAY,

the

The
Lesson-Sermon
also
included
the
following
passages
from
the
Christian
Science textbook, “Science and Health with

TUESDAY,

22-24 NORTH FIRST ST. S PHONE H.P.1676

I

to, Heks through

FIRST

BR OS.

RAPP

B

sent some

meeting.
The
general
public
is invited
to attend.
FRIDAY, April 18,
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
MONDAY,
April 21,
The Father-Son Dinner is scheduled for
the
Highland
House
on North
Sheridan
road.
All men are invited and those who
can are to bring a son for the dinner. The
Rev. Howard Jones of Milwaukee, Wis. is
listed as the speaker.

3 5c

7:15 p.m. Tuxis society will meet in the
Parish house.
There will be a discussion
led by the Seniors—‘‘Should
We
Always
Tolerant?”
Deerfield
Tuxis
will be
‘Be
our guests.
MONDAY,
April

10

a.m.

meeting

in

14,

Woman’s”

Association

the

house.

Parish

Board

TUESDAY, April 15,
7:30 p.m. Boy
Scout Troop
324 meeting in the Scout room.
*
WEDNESDAY,
April 16,
7:15 p.m. Rehearsal for the choirs.
THURSDAY, April 17,
‘
10:30
a.m.
Women’s
Bible
class conducted by Mrs.
Arthur
F. Tylee at the
Highland Park Public Library.
All women
in the community are invited.

:

�es

Home Economics
s ;

is

(Continued

equipped

with

the St. Paul, Minn. "echeols
coming to Highland Park.

from

page

11

electric

The

5)

Park

also

receive

a

course

in Interior Decorating in which they
study floor plans, all types of architecture, pictures, and ceppery and rug
materials.

_

Clothing

betore’

department

is

Homemaking III and IV will be
introduced at the school this coming
year, when the girls will have the
opportunity of doing advanced work
in the department.
Miss Cairncross has been teaching

Custom, education, and fashion form
the transient standards of mortals. Immortality, exempt from age or decay,
has a glory of its own,—the radiancé of
Soul.
—Mary Baker Eddy

at Highland Park High school for: the

_ past seven years. She has a bachelor’s degree from University of Minnesota and a master’s degree from
*
Columbia university.
She taught in

MARKETING
with
LLL Meas
When April showers come your way, do you have to brave
enough

you

have

. or

..

marketing

to go

rain

the

staples

and canned goods on hand to tide you over till the sun
shines again? If you haven’t, there’s no time like the present
for acquiring a “rainy day” shelf . . . and no place like
the A&amp;P for stocking it with fine foods at thrifty prices!
to use the product. For example: ;
A TOAST TO THIS TOAST
I was about to buy a can of A&amp;P
You'll toast cinnamon toast made
BRAND peaches for a pie when
this way: Mix % cup powdered
the manager pointed out that
sugar with 1 tsp. cinnamon, and
IONA peaches would be just as
combine with 4 tbsps. butter,
good for that purpose because
creamed. Toast 4 slices of
they’re equally nutritious, though

SS A An,

\

N aly
Qo
7

ENRICHED

not as fancy.

broiler

till

it

bubbles. I always use A&amp;P’s
MARVEL ENRICHED WHITE
BREAD
because it toasts so
evenly, and is
guaranteed fresh
by the date on the wrapper.
READ

’EM

AND

Since then

and

to
make
stiff
dough. Chill 1 hr.
toll out; cut into
6 to 8 2- ‘inch rounds; put % tsp.
ANN
PAGE
GRAPE
JAM
in
center of each and fold over. Press :
edges with fork; prick top. Bake
10 mins. in very hot oven, 500°F.

%

ac-

cording to standards set up by the
Department

of Agriculture.

A&amp;P

BRAND is Grade A; SULTANA,
Grade B; and IONA, Grade C

- -.

and

we

housewives

can

cut

our food bills by buying the grade

that’s best for the way

we

intend

succeed

with

Scotts

of Scotts Weed

Lawn
Control

Care

products.

to banish

First

dandelions,

plantain, buckhorn and the like. Next, restore grass health
and color with a meal of Scotts Turf Builder. Fill in bare spots
with vigorous growing Scotts Seed.
SCOTTS
WEED
CONTROL—Quick
destruction
of weeds
without harm to grass. $1.25, $3.85.
SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—Complete food for grass. Quick
acting and long lasting. 25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft. 50
Ibs. - $3.75 feeds 5,000 sq. ft. \
SCOTTS LAWN
SEED—Triple clean, 99.91%
weedfree for
lawns in full sun, light shade. 1 Ib. $1.25 5 Ibs $6.25
25 Ibs.
$29.85.
Scotts for Dense Shade, same prices.

HUSENETTER

HARDWARE

365 Roger Williams

Tel. H. P. 4387

CATALOG

OFFICE

(and who doesn’t?).
Sift 1 cup
flour and % tsp. salt; cut in % cup

shortening;

graded

can

the magic

QUICK TURNOVER
Here’s a turnover that’s quick to
click with folks who enjoy A&amp;l’s
rich ANN
PAGE GRAPE JAM

REAP!

are

call on

I’ve been

In talking to the manager of my
A&amp;P the other day, I made a
very interesting discovery. He
told me that A&amp;P’s canned fruits
vegetables

Anyone

reading the back panels of all
labels very carefully . .. and
profitably. I recommend that you
“read ’em and reap”, too! You'll
be surprised how much helpful
information. they give.

WHITE BREAD
on 1 side, spread
) mixture on other
side, and cook under

in

charge of Miss Dora Bean, who received her bachelor’s degree at Parsons college, did:graduate work at
Iowa State college, and is now working on a master’s degree at Columbia.
The nursery school is under the
supervision of Mrs. Nondas Rothenberger.
Mrs. Rothenberger’s background includes a bachelor’s degree
from University of Minnesota; she
has served as a public health nurse,
and has work at University of Washington and Purdue university.

sewing

_ machines and has a complete fitting
room.
Girls studying Home Economics at
Highland

eee

9

cup

ped

cheese

and

2 t

tbsps.

cold

Ee

a er

Wl) W),/
iy

eres.

re

wlli

wa 6

ie

.
yp

en

DRESS UP
YOUR HOME
with Wards new Wallpaper.
LUCKIES
°
CHESTERFIELD
OLD GOLD
PHILIP MORRIS’

PALL MALL
RALEIGHS
e
e

KOOL
REGENTS

(Caniels subject to stock on hand)

Sunshine, Wings, Carton $1.15
NO

LIMIT—AIl

Orders

Cigarettes

Guaranteed

_ Thousands
~~ ne

of

rege
IN TH

‘ae

7

Insured
FRESH

Satisfied Customers.
shipped promptly od
check or
CIGARETTE MAIL momnke' COMPANY
ct
IDDLE WEST. Est. Over 25 Years

6OEDWARD

SALES

Carton of 10 Pkgs.
(200 Cigarettes)
MINIMUM
3 CARTONS
Include

for

Tired of looking at the same old designs? Then
give your rooms a lift with Wards new wallpapers! We have a wide assortment of patterns
for every room in the house! Our stocks are
complete and low-priced . . . from 8c to $3.00 a
roll. So come in today and make your selections from our big sample books!

postage

and
service
within
150 miles — 12c for
2 cartons — add ic
for
each
additiona!
carton.
Prices subfect to change.

CO.

.

HAMMOND
INDIANA

Telephone 4800

28

N.

Highland

First

St.

Park, Ail.

�SAVE 45% ON BREAD!

Deerfield

Bowling Academy

Compare! Top Taste Bread
MONDAY
EVENING
Victory Rollers
Theo Hamill and Velma Vanderbloomen tied for high individual game
with

scores

high

individual

of

211.

Velma

series

of

also

is your best Bread buy,

for quality - for goodness.

had

539.

16-OZ.
LOAVES

The

Haven
team
had
high
team
single
game
of 832, and DBA, high team
series of 2323.

ae
=AGAR'S=

Standings:
I
ee
iy ee
| ae pe 64-26
PER FERUOOy
hi Vad ic cy ek ee
64-26
NNONA
ET ese iy eck oe ekg es} 59-31
Mac’s

Pte

heat

asin

eta eo eta

nara pe

&gt;.
~~

os

38-52
36-54
27-63
26-64

YOUNGBERRY,

BOYSENBERRY

DRINK

VEGETABLE

make

up,

so

it

97%

into

third

spot,

NaNGE Jul
“UNSWEETENED

BLENDED

BABY FOODS

in the
Braun

43,-OZ. D5
JARS
BARRINGTON

You will all probably wonder why
ne scores were mentioned.
The answer is plain and simple—no scores
were turned in to be put in the newspaper. There were
more
400 series
than
at any other
time
this year,

HOLSUM

will bowl

our

pair

I

noticed

that

there

PEANUT

BUTTER

Peanut Creme
PEANUT

‘$2 38¢

BUTTER

That

is

how

hard

it happened
weep, but I

the

is a true

CHICKEN

NOODLE

20

TEAM

Wyler’s Mix
MULE

last
was

place you find the word SYMPATHY
is in a dictionary. Geo. Moen and
Bruno Scapecchi, bowling in a jackpot game, each
frame
with a

had 167 in the
spare
in the

and

figured

they

two

together

the

“cinch”.

boys
So the

got

seventh
eighth,

had

a
and

decided to split the winnings—it all
looked good as they had a thirty-two
lead with only two frames to go.
Little Midge got a strike in the eighth
and

Bruno

picked

a

cherry

ninth and Geo. got a rail. To
a long story short, when the
was over the boys really
neither had won the pot,

in

the

make
game

Chamber

of

Commerce

Chamber
of Commerce
secretary
reports that “Lucky Park avenue too
three more, as did
unlucky
Clay
(Continued

on

Page

41)

REGUAR

INSTITUTE

DRAIN

PIPE

be

OR

GRIND

DRIP

Natco Coffee ‘ii A7c
Quick and Easy to ae

©

Bisquick
PORK

WITH

xe, 47¢

ide

Heinz Beans ‘597; 17¢

SNIDER'S OR DEL MONTE

“mn. *19¢

Catsup

‘i; 39c

Peanut Butter
CLEANER

222°725¢

‘5 45c

Nat'l Coffee

‘°&amp; 37c

CleanserPads "V

ie tae

Wallpaper

“can 17

CLEANER

Drain-e-ze

21¢

gee

2 "ON 19¢

TOMATOES |
CELLO

RED
RIPE
FIRM

93°

TUBE

FRESH ASPARAGUS »&lt;. 19°
PORTO

LARGE

FRESH

RICAN

Vams .. 412s. 29°

Carrots . sUNer

fie

;

BLUING

FLAKES

Blue

Suds

HURTS

ONLY

...:.:

Pees1°

2\/o-OZ.

DIRT

: Kitchen Klenzer . 3 cans 20°
Woodbury Soap... REG.
fax 12°
.

14-OZ.

FACIAL

oo

FLORIDA

CHERRY

JUICE

Oranges (0 .,;. 69°
“ICEBERG

HEADS

RED

NEW POTATOES

4

2 .,; 25°
SEEDLESS

GRAPEFRUIT
Cc

TEXAS

Rhubarh
TEXAS

LETTUCE

blushed as
and Midge

had the money. It’ll be a long time
before any of the boys start splitting
in the seventh or eighth frame again.
TUESDAY EVENING

DUCK

CLIMAX

and

week. Read
it and
told that the only

FLAKES

SOUP

Borax

REGULAR OR DRIP GRIND

35°

xe: 286

were

story

SOAP

HOUSEHOLD

CRACKERS

or ASc

16-OZ.

WAX

Chiffon Flakes

FLAVORKIST

was

alleys

FLOOR

_

Wilbert’s ....... er, O9C

Peanut Crunch *9% 22¢

exactly TWO strikes on the “Brooklyn Side”, which is quite unusual.
running.
The following

NO-RUB

PACKED

Sanka Coffee

JUICE

46-OZ.
CANS

DONALD

Saltines

and the boys are really bumping
their heads against a stone wall. The
alleys were extremely slick, and on

HALL

Instant Coffee 72% 39c
HOLSUM

Duffy

2

STRAINED FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES

CAN
2 %x67 23¢

Rice Krispies

Fancy Florida Unsweetened
Stock up! at this low Price!

BEECH-NUT

extending

16-OZ. AT:

KELLOGG'S

cé

OR

ORANGE

at a later

and

FREE

VACUUM

their winning streak to seven games.
Rich
Seul’s took the odd game
from Somenzi and Son and here, too,
was a winning streak. Somenzi lost
seven. games before they won the
Bros.
date.

16-OZ. Ag:
CAN

KAFFEE HAG. .

might

first, then they fell right, back
groove dropping the next two.

SLEEP

OIL

CAFFEIN

3 1.or.
4

still go down to the wire as only two
weeks remain.
Club Lorraine won
three games
from the Frigid Freeze as they have
climbed

AND

MAZOLA OIL... ‘tm 45°

League

have a six game jump on Duffy;
however that is the number of games
must

SANKA

SANKA COFFEE

Angeles. I hope that on their
back they stop some place and
some
sunshine.
The
Pag boys

Duffy

16-OZ.
JAR

;

Paganelli
Bros.
slid by the 400
Club three games, as they extended
their winning streak to 11 games and
will really put the pressure on the
Duffy boys when they get back from
Los
way
get

Ju

OR

@ CHERRY PRESERVES

vi

Pa

45-45

Bpwettes: itis osa
pomet: O0Grey CH. eee. 224.4
eric Dm: station 058
menanie Gatsees oo ce
Major

=

NATCO

¢

29°

10 49

FOR DAINTY

LINGERIE

Swerl ..c cs
ALL-PURPOSE

Help Cleaner...

THE

LOTION

LIKE

10:02

na ee eae
28-OZ.

rxc (9°

SOAP

Olivilo Soap...

10°

BAR

NATIONAL
FOOD

STORES

fe

�LN
REAL

ESTATE

iy

FOR

SALE.

(Highland

IMMEDIATE

(Improved)

Park)

¥:

R. S. HAMBLY
Clavey
&amp;
Highland Park

RED BRICK

1845

COLONIAL

his pressed
brick
home,
owner
built
and occupied,
is undoubtedly
one of the
best constructed
residence
in the entire
Woodridge District.
Here’s why:
8” Steel
“T’ Beams and Lally columns; copper gutters,
down
spouts
and
flashings;
solid
birch millwork and trim.
House is thoroughly insulated.
Living
Room
is large
with
fireplace,
off which
is a Library;
large dining room, kitchen with breakfast
nook and Powder Rm.
on first floor.
4
bedrooms, 2 tiled baths on 2nd.
Room on

3rd floor finished in rustic birch and cedar

bark, esp&amp;cially suitable for a girl or boy’s
den.
The 7 ft. 7 in. basement is plastered,
in which there is a recreation room with
fireplace.
Heat
is Air Conditioned
Gas.
he 2 car garage is also of brick.
Two
Blocks to Woodridge (H. P.) Express station;
4
blocks
to famous
West
Ridge
School.
Shown by appointment.

R. S. HAMBLY
Clavey
&amp;
Highland Park

A

&amp; COMPANY

Ridge
Roads,
1491, 4866 or

1845»

LOT
OF HOUSE
and a lot of lot in
Highland Park, near the Lincoln School.
100x210,
9
rooms,
2%
baths,
large
porch, excellent condition and immediate
possession.
Priced
at
only
$26,000.
Mr. Rumsfeld.
Baird
&amp; Warner,
Inc.,
576
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka
2700
and
Briargate 9001.

GLENCOE

One
of the finer homes
on approx
4
acres. Nr lake.
An ideal resid for a family wanting
a larger
home
suitable
for
entertaining
&amp;
comfortable
living.
For
sale at less than half real value.
Property
can be divided.
Mr. Clow

522

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

Davis

St.,

Ev.

VARIOUS

Gre.

1855

Hol.

1855

OFFERINGS

Good older 6 rm home require painting
decor., good loc., immed poss. .-.-611,000
Also 8 rm home nr hospital ........
2,50
‘rm
brk country home, 4 bed R.. 20,000
New 6 rm brick.
Just built at ...... 25,000
Several good apt. bldgs...... $12,500-22,500
15 Acre country est, fine bldgs. .... 42,500

E. T. SKIDMORE

332

N. St.

Johns

LOW
FIXED

Ave.

PRICED

&amp; SON

RO

FER

OTT

HOMES

PRICE and EARLY COMPLETION
features:
these
Compare
bedrooms
Three
tile floors
Asphalt
~
Radiant heat or gravity warm air
Modern bath
22 ft. by 13 ft. living room
With or without basement
Vermiculite insulation
Storm windows and screens
Your choice of three exteriors
Cape Cod
French Provincial
‘
odern
Built on your
own lot or a lot that we
secure for you.
will
‘
Complete Financing Servic

541

REAL
ESTATE SERVICE
Central
Ave.

IDEAL

Highland

SMALL

Park

2360

MEAD

69

_

W.

&amp;

COE,

Inc.

_ (Exclusive Agents)
Washington
St.. Chicago
Tel. Randolph 0450

GLENCOE:

Four
room
cottage
to
be
moved on to adjoining lot, $5,000.
Also
large 5 bedrm house.
Close to schools &amp;
transportation.
Tel. Sunday, Mrs. Brannen.
Winnetka 4740.
Ex. Aget.

WHITE

Brick

Colonial,

1917

Northmoor

Rd., H. P., lg living room, dining 1, den,
tile lav., screened porch,
G.E.
kitchen,
dish washer, three bedrooms, tile bath,
recreation rm., stone fireplace, G.E. oil
burner.

SALE
Park)

(Improved)

-- WELL

McGUIRE

567

Lincoln

&amp;

Ave.,

BUILT

ORR,

Winnetka.

WILLIAMSBURG
Charming red
fully landscaped
fruit

orchard,

Inc.
Tel. Win.

703

COLONIAL

brick with beautigrounds, including

strawberry

beds,

per-

renials, and large greenhouse.
Spacious living room with woodburning fireplace, large sun room, attractive dining room, wood-burning
fireplace and kitchen on the 1st floor.
2nd floor there are 3 lovely bedrooms
and tile bath.
New oil burner. This unusual property

is in central

Highland

Park

near

schools and transportation. ImmediRte OCCUPAHEY: obo
as
$22,500.

A REAL

&lt;p

Review @

@ High wood News

English brick.
Six rms; 2 tile baths &amp;
powder
rm.
An
inviting
pine
panelled
recreation room
in basement.
Tiled
kitchen,
automatic
heat,
a really charming
yard.
One
of Deerfield’s
best
locations
and the price for immediate
delivery
is
only $24,750.

BUY

REAL

New

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

Phone:

(Vacant)

FOR

N. St. Johns

FINE

Tel.

RIPARIAN

H.P.

Best
central
Glencoe
loc.
180x600
ft.
frontage on lake, beaut wooded with ravine.
We consider this the best riparian buy on
the market.
We also offer a selection of
other choice lots at low prices.
Mr. Clow

BAIRD

522

Davis

St.,

&amp;

Ev.

WARNER

Gre.

1855

TO

EXCHANGE

Hol.

1855

ROOMS
ESTATE

with fireplace, dining room, modern
kitchen, breakfast
nook and 2-car
garage complete the first floor ar-

TWO
bedroom
apartment
Coronado, California
(near San
Diego)
for Norshore
Apartment or house at least 2 bedrooms.
Navy Officer.
Phone Weaver, Sup. 5637,
Chicago.

house

struction.

is

of

good

brick

A comfortable living room

rangement.

_ The 2nd floor has two good-sized
bedrooms and bath, with chance for
additional large bedroom and bath
over garage. Full concrete basement
with good heating plant.
Owner has left town.
For quick
sale at
$18,000.

ENGLISH

BRICK

For the first time we are privileged
to offer one of the finest homes in
Highland Park. With full view of the
lake this red brick English home has
a spacious living room, dining room,
library, powder room, kitchen with
butlery on lst floor.
4 master bedrooms, 3 tile baths on
2nd floor, and 2 servants’ rooms and
bath on 3rd floor. It is situated on %
acre of beautifully landscaped property. For price consult
;

PAUL

PHELPS,

387 Central Ave.

VETERAN

Inc.

Highland Park 4580

SPECIALS

No
money
down
needed
if G.I.
Loan
approved.
Get a Buddy to go in with you
and buy
one of these
50-50.
2 flat frame, 5 rooms
each, 2 heating
plants, 2 car garage, convenient Highland
Park location, price $12,500.
$87.86 each
per month on loan.
Brick Bldg., containing one 6 room apt.,
one 3 room, one 2 room, all with private
bath and large store.
Good basement, hot
water heat stoker, large lot, 4 car brick
garage,
price
$20,000,
$60.60
each
per
month on loan.
Will about pay: for itself
on

present

income.

JOHNF. LEONARDI
51
30

REAL

ESTATE

SUMMER

PAUL

ESTATE FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS

GLENVIEW
WHERE THE SUNSET

IS NOT

Behind
the
house
next
door.
8 room
Lannon
stone
residence
on
4%
acres.
2 story 32 foot living room is only one
of this beautiful home’s prize features.
On a private lane—there
is safety for
children here, yet it is only 85 minutes
from
Chicago
by train.
$20,000
cash
will handle under
certain
credit regulations.
©
Long-Kogen Inc., Realtors, Rog. 6500

LAKE

FOREST

Beautiful
wooded
plot
in best residential section.
to sacrifice.
Act quickly.
522

Davis

St.,

Ev.

Gre.

BEDROOM,

single
353

Park.

COLONEL,
regular army, and wife desire
2
or 8
bedroom
furnished
house
or
apartment
by
April
80.
No
children.
References
furnished.
Write
Box
74,
Ravinia,
Illinois or Tel. H.P. 8957.
YOUNG couple urgently need garage apartment or similar rental for June 1st occupancy.
No children or pets.
Write Box
L-7, c/o Lake Forester.

FURNISHED room
or small apt.
ple.
No
children.
Tel.
H.P.
2029 S. St. Johns Ave., H. P.

for cou4254 \or
‘i

VET &amp; wife
Call E. J.

3 rooms.

room,

&amp;

near

Tel.

private

bath

employed

gentlemen;

near

Box

c/o

C-55,

H.

P. News.

HELP

rent.

TO
283

WANTED

RENT
Laurel

Ave.

Tel.
ee

(Clerical)

STENOGRAPHER
OR
BOOKKEEPER,
permanent position with a future proportionate
to your
ability.
Growing
national concern.
State age, exp., salary
desired.
Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)

WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by responsible family.
Will
furnish
finest
references.
Tel.
Central 5309.

two

Write

GARAGES

Inc.

FAMILY
of 2 adults with housekeeper of
25 years service, desire home for summer rental.
Tel. State 0600 (collect).

sitting

or

GARAGE
for
H.P. 3518.

Highland Park 4580

need. of
4264.

rent,
for
transp.

near

PLEASANT room &amp; board to employed girl
or woman
in exchange for help during
dinner hour and ‘to stay in a few evenings a week, with 2 girls. No Sundays.
Ravinia District, 2 blks from transportation. Tel. H.P. 2731 or Write Box C-65,
c/o H. P. News.

RENTAL

in desperate
Riddle, H.P.

one

transp.

PERMANENT full-time office position now
open.
Need
someone
who
can _ handle
telephone
calls, light entry
work, and
waiting
on office customers.
Fleasant
surroundings and work.
Reliable Laundry, 618 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P.
UNMARRIED
WOMAN
FOR
GENERAL
OFFICE WORK: STENOGRAPHY, TYPING, AND ABILITY TO HANDLE FIGURES.
SMALL
OFFICE,
VACATION
WITH PAY, EXCELLENT SALARY TO
EXPERIENCED PERSON.
WRITE BOX
C-45, c/o HIGHLAND
PARK
NEWS.

WANTED:
Stenographer. Permanent position.
First National Bank, Highland Park.
SECRETARY:
Experienced;
full or part
time, to work in school office in Lake
Forest.
Making
appointment
in
writing to Box
M-57,
c/o
Lake
Forester,
giving
full
particulars
as
to training
and experience,

TELEPHONE
OPERATORS
HIGH SALARIES
$29 per 5-day week

GOING AWAY SOON?
Relieve your worries, and ours by renting us your house,
furnished for 2 months,
or longer unfurnished.
Respectable couple.
No children.
Tel. Monday: Franklin 6386, Ext.
20.

to start:

Frequent increases.

LOVELY 3% rm unfurn. apt. in Cincinnati
or ’47 Pontiac at list for 4 rm. or larger
North Shore apt. or house. Call or write
E. Ci Niederhofer,
c/o
E. M. Filkins,
730 N. St. Johns, Highland Park.

21

6314x300
feet
Owner willing
Six room. house, unfurnished.
Mrs. Hook
| WANTED:
Family of 4—daughter
12, son 9. Tel.
Mr. W. Olson, H.P. 5000, Ext. 871, or
1855 Hol. 1855
Write Walter Olson, Ft. Sheridan.

BAIRD
G WARNER

Highland

to transH.P.
149

LARGE
furnished
room
for couple,
transportation.
813 Ridgewood Dr.
H.P. 1665

RENT

PHELPS,

for

person;

St.,

Close
Tel.

FURN:
Bedroom, sitting room, bath, pri.
living qts. for epl., white or col., in exchange for woman’s
services, plus sm.
saly.
(Genl.
hswk
@&amp; assist children).
Man employed elsewhere; ref req.
H.P. 3595 or write c/o H. P. News, Box

Located in one of the finest residential sections of Highland
Park,
this lovely frame house is available
for summer rental. 1st floor contains
living room, dining room, kitchen, den,
and powder room.
2nd floor there
are 4 family bedrooms and 2 baths.
There are 2 servant’s rooms and bath
on third floor. For price consult
387 Central Ave.

room.

employed

Bloom

or

TO

RENT

C-25.

6128.

REAL

FURNISHED

PRIVATE
party
will
give
cash.
Small
house wanted on one or more acres or
vacant property.
East of Waukegan Rd.
Write c/o H. F. News, Box B-25.

HOUSE

TO

NICELY furnished room.
portation,
theatre, ete.
mornings
or evenings.

WANTED

VET &amp; wife need 2 or 3 room furnished
or unfurnished
apt.
in or near North
Shore.
Tel. H.P. 172 days; nights H.P.

Highwood
Ave., Highwood
Hickory St., Highland Park

APBOTT ADV. MAN
Urgently needs 8 or even 2 bdrm. house
or apt.
anywhere
on North
Shore
from
Winnetka
to
North
Waukegan.
Ex-Lt.
Comdr., responsible, have previously owned
own home, will take excellent care of yours.
Can give good local references.
Call R. B.
McCurry, Majestic 3080 or Deerpath Inn,
Lake Forest.

LOT

con-

in width wifh an approximate 200 ft.

SITUATION critical.
Reliable veteran and
wife
desperately
need
apartment,
any
size, or house furnished or unfurnished.
L. D. Zimmer, 816 Edwards, Waukegan.
Majestic 4749."

577

DELUXE
Evanston six room apt. or five
room Highland
Park house for rent in
exchange for rental of three or four bedroom house in Highland Park or nearby
suburbs.
Maybe
three-way
exchange.
Write Box C-15, c/o H. P. News.

depth.
The

REFINED
young
couple,
both
employed,
desire four or five room apartment, unfurnished.
Excellent
references.
Reply
Box M-47, c/o Lake Forester.

&amp; SON

Ave.

WANTED

SMALL furnished apt. or house June, July,
Aug. to $150 month. Can exchange choice
apt. Hyde Park.
Tel. Wilmette 2313 or
Fairfax 2673.

SALE

E. T. SKIDMORE

APARTMENTS

INTERESTED
in renting
house,
months
July &amp; Aug. Small reliable family.
Best
references.
Tel. Briargate 4857.

% to 1 acre lots in country Ass pd. So.
Linden Av. buy, 100x277 lot .00......... $6,500
Also 75 ft. lot So. Linden Av.
5,625
Call us
Re Business
Properties.
832

&amp;

DOCTOR &amp; wife stationed at Great Lakes
urgently need furnished apt.
Will take
garage or stable quarters.
Write c/o H.
P. News,
Box C-5.

ONE of the most beautiful homesites in H.
Pk., 2%
acres on private road.
Water
&amp; sewer in.
Within city limits for fire
&amp; police protection but far enough for
country
atmosphere.
Gorgeous
sunsets
over gently rolling distance.
Nr. school
&amp; trans.
$7,000 or 11/4 acre $3,500.
Owner.
Tel. H.P. 1880.
\

VACANT

Highland Park 4500-01-02

HOUSES

SEVERAL
LOTS
IN
RAVINIA,
BRAEside and Sunset
Subdivisions
in Highland Park at reasonable prices.
ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
AGENCY
16 N. Sheridan Rd.—H.
Pk.
.
Tel. H.P. 98—Res.
37
95-R-30-tf

REAL

In an attractive outlying wooded
part of town, this property is 100 ft.

HOME

In East Highland
Park, on a_ private,
dead-end
street,
convenient
to
schools,
trains and stores., There are 6 rms.
(2
Bedrms)
and 1 Bath on 1st floor.
Space
for 2 additional bedrms and bath on 2nd
Fl.
H.W.
Heat-Stoker.
Garage.
Lot 83x
130, beautifully landscaped.
Priced below
reproduction cost at $19,500.
Owner moving West June 15.
Restricted.
Call Mr.
Buckmaster

Deer rfield

@

I It!

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

COMPACT

&amp; COMPANY

Ridge
Roads,
1491, 4866 or

@ Se

REAL

OCCUPANCY

_Nestling amid towering Oak, Hickory and
s on 4 acres,
CHARMING
3 BEDROOM,
2 Bath
ALMOST NEW RAMBLING LANNON
STONE
&amp; BRICK
HOME
Offers the freedom
and seclusion of a
_ country estate coupled with low taxes and
the advantages of every city convenience;
close to excellent school and express trans_ portation; random width hand pegged, oak
_ plank flooring thruout; attached 2 car brick
garage;
large screened
in
dining
porch;
forced circulating H.W. heat; copper pipes;
_ charming,
well-planned
kitchen.
Cannot
be
duplicated
at today’s price of $40,000.

y it!

Apply To
Chief Operator
S. St. Johns Ave.

Illinois

ss

=

Bell

Telephone Company
A

a

see

�on

HELP

WANTED (Clerical)

HELP

HELP WANTED

(Domestic)

General

housekeeping,

ily.
Near
village.
Lake Forest 135.

small

References

fam-

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Young woman, between the age of 21 and
85 years to train for Soda Fountain and
lunch counter management.
WE TEACH
YOU
fundamentals
of cooking,
baking,
buying and menu planning.
Learn a staple, growing business. Previous experience preferred, but not a requirement.
Uniforms
and
meals
furnished.
Good salary while learning.
No
Sunday or holiday work.
Write, c/o H.
P. News, Box A-55.

YOU
are an experienced maid &amp; can
cook, I have an attractive offer.
Top
salary.
No children.
No heavy work.
Tel. H.P.
5872
or come to 1833
Kincaid St., H. P.

WANTED:
Windows.
rel Ave.,

Man to help
Mrs. G. F.
H. P.

take down storm
Davie, 291 Lau-

GENERAL
housework &amp; plain cooking in
small home.
No heavy cleaning or laundry.
Own room, bath &amp; radio, $120 a
month.
Tel. H.P.
8766
or Write
Box
C-35, c/o H. P. News.

CAB

DRIVERS

GENERAL
housework—full
or part time.
Plain cooking.
Small house; young couple; no children. Tel. H.P. 5316 (collect)

Apply
LAKE

WHITE
maid,
general
housework.
No
laundry.
Must like children.
Own room.
Top wages.
Tel. H.P. 457 or 646 Waverly Rd., H. P.
DAY
WORK,
hour, plus

GROCERY

maid.
Lake

JANOWITZ
293

Experienced—for yard work,
week.
Lake Forest 2695.

GARDENER:
Man with some nursery experience
wanted
to care
for
grounds
three days a week.
Steady work.
Libertyville 40.
GARDENER:
Two days each week.
Current wages.
Volney Foster.
Lake Forest 2552.
GARDENER’S
HELPER:
Experienced
—
also to assist in house.
Reply Box M-7,
c/o Lake Forester.
GENERAL: Cleaning woman and laundress,
three days a week.
Easy transportation.
Lake Forest 1459.
GENERAL MAID:
Capable cleaning woman or general
maid
either by day or
permanent position.
Top wages.
References required.
Lake Forest 759.
GENERAL
MAID:
Cooking
and _ light
downstairs
cleaning.
Convenient hours,
pleasant room, bath and radio.
References required.
Mrs. Edwin W. Winter,
959 Maplewood.
Lake Forest 2612.

NURSE

HELP!
‘

white—for
References
c/o
Lake
j

SECOND
MAID:
Experienced,
white
—
some serving, small family. Near transportation.
References
required.
Lake
Forest 659.

"HELP

WANTED

TO

ReferHamill.

(Miscellaneous)

p.m.

:

139

N.

Second

St.,

H.

|

CHARGE

REF.

MORE

OF

2

EX-AIR
force officer, available evenings,
Saturday,
Sunday,
and
afternoons
for
taking care of children.
Tel. H.P. 762
after 7 p.m.
NURSE
available after April 7th by
or hour.
Elderly people preferred.
Majestic 5314.

HOUSEHOLD
VISIT

day
Tel.

YOUR

GOODS
OWN

FOR

SALE

HIGHLAND

PARK

Trading Post. , We sell furniture, bric-abrac &amp; clothing.
47 S. St. Johns.
Tel.
H.P. 2744.
84-B120-In-tf
FILTER-TYPE
vacuum
cleaner like new.
Extra powerful, silent; variety of accessories.
Mr.
Stevenson,
839 Waukegan
Rd., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 445.

IMPORTANT

THURSDAY
326

ech

GENERAL

Evanston

Office

Store

5th

Floor

WANTED:
Part time janitor at Ravinia
school, hours 2 to 5, Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon Sat.
Tel. H.P.
4020 days or H.P. 3091 evenings.

RECEPTIONIST:
also

to

assist.

For
Lake

physician’s
Forest 89.

office,

eae

FROM

good

condition.

DECORATORS

Tel.

HOME.

leaf,
Also
brass
dining
4507

(Come

_

Home
Appliances, 956 Linden,
Woods.
Tel. Winn. 2000.

Hubbard

PRACTICALLY
new table top gas range,
in excellent
condition,
$85.
5913 or 1311 Burton Ave., H. P
SS
UNIVERSAL stove, Thor washer, old books
&amp; stamps.
Tel. H.F. 2392 or see at 327
Vine Ave.,
P.

Tel. H.P.

SIXTY inch double Hollywood bed, finest
construction,
perfect
condition,
$110.
Tel. H.P. 1632.
Mrs. Montgomery,
265
Prospect Ave., H. P.
NEW
GAS
RANGES:
Universal,
Roper,
Magic
Chef,
and
Monarch.
Terms
—
Free installation.
Winnetka Home Appliances,
956
Linden,
Hubbard
Woods.
Tel. Win. 2000.

“KING

AND

QUEEN

FOR

A

wanted:
How
about you?
week’s Deerfield Review.

|
|

NIGHT”
next

4

ELECTRIC
500.
chick
brooder;
chicken
house,
8x10-ft.;
&amp;
odds
&amp;
ends
for
chicken
business.
Tel. Deerfield
279-

|

MICELLANEOUS

Read

FOR

SALE

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
lawn roller for hire.
Borchardt Fuel Co.,
Tel. H.P. 67.
LAMPS,
antique wire fernery,
silver
jacket,
suits &amp; dresses, size 14.
WEP. 2171.

fox
Tel.

CALIFORNIA
style furniture:
Round top
table &amp; four chairs, 1 high back chair,
like
new;
1 table
model
combination’
radio-vic., automatic record changer;
1
ping
pong
table.
Tel.
H.P.
1292
or
388 Roger Williams, H. F .

SATURDAY

SALE

Girl’s 26-in. balloon tire bicycle; 2 men’s
suits, size 30 &amp; 40; also blue flannel
coat; pastel flannel dresses &amp; suits, size
14; lady’s
shoes, size 8 to 9; men’s,
size 11; two leather suit cases; roller
skates;
games
&amp;
books.
233
Laurel
Ave., H. 'P.
Tel. H.P. 8518.
NEW
knit diapers,
$2 a
turer’s
slight
seconds.
2318
or
send
money
Rubens, 2113 Kenilworth

doz.,
Tel.
order
Ave.,

©

manufac- |
Wilmette
.to
Mrs.
Wilmette.

CHILD’S
small
sturdy
bicycle,
16
inch
wheel, 25 inches to seat, $15.
Tel. Deer-

field
Rd.,

725.

R.

G.

Heupel,

WANTED

WHY

232

Deerfield

Deerfield.

NOT

TO

BUY

SELL THAT

{DLE

PIANO? _

A man for many years in the piano business will buy or appraise without obligation
on your
part,
Tel. University

1561

(collect}

after

7 p.m.

—

130-G-31-In-tf

AND

FOUND

AUTOMOBILES

OLDSMOBILFE 1989.
6 p.m. or see at
Highland Fark.

FORD

OF

Tel. H.P. 1407
1251
Pleasant

First St.

and go anytime —

after
Ave.,

1937 Sixty coupe in excellent con-—
Tel. H.P. 2768
see

at

297

Park

PACKARD
1947 Custom Super Clipper, 4
door 5 passenger sedan.
Fully equipped.
Driven 11,000 miles, $3,200.
(Presentl
listed
$38,500
new.)
Tel.
Forest
250
or 33 N. La Salle St., Chicago.

PARK

be sure to come.)

in

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern
Ave.
Lake Forest, Ill.
Tel. L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.

MERCHANDISE

North

na-—

TEN CU. FT. used Servel, $90. Winnetka _

USED

GOODS,

DEALERS

32-34

Antique

6
matching
chairs,
cane
seats.
cherry
dresser, pink marble
top,
All suitable for small
hardware.
room or living room.
Tel. H.P.
or 294 Linden Park Pl, H. P.

LOST

GOODS

HIGHLAND

Deerfield

tural walnut dining table, 54-in. sq. with

dition.
Original owner.
wafter 7 p.m. Friday or
Ave., H. P.

THE

|

LOST:
Black Scottie, broken leash, Evanston license.
Tel. H.P. 6127 or return
to 657 Vine Ave., H

10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
7 p.m. to Midnight

ART

SALE

SOLID oak cabinet 42-in. base in natural _

FRIDAY

10th &amp; 11th

HOUSEHOLD

FOR

WILL buy used baby stroller. Must be
good condition.
Lake Forest 2394.

Apply

at

P.

APRIL

AND

GOODS

FRIGIDAIRE, medium size; kitchen range,
right hand oven; Zenith arm chair radio.
All in good condition.
‘Tel, H.P. 2133
or 1225 Burton Ave,
es

BANQUET CLOTH
Have
you fine banquet cloth to sell?
Must be at least 9%
ft. long at least
6%
ft. wide.
Tel. H.P.
5110
or 315
Ravine Dr., H. P

PUBLIC
AUCTION

CHIL-

MARSHALL FIELD &amp; CO.
Has -Full Time Positions For
NIGHT
HOUSEKEEPER
(Male)
Also
DAY MAID
40 Hour Week
Store Discount

Personnel

WANTED: _ Lathe operators &amp; other machine
shop
employees.
Modern
Engineering
Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.

Tel. HP. i087.

STORE

HELP!
HELP!
Fountain help needed
Good wages
Dick Tracy’s
Tel. H.P.

FIVE MEN needed for light garden work.
Very good pay for the man who likes
&gt; make
money.
Tel. H.P.
2652 after
WANTED
Men, part or full time
Highland Ten Pins

\

STOKER with all automatic controls, perfect condition, $50.
Tel. H.P. 5290 after
Saturday or 752 Glencoe Ave., H. F

E. Illinois Road
Lake Forfest

TAKE

WAGES.

Experienced,
white.
Must
like
children.

be competent.
Mrs.
Alfred

WOMAN
desires
position
for day
work.
Prefers restaurant or store work.
Tel.
H.P. 3511 or see at 186 Edge Cliff Rd.,
Highland Park.

THAN EXPERIENCE. TEL. H.P. 3964
OR 1622 S. GREEN BAY RD.

GENERAL
MAID:
Experienced,
white,
cooking
and
first floor ‘work.
Living
accommodations
for employed
husband.
Lake Forest 753.
4

WAITRESS:
Must
ences
required.
Lake Forest 88.

ENTERTAIN
at home—for
six or more
persons; all food provided, served, and
dishes washed.
Flaming sword dinners,
flaming desserts, luncheons, buffet, teas
and weddings.
Franzen and Co., Superior 0491, Chicago and suburbs.

ELECTRIC
alarm
clocks,
coffee
makers
G.E., Westingby Cory, Kent and G.E.
house,
Sunbeam,
Proctor
and
Miracle
irons.
Winnetka Home Appliances, 956
Linden,
Hubbard
Woods.
Tel.
Winn.
2000.

CLERK

FOOD

CATERING
Weddings, teas, dinner parties, large or
small.
Tel. Glencoe 1594.
P. C. McCultough.

15%4X12%
worn oriental rug, $100; Victorian
love
seat;
Tuxedo
davenport;
MECHANICS
needed
to
work
in _ local
Lawson
chair;
pair wing chairs; matchChrysler, Plymouth Agency.
Better than
ing
drapes;
studio
couch;
sun_
cot;
Best
working
conditions
in]
union pay.
mahog.
china
cabinet;
rose
broadloom
town.
Local
men
preferred.
Apply
in
rug;
white
buffet,
4
Windsor
chairs,
person. 106 S. First St. or call H.P. 2500
round oak d. r. table; low Victorian bed,
double spring and mattress; vanity table
WANTED:
Gardener,
one
day
a_ week,
and stool; electric mangle; 2 baby bugthroughout the year, who will also do
gies; baby scale; 31x89 plate glass wall
house cleaning.
New house.
120 Prosmirror; marble top coffee table and other
pect Ave., H. P. Tel. H.P- 349.
household articles.
547 So. St. Johns.
Tel. H.P.
2864.
ASSISTANT cook &amp; dietary maid. Straight
hours.
Tel. H.P: 2550.
Ask for Cook,
USED
GAS
RANGES:
Winnetka
Home
Highland Park Hospital.
Appliances, 956 Linden, Hubbard Woods.
Tel.
Winnetka
2000.
WANTED:
Women for work in the High}
School Cafeteria, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., five
Overstuffed
with
plain
day week.
Tel. H.P.
4300
Monday
or DAVENPORT:
dusty rose slip cover, $45.
Lake ForTel. H.P. 4103
Sunday.
est 2909.
Upholstering
trainee.
MAN
WANTED:
ICE
BOX:
1944
“Coolerator,”
5 cu. ft
Good
chance
to
learn
trade.
Cabinet
Reasonably priced.
Lake Bluff 3018.
maker
or
furniture
repair
man
also
wanted.
C.
Eklund,
875
Park
Ave.,
MISCELLANEOUS:
Victorian
iron
chairs
Glencoe.
Tel. Glencoe 33.
and table for home or garden,
$40; 2
beautiful
mirrors,
$15
each;
4
lamps,
SALESMAN WANTED
$15 each; 2 consoles, $12 each.
WhiteVeteran preferred, for high paying sales
work with nationally known cooking utenhall 6226.
sil company.
Permanent and stable.
Car
essential.
Tel. H.P. 4513.

COOK:
Experienced, white. Own room and
bath.
References
required.
Mrs.
j
Earle
Muzzy,
644
E.
Deerpath,
Lake
Forest 1517.

SECOND
MAID:
Experienced,
serving and upstairs
work.
required.
Reply
Box
M-87,
Forester.

CAB

Permanent position.
a
Excellent working conditions.
Good wages.
Apply
in Person

COOK:
Experienced,
white—for
cooking
and
downstairs
work.
References
re—
Reply Box M-27, c/o Lake Forester.

GENERAL
MAID:
Family
of
four.
Lake Forest 680.

YELLOW

EXPERIENCED

CHAMBERMAID:
Experienced,
white.
Permanent position; convenient location.
Adults only.
Current wages.
Lake Forest
751
or write
980
N.
Green
Bay
Rd., Lake Forest.

GARDENER:
two days a

:

ARE
YOU
a housewife looking for ways
and means of bringing extra money into
your home?
Avon Products Co. can offer
you
a solution
to
your
problem.
Easy
to start.
M.
Gease,
Dist. Mgr.
Box 527, Elgin, Il.

woman
for
housework,
full days per week. Near
Tel. H.P. 5075 Monday,

COOK:
Experienced,
white.
Also
Current
wages.
Volney
Foster.
Forest 2552.

FOREST

.

GARDENER
with 15 years experience desires full-time employment in Highland
Park.
-Tel. H.P. 1849.

770 N. Western Ave.

2 half days a week $1 per
carfare.
Tel. H.F. 1432.

MIDDLE-AGED
several half or
transportation.
April 14th.

HOUSEHOLD

_

FIVE
men
wanted
for
landscaping
and
gardening.
Good pay.
All work on the
North-Shore.
Must be steady and reliable.
R. Kohlmaier, Dundee Rd:, Northbrook.
Tel. Northbrook 422.

required.

WOMAN
for thorough cleaning on Thursdays,
$7
and
carfare,
near
Beech
St.
station.
Refs. &amp; exp. required.
Tel. H.
P. 788.
1141 S. Linden Ave., H. P.
IF

(Miscel.)

MAN
with car for service or production
work.
Must have good personality and
be capable
of selling or making
estimates.
Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired.
Address
Mr. Kehle,
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield.

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white.
For
6 weeks or permanent, starting April 1st.
References
required.
Mrs.
P. MeBride. Lake Forest 36.

COOK:

WANTED

RESPONSIBLE lady will act as companion
ADV.
14ANAGER
AND
SALES
CORRE&amp; care of children or do light nursing.
spondent for growing national firm. UnTel. H.P. 4784 or 522 N. Linden Ave.
usual future for right man.
State age,
education, experience, references, sal
j
expected.
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield,
Il.
SITUATIONS WANTED
(Miscel.)

SALES CLERK for A-1 stationery &amp; office
supply retail store.
No special experience required.
Full time.
Permanent.
1629 Howard St.
Tel. Rogers Park 3373.

CADILLAC

but

Tudor 1936 family car, good

condition; four
new
4507 or 294 Linden
FORD—1941

Deluxe,

heater, $1,075.

2

téres.
Tel.
Park Pl., H.
door

Tel. H.P.

sedan,

2480.

F

Nts

radio,

"
—

�eC

REPO

eR

Bee

Ske
?
Shavercaste
&lt;A
ay

eseSo"). he. MOOR WANTED 5
A

Mee

wed
sutra

tS |

Reeser

WA

ED

FOR

CASH

‘

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park,
IN.
9-S-3-In-t/

MODERNE DECORATING
|
SERVICE
623

Vine Ave.,

Highland

Park

E. Q. Inman
Tel. H. P. 89
136-J-19-tf

5676

FLAGSTONE,
TOP
SOIL,
HUMUS,
CIN_
ders,..screcnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
down, power saw for hire; general hauling
and
welding.
Tel.
PF... 8981.
or
8785.
John Tazioli.
SEWING
MACHINE
SERVICE
Singer &amp; other makes repaired, bought &amp;
sold; also vacuum cleaners. Will call for
and
deliver.
Phone
Robt.
W.
Arends,
Northbrook 624-W.

j

7
PAINTING
Kitchens —
Bathrooms
Woodwork
Washed
and
Painted
Best Frices
Tel. H.P. 2884

PAINTING
Hubert

&amp; DECORATING

Exterior

and

Johnson

Interior.

Tel.

H.P.

1770

TREE TRIMMING
&amp; LANDSCAPING
Removing Dead Trees, Hauling Away
Sarnent Work
Light Hauling —- Wood
ROBERT L. WHITE
Waukegan
1002 N. Elmwood,
Telephone
Ont.
7530
CRAFTSMAN
FURNITURE
REPAIR,
i
“For Work
of Quality”
‘Upholstering,
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.
88rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Zion, Ill.
:
Tel. Zion 3496
BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel.

966

606.
-

‘

Our

most
cars.
ness.

may}

Vet’s

FOR

SPRING!

Screen

Gutters

cleaned,

cleaned*

Maintenance.

Tel.

&amp;

Skokie

takes

6

to

8

records,

Gen-

L.F.

has

FOR

SALE:

large

Lovely

bedrooms;

five

att,

room

htd.

home,

garage;

tiful deep lot.
;
During
telephone
strike. Open
2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
Owner 731 S. St. Johns.
Tel.

two

beau-

everyday
H.P.

969.

the

OLDSMOBILE
1941 Hydramatic,
in
_ condition.
May be seen evenings.
S. Sheridan Rd., H. P.

good
1915

HELP WANTED
Male -- Female
No experience necessary—5 day week
GREAT
ATLANTIC
&amp; PACIFIC TEA CO.
56 N. First St., H. FP.

BOY'S BICYCEE.
3026.

TEL. +H.
|

'P.

Hauling
Annual

Dirt
and

‘CONSTRUCTION

and

ha North
_

Raa

f

Skokie

Highway

;

Tel. Niles 9805

painted
5071.

Plants

Forest

2764

l

PAINTING

&amp; DECORATING

Fully Insured
Interior and Exterior
Residential
and Commercial
Immediate Service

Phone

804

Highland

Park

6012

CYCLONE CHAIN LINK FENCE
Delivered and Erected
* For Estimates
Tim Stodder

Central Ave.

ye

Tel. H.P. 3415

state

The
form
which
House
tees in

legislature.

pending
legislation,
in the
of two almost identical bills
are now under study by the
and Senate judiciary commitSpringfield, would forbid dis-

crimination

‘in

employment

because

of race, color, creed, national origin,
or ancestry and would create a permanent
fair employment
practices
commission to prevent such discrimination...
L,

Julian

Harris

of

Highland

been

in

effect

in

New

York,

CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION
On
THURSDAY,
April
17th,
at
8:00
p.m. in the Council Chamber,
City Hall,
the Civil Service Commission of the City
of Highland Park will hold an oral examination to establish an eligible labor service
list for the City of Highland Park.
This
eligible list will last two years and assignments
will “be
made
from
this
list
as
occasion
permits.
No
person
shall
be
admitted to the examination who is not a
citizen of the United States and who has-

New

Jersey, Massachusetts, Indiana, and
Wisconsin, and has worked successfully. There would be no civil or
criminal penalties for violations under the proposed Illinois law, largely
because
such penalties
unnecessary
in
New

have
York

@ EXPERT ROOFING
@ BRICK VENEER
Now

new

is

roof

materials
roofers.

FREE

the

time

laid

by

made

Cement

to

of

the

have

a

finest

experienced
work.

ESTIMATES.

GIVEN

Deerfield Roofing Co.

Phone DEERFIELD 486

a

|

Park,

chairman of the Committee on Social
Legislation, pointed out at the meeting that this type of legislation has

proved
State,

not been

an

actual resident

of the City of

Highland
Fark
for at least
six months
preceding the date of examination.
Salary
depends on experience, type and quality of
work.
Application blanks may: be obtained
from Mr. V. C. Musser, City Clerk at the
City
Hall.
The
state
civil
service law
requires a fee of one dollar to be paid at
the time of filing application.
All applieations must be filed with the secretary
by 6:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 16th.
‘
H. G. PERTZ,
Secretary
Civil Service Commission
of Highland Park
704 Ridgewood Drive.
Apr. 8-10)

CITY OF HIGHLAND

PARK

CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION
On
THURSDAY,
April
17th,
at
8:00
p.m. in the Council Chamber,
City Hall,
the Civil Service Commission of the City
of Highland Park will hold an examination
to establish an eligible list for janitor in
the City Hall.
No person shall be admitted

to

the

examination

who

is

not

a

with

the

secretary

cations

must

by

p.m.

6:30

(Apr. 3-10)

citizen

be

filed

—

Wednesday, April 16th.
H. G. PERTZ, Secretary.
Civil Service Commission
of Highland Park
704 Rigdewood Drive.

CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION
On
THURSDAY,
April
17th,
at
8:00
p.m. in the Council Chamber,
City Hall,
the Civil Service Commission of the City
of Highland Park will hold an examination

The partnership consisting
of
Albert J. Cesnovar, Alice J. Gesnovar, L. E. Tracy and Florence Tracy doing business under
the name
firm and style of
“Dick Tracy’s,” located at: 364
Central Avenue, Highland Park,
Illinois, has been dissolved as
of April 1, 1947.
L. E. Tracy
and
Florence
Tracy as co-partners are continuing the operation of said
Business at the same address
and they are the full and complete owner of said business,
Albert J. Cesnovar and Alice
J. Cesnovar having withdrawn
therefrom. |

to

establish

an

eligible

list

for

Semi-

|

skilled employees in the Sewer and Water
Department.
No person shall be admitted
_
to the examination
who
is not a citizen
—
of the United States and who has not been |
an actual resident of the City of Highland
Park
for at least six months
preceding
the date of examination.
Physical ability,
a knowledge
of local government
and a &gt;
general
knowledge
of water
installations
and sewage disposal methods will be considered.
Salary $2,400.00 per year.
All
applicants must pass a medical examination —
by a medical
examiner appointed by the

Commission

after

taking

the

Civil

Service

Test before they are placed on the eligible
list.
Application blanks may be obtained
from
Mr.
V. €.
Musser,
City
~-Clerk
at
the City
Hall.
The
state Civil
Service
law requires a fee of two. dollars to be paid
at the time of filing
application.
All applications must be filed
with the secretary
by 6:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 16th. -

. G.

DICK TRACY’S

PERTZ,

Secretary

Civil Service
Commission
of Highland Park
-.
es
‘

—

of the
United
States
and
who
has
not.
been
an actual
resident
of the City of
Highland
Park
for at least
six months
preceding the date of examination.
Physical ability and a general
knowledge
of
janitor work will be considered.
Starting
salary $2,310.00 per year.
All applicants
must
pass
a medical
examination
by
a
medical examiner appointed by the Com-~~
mission
after
taking
the
Civil
Service
|
requires a fee of two dollars to be paid at |
the time of filing application. All appli-

NOTICE

Manure

Lake

Illinois

—

ADJUDICATION AND CLAIM DAY
NOTICE
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
to
all
persons
that
the first Monday
of May,
1947, is the claim date in the estate of
JOHN A. BLOMDAHL,
Deceased, pending
in
the
Probate
Court
of
Lake
County,
Illinois,
and
that
claims
may
be
filed —
against the said estate on or before said
|
date without
issuance
of summons.
All —
claims filed against said estate on or before
|
said date and not contested, will be adjudi- ©
cated on the first Tuesday after the first —
Monday of the next succeeding month at
0 a.m.
ANNIE S. BLOMDAHL,
Executor.
(Mar. 27-Apr. 8-10)
Marvin Wallach,
Attorney,
:
Highland
Park, Ill.

in the

at the annual meeting at which time

Dormers, etc.

painted.

LAKE FOREST FLOWER FARM
Bo

legislation now pending

Greenebaum,

Jr., A. L. Foster, all

LEGAL NOTICES

annual eléctions will take place.
The nominating committee, which
will begin work immediately and will
publish
the
names
of candidates
shortly, consists
of: Mrs.
George
| Herbert Brown,
L. Julian Harris,

LAWNS

Perennial
Pansies

Citizens’ committee

Monday
night,
March
31, in .the
Winnetka Community
house,
the
membership
voted
unanimously
to
affiliate with the Illinois Council for
a State Fair Employment Practices
FEPC

Park; Rober

of Glencoe;
Mrs.
William
Cobb,
Mrs.
Arthur
Rosenbaum, Robert
Carpenter, of Winnetka; Miss Agnes
Lilley, of Northfield; and
Graton '
Little and Curtis Mac Dougall, both
of Evanston.

FREE ESTIMATES

LANDSCAPING
—

With FEP Council
Shore

Michael

Stanley Harris

SURGERY

drapes,
Ruffled
curtains,
panels,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 5804

GARDENS

Votes to Affili

where the law has been in effect for
more than two years.
A report was given at the meeting
SKOKIE
VALLEY
TREE
SERVICE
by the committee’s delegate to the
Treating,
Fruning,
Spraying
Dangerous Trees Removed
FEPC
hearings
in Springfield
on
Also cabling and surgery.
All property
March 18. William E. Peters, Jr. of
and men fully insured.
‘Earl
Reynolds.
Tel. H.P.
2653.
Highland Park told of his testimony
before the House and Senate judiA friend should be one in whose unciary committees
in favor of an
derstanding and virtue we can equally
confide, and whose opinion we can FEPC and discussed at length the
wide representation of civic, veteran,
value at once for its justness and its religious,
~ labor, youth, community,
sincerity.
welfare, consumer, business, and proRobert Hall
fessional organizations which testified in behalf of FEPC legislation.
Other business at the meeting was
chiefly concerned with the election
of a nominating
committee which
will nominate candidates for the offices of the board of directors of the
Citizens’
committee,
the
present
GENERAL REPAIR
members
of which wwill ‘terminate
and |
their offices on Monday,
May 26,
TREE

PARKWAY CURTAIN
LAUNDRY

ae

rat
SAE
/

removed,

hung.

--

department,

changer,

modern
equipment to serve your
Stop in today.
Now open for busiC. T. Bartlett.”
PREPARE

Storms
ac

service

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
RADIOs.PHONOGRAPH:
Beautiful
General Electric combination, automatic rec-

FURNISHED room for single person.
Tel.
H.P. 3769 or 209 North Ave., Highwood.

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More

.

both of Highland

Richheimer,

Law and to work for the passage of

eral Electric Super Beam-a-scope radio,
no aerial, no ground. Will sell at a fraction of what a machine like this costs
today.
Tel. H.P. 3026.

Photographer

ML
Preti
hak
Tel. H. P.

INSTRUCTION

ord

SERVICE

PERCY H. PRIOR, Jr.

-

Citizens’ Commitatetee
the North

LAKEWOOD
DAY
SCHOOL
Boarding school &amp; Day school, children
4 to 12.
Tel. Deerfield
810.

ACT NOW—To
secure’ the county’s most
profitable small business.
One man can
operate.
Write
Mr.
R.
G. Gilbertson,
223 E. Douglas St., Bloomington, Illinois.

Specializing in
pictures of
Tel. T.P. 8199

_

———————e—=_—_Ez{z{=—iIE=ae=—i————EEEE

:

CHANCES.

' BUSINESS.

ee ee

WALL WASHING
Window Washing
Storms and Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
R.F.D. No. 1, Box 246-A
Libertyville, Illinois
Grayslake 5414

AMERICAN

COURT
ANTIQUE
SHOP
Linden
Ave., Hubbard
Woods
Winnetka 4085
BUSINESS

ie

‘At a regular bi-monthly meeting of

OF

ENGLISH
ANTIQUES
Lamps,
Silver, ete.
Wish to clear all merchandise before
going to England for the summer.
No
reasonable offer refused.

?

le
:

HENNING 0. BERGQUIST

AND

918

‘

}
Painting &amp; hooetee
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North
Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, Ill.
Tel. Longbeach 2404.
Fully insured

ANTIQUES

QUANTITY

RN

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING

e.

Good °’37 to °47 Used Cars.
A. G. McPHERSON, Inc.
887 E. Park Ave., H. P.

ve - LARGE

ae:

| mn Apr. 8-10)
}

704

Ridgewood Drive.

—

_

|

_
wv

Fee ge

�Deerfield Bowling
(continued
street,

with

a 3-game

from

the

latter

finally

took

series.”

Results :
Park ave. took
Clay st. took
Cedar st. took 3
Elm st. took 2
He

E.V.T. at

page 37)

reports,

3 from Cherry’st.
3 from Pine st.
from Central ave.
from Walnut st.

“No

one

bowled

excep-

tionally well, although Ray Meyer
held high series of 159-176-234—569.
Only 5 more weeks to go. Tra la!”
It was

a short

week,

with

not much

news, as-many teams did
due to Holy Week church

not play
services.

Match

made

by

Earl

Dueball,

558,

of

the

cluded

Rudy

Don

Brown,

Kennedy,

George

Roehr,

Rudy

Wally,
and

Abel,

Rogner,

total

pins

and
were

2410.
Wheeling’s
Chicago
House team
included
Bob
Koepten,
Ed _ Glick,
Earl Dueball, Herman Koepler, and
Ed Welfin, and total pins were 2388.

Last week’s township election returns. omitted
the results
of the
proposition
concerning
retirement
fund for township officials. The vote
was 248 yes; and 66 no.

April

May

1-2-3

April

Wednesday,
Thursday,
Friday,

May
May

Saturday,

Deerfield
tracks

29—Northeast

April

are

Bob-Mari
Deerfield

1—Southwest

8—Woodland

road
the

four sections,
Park.

section.

30——-Southeast

2—Northwest

May

and

section.
Park.

for

the

Woodland

Team Beats
Amvets Bowlers

Bob-Mari,

Half

Gail Meintzer
-.............
George Moen ...............are:
Mone
koi
Marshall Fredericks ....
Bucky
Walter ......... \...

the Deerfield
Saturday evebowling
team
Amvets All142 pins.
Day

178-178-194—
183-172-212—
166-165-162—
161-197-159—
192-192-209—

Deerfield Amvets
Pei Bolly. Jt, (seca 235-175-181—
Christ Willman Jr. ...:. 151-170-148—
Edward Horenberger .. 180-188-160—
William Peterson ........ 177-154-153—

Melvin

Mailfald

c

Gg

5

LB
Wieners
BORDEN'S CREAMED

Cottage

$

C

PRICE

CUT-UP PAN-READY

GIRL

PEELED

LARGE STEAKS

p
hlefish
Sablefis

Cc
LB, 29

aw.

Finnan Haddie

LB. 30°

CELLO WRAPPED

LEAN MEATY TENDER YOUNG

GINGHAM

Fillets. .,, 29°
Cod
FANCY FILLETS
FANCY

69°

CHICKEN Legs and Thighs .
LAMB FOR STEW ee @e eo 1B

CELLO WRAPPED

Sea Perch...,, 29°

TRIM—TENDERLOINS NOT REMOVED
WHOLE OR
9°
FULL LOIN
LB. 49
LOINS HALF LB. 59C Ri HALF

PORK

Sole Fillets. .,, 39°

c

FANCY

FRESHLY

Smoked Trout ,,.

ae

aay ON

WHOLE APRICOTS. .. . "c 29° _ | fyesunpeeas
le
2"

ne cure,
Segments. . Qos: 25° | PEwcemcs
Grapefruit
OLD COUNTRY
AN OLD
FAVORITE

HARDTAC

.

KRISPY CRACKERS.
dihdap
FOODS

FRESH

WHOLE KERNEL

_O2.

th?

upieit e cms 29°

ne QQ

| POTATO SALAD ae a23+

VAN
VAN BEANS

CAMP
‘'NeQNATo

Gre
fers

oF

UNSHINE

|

Cut

Tae

eee

Corn

19°
93°

7

vale

FLAVORFUL ALL WHITE

Cauliflower
E-—SUGARED
TOPS FOR TAST

t

SALE!
= Q 207 2Qc

¢

WITH MEAT ~~ 17-O2Z.
SAUCE
JAR Hc

‘
cave SPAGHETTI
} , TENDEROM!
= wictrow = 2 vkes,
W1°

|

| KIDNEY BEANS newsme® 2 Sang 29° |

CHILI CON CARNE e"

vas
y
m
m
o
H
|
|
°
Q
3
||
2
s
e
OO
i
VoungberTHIES r xc.
| BEANIE WEENIES
;

a

CREAMY.

RICH

p

COUNTRY

GREEN

GARDEN

BEANS

CUT

CHERRY VALLEY

NO.2 946

STOKELY'S SWEETENED a

TOMATO

PILLSBURY'S OR CERESOTA,

Chicken

«ee aaa $1.95
PROUM
NO RINSING—NO WIPING

NORTH STARKIBBLED
Nog Food ae

&amp; SPAN
SPIC
DISINFECT—DEODORIZE

CLOROXBLEACH

MADE

OF

FLUFF

550
567
493
517
593

591
469
528
484

........ 158-188-160— 506
901-875-802—2578

I-LB.
2excs. Ale

3S 21

ALL

17-OZ.

MEAT

JAR

witnens

30°

{

Jar” 19S |

519

Central

PPL

Ave.

445 Roger Williams
Ave.

a
—

OAD

14-DAY

BEAUTY

MAKES

HARD

WATER

:

sr 15

} Palmolive...
ACT

SOFT

Vel Minacte
Gl
"subs
PKG.
FINE TOILET SOAP—CASHMERE

Bouquet...

LOADS O' SUDS WITH

e

CAN

2 ars 2e°

Super Suds». + xc. 30°

i 5

eecCAN

@”

Bre

10/4-0Z. §

BORDEN’S
Hemo....

9c

ta

©

Soup

Noodle

FOR THAT SCHOOLGIRL coMnenon

TRY THE

TISSUE... 3 ous 19¢
PPP PPP

:

46-OZ. 9 4 c

JUICE.

°° 17c | Palmolive.» + Gax (0°

AGAIN—NORTHERN

PPPPPPP

880-904-936—2720

;

6th &amp; 7th RIB ROAST
EXTRA-VALUE

ORANGE JUICE “92 21c¢ 3 cAMparuu's

In a match game at
Bowling academy on
ning, the Bob-Mari
defeated the Deerfield
Stars by a margin of
The scores:

you.

Skinless

railroad

lines

excluding

section.

section.

the

dividing

for

OO

uw

= ALL

BONE
ROUND
BOSTON CUT

t
Dewkis

Homer G. Cazel, road and bridge
commissioner, announces the annual
“CLEAN UP WEEK” with the dates
of pick-up as follows:
Tuesday,

‘

TRIM

ALL

BONE

WEEK

29-30,

}

less

waste, before it is
weighed

F

VITA-NIP

Retirement Fund for
Township Employees
Approved 248 to 66

CLEAN-UP

get

you

meat,

fat, less bone, less

in-

.

3 ARMOUR OR OSCAR MAYER

BEEF POT ROASTS | theese 2... 39°
FLAT

Chicago House, and George Roehr,
596, of the All-Stars.
Northbrook’s
All-Star
team _ in-

Because

more

All

products.

spected

EXTRA-VALUE

JEWEL

Game

Wheeling’s Chicago House bowled
the Northbrook All-Stars on Saturday
evening in the Deerfield Bowling
Academy. The All-Stars won by 22
pins.
High
individual
series
were

government

Value.

Extra

Top.

is

ity

you

are low—and

our qual-

Because

prices

Because

§

Paha

ek

a

kid ed

as)

Pers

TRIM

VALUE

EXTRA
get

YOUR

BALANCE

WILL

Ee

BUDGET!

fle

Gc

PIE CRUST MIX

Py-O-My.. xe. 15°
POMPEIAN

OLIVE OIL

Shampoo ‘co, 49°
BEECHNUT

BABY FOODS
STRAINED
VARIETIES

CHOPPED
VARIETIES

3 JARS 25°:

2 JARS 25°

�PALCYON

(Continued

Highland Park
TELEPHONE H. P. 2400
THU.,

FRI., SAT.

April

10-11-12

Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur

“'The Plainsman”
April

SUN. thru WED.

13-14-15-16

Merle Oberon, George Brent,
Charles Korvin, Paul Lukas

“Temptation”
Selected

Short

Subjects

THURS.,

FRI.,

SAT.

Lucille

News

Late

and

from

page

8)

Vice chairmen Mrs. Fred Mudge,
Mrs. V. E. Lawrence, Mrs. William
Stupple, Mrs. George Martin, Mrs.
M. Francis Simms, Mrs. A. J. Bushey,
Mrs. Joseph Schonthal, Mrs. H. Porter, Mrs. Burton Smalley, Mrs. Mert
Johnson, Mrs. Judson
Cross, Mrs.
Sigrid Johnson and Mrs. Irving Goldberg.

BARTLETT
THEATRE
HIGHWOOD,
LAST

FRI.

“VLL
Deanna

BE

Also

SUN.

&amp;

One
STAGE

FRL., April 18
ON THE

Short

Niven

DOLL”

OF

Also

Tierney

Only

Day

Selected

SOUTH”

Short

TUES., WED., THURS.,

Tom

Conway,

“The
Dan

Subjects

Madge

Duryea,

TIE

now

reside

and,

after

graduate

work

at

Northwestern

FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS

Highland

Park

Sat.-Sun.,
-THU.,

FRL., SAT.,

Dick
10-11-12

“The Time, Place &amp; the Girl”
Dennis

Morgan,

Jack

Carson

April 13 &amp; 14
SUN., MON.,
“TWO SMART PEOPLE”
John

Hodiak,

Lucille

TUE., WED., THU.

“THE

MAN

Ball

April 15-17

SAT.

“THE

April

Showing

“HOOSIER

Only—At

SCHOOL

PARTY
2

P.M.

BOY”

Mickey Rooney, Ann Nagel
3 Cartoons &amp; Comedy
Advance
tickets now on sale
NOTE: Regular
performance starts
4:30.
30c to 6:30
/

in

Ella

Rains

and

TAILS”

thru

from

—

WILLIAMS, BARKER
SEVERN COMPANY

Martha Mooney, Auctioneer
229 South Wabash Avenue
Chicago 4, Illinois
Harrison 3777

of
of

our city,
working

also

served,

upon

request,

KIWANIS CLUB OF HIGHLAND PARKING.
PRESENTS

—

The Great Tarbell
Master

Magician

at

at

1:30

SATURDAY

Powell, Evelyn Keyes
thrilling drama

and

Mentalist

' AT 8:15 O'CLOCK
Coupons,

SUN., MON.,

TUES.,

April

13-15

Yvonne De Carlo
Brian Donlevy, Pierre Aumont
in Technicolor Romance

SCHEHERAZADE”
WED.,

April

16th

Walter Pidgeon,
Claudette Colbert
in intimate romance

“THE SECRET
HEART”

the

Highland Park High School Auditorium
Friday Evening, April 11, 1947

“Johnny O'clock”

Starts

Cooper

SPECIAL KIDDIES MATINEE
One

18-19

PLAINSMAN”
Gary

Activities

Meredith

“SONG OF

I LOVE”

Ida Lupino, Robt. Alda,
FRL,

tive services for defense
I had
the
opportunity

I

Porcelains — Jewelry
Pianos — Libraries.

GENESEE
NOW

6:00

1:30
April

Scout

Exchangeable

for

Reserved

Seats

on

sale

at:

Gsell’s (Ravinia &amp; Highland Park) and Garnett’s,
or by mail.
Address Highland Park Kiwanis Club,
P. O. Box “A”,

as

volunteer instructor in the Chicago
night school, conducted in cooperation with the United States Navy for
training of naval officer candidates
in piloting, dead réckoning and celestial navigation.
Memberships: The Highland Park
Post of the American Legion, The
Rotary Club, North Shore Boy Scout
Organization, Exmoor, Amherst Club
of Chicago, Great Lakes
Cruising
Club and P.T,A;
|
Time available: I am able to devote the full time daily, .which. I
know is necessary to proper performance of the duties as Mayor.

Bought for Cash

Entertainment

Continuous

605

Mon.-Fri.

Best

Boy

etc.

Oriental Rugs — Carpets
Silverware —
China —

_&amp;

Area

Committee, Member of War Bond
Organization Committee, Red Cross
Training
Committee, Community
Chest and U.S.O. Worker.
War
Service:
I served for the
duration of’ World War I in the
United States Navy. During World
War II, I maintained an office in the
Building Department at the Highland
Park City Hall for four years during which time I served by appointment, without compensation, as Acting Chief Defense Warden of Highland Park, directing over 700 voluniteer workers.
This office was in
charge of the organization and operation of civilian defense of the city.
In coordinating the various protecclosely with all the City Departments,
such as Police, Fire, Streets, Health,

—

Your

Uni-

Shore

of the
North

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

GLENCOE
Open

graduation

versity School of Commerce.
Business:
After
completing
my
education I entered the printing and
publishing business and upon retire-

16th Annual Spring Recital
of the Pupils of Mrs. J. C.
Emma’s School of the Dance
ON THE SCREEN
Walt
Disney's
Festival
Mouse,
Mickey
Duck,
with Donald
Pluto, Goofy
Admission: Unreserved Seats, 60c tax inc.
Reserved Seats $1.20 tax inc.

with

a national trade publication.
Local Activities: Member
City
Planning
Commission,

April 15-16-17

Falcon’s Adventure”
PLUS
E

“WHITE

School

13-14

DISNEY’S

THE

I

Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service

April

WALT

Place

Subjects

MON.

“SONG

11-12

In Technicolor

SUN. thru THU., April 13-17
“THE RAZOR'S EDGE”
Gene

April

“MAGNIFICENT

YOURS”

Power,

SAT.

Ginger Rogers, David

Durbin, Tom Drake,
Adolph Menjou

Tyrone

&amp;

Parker

GOODBYE”

where

from Lake Forest Academy,
I attended Amherst College where I received my degree. I later took post

April 10

Eleanor

“WNEVER SAY

4

2 to

Mat.

Sat.

Also

Flynn,

Ave.,

my wife, Sue Buckley Patton, and
my son, Richard, who is a student
at the Highland Park High School.
Education: ] am a graduate of Elm

ILLINOIS

DAY THURSDAY

Errol

April 10-11-12

citizens, and for the benefit of those
whom I do not have the privilege of
knowing
personally, I am glad to
submit the following information:
Family and residence: I was born
in 1896 and have lived all of my life
in the family home established by

my father in 1893 at the foot of Pros-

News and Selected Shorts

THU., FRI, SAT.

3)

pect

“Two Smart People”

LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS
TEL. L. F. 2106

fides page

Rose.

Ball, John Hodiak,
Lloyd Nolan

Deerpath

(Continued

ske, Harry Sellery, Mrs. William Miller Jr., Mrs. Lawrence
E. Meyer,
Mrs. Harry Van Ornum, Mrs. Carol
B. Summers, Mrs. John W. Newey,
Mrs. Ray J. Botker, Richard F.
Kuhns, Mrs. Raymond J. Ryan, William Guyot, Mrs. Harold D’Ancona,
Harrington
Yost
and
Charles
W.

17-18-19

April

Mr. Patton's Story

{| Library Drive

Highland

Park,

Hl.

ADMISSION $1.00 — Tax 20c, Total $1.20
ALL SEATS RESERVED

Exchange

Coupons

Coupons exchangeable now by mail.
Address Kiwanis Club,
Box A, Highland Park, Ill., or in person at Highland Park
News office, corner St. Johns and Laurel Avenues, Thursday,
April 10 and Friday, April 11, from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. .

�10

DIAMOND
\\ihj,

PERFECT

BRIDAL

ee a!

Shown here are only a few of the many unusual diamond
and watch values Buschs are offering to complete your
Spring ensemble.
Our confidential easy kredit plan is at
your convenience. coi
in and make your selection na

whi

PAIR

3Se

&gt;

2

‘BULOVA

is

17 JEWELS

&lt;3

750

aa

75¢ Weekly
LT 1 WK arent—

$69.
$1.50 Weekly
Beautiful bridal ensemble.
Ten
genuine
diamonds
are in this
neatly engraved
14-k
natural
gold bridal pair.
Ask for No. 96.

$1.50 Weekly

%

Beautiful large perfect diamond
in one of our latest ring creations
of 18-k white or 14-k natural
gold.
Ask for Perfect “75.”

7

o

«&lt;

Ladies’ or gents’ 17 jewel
Bulova with small size 10-k
matural
rolled
gold plate
cases— ladies’ complete
with

band

for No. 73.

to

match.

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PERFECT

Diamonds and mountings shown
are enlarged to bring out detail
of design.

SEE SPECIALS

IN OUR

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this heavy massive
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man will be proud
for Gents’ Perfect

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Large perfect sparkling center
diamond with six fiery genuine
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or
14-k natural gold with fishtail
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OS

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jewel watch with

jewel

watches

plate cases.

case.

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four

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Include

7 DIAMOND
WEDDING

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natural

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$] 675
50c Weekly

Ask

for No.

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1624 Sherman
Chicago
Also

Loop

4 Other

Store,

engagement

with

five diamond wedding ring with
fishtail style settings. 18-k white

Tax

Monday

diamond

RING

Seven genuine diamonds are in
this neatly engraved 18-k white
or 14-k natural
gold wedding

is

$4 MD v-200

Dependable 17
14-k rose gold

96.

Buschs

ring.

Te ae
ia

Beautiful cocktail
watch
two genuine diamonds and

with small size 10-k natural

rolled

ly
a ni Ail,

$1.50 Weekly
Choice

75¢ Weekly

ae

RINGS

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diamond in
gents’ 14-k
A ring every
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WINDOWS

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Conveniently

E. Madison
Located

St.

Stores

gold.

‘Ask

for

�ROBERT

FERRY

Candidate

A

4

Year

Plan

For Mayor,

of Progress

Highland Park’s needs are urgent and critical. They
are known and recognized by everyone. Among
them are
Greater safety for school and grade crossings.

Better streets and sidewalks.
ity-wide garbage
garbage
collection.
City-wide
collection

io. RACK 38 GAWEERGD sy etent.
City-.-*Je water service.
i
CITIZENS AND

VOTE

FOR THE

PATTON
Presents

for

Highland

We can no longer grope for results.
come for action. .

Mr.

Patton

promises

a definite,

Park
The time has

practical

4-year

program for Civic progress.
ine
If elected he proposes to enlist representative citizens’ committees, with their wealth of latent talent,

to work with the.City Council in securing the ans-

wers to the problems that concern every tax payer.

Mr. Patton believes that Highland Park’s progress is
within the power of a united citizenry.
VETERANS’

MAN

COMMITTEE

WITH A PLAN

(THE FIRST NAME ON YOUR BALLOT)

�</text>
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                    <text>Photo

AN

KASTER

The Junior Choir of St. Paul’s church will be
one of the choral groups singing on Sunday.
Left
to right, front row, Betty Lou Batt, Jean Ullmann,

Thursday,

April

3, 1947

by

Ezra

Smith

CHOIR
Marian Ott, Barbara Kapschull, and Nancy Antes.
Second row, Norman Petersen, Robert Daniels, James
Reagan, and Caroline Soefker.

5c

per Copy

�a

The Mayors job is a
‘oh for a business

Bex.
silk

It’s

the
ment

the

hat.and
a

Mayor

striped

plain,

city’s

Highland

affairs.

executive

Park

is

no

job

in

of

managing

for

manage-

coordinating

the

activities of the city’s various departments—
police, fire, streets.
It calls for experience in
the administration of financial affairs, in the
wise

expenditure

of

public

efficiency.

We

know

that

Robert

F.

Walker

is

We

know

that

he

do

the

well,

such

a

man.

carried major responsibility in the planning of
advertising and public relations programs
for
some
of the
nation’s
largest
and
best-known
corporations.
He has had responsibility for the
administration
of expenditures
for advertising
running
into millions
of dollars.

Park

for

25

has

years.

been

He

a

resident

has

the

Your

best

with

of

Highland

interests

right to vote

Lakes

and

II

the

Highland

Nava!

Station.

a half years

If

you

agree

Jr.,

were

troop

through

with

us

that

Bob

and

at* the

is a

veteran
in the
Corps.

in Europe

spent

de-

was

Cross

spent four years
Signal
the 92nd

going

army

make
the kind
Park—make
up

Red

F. Walker,

war having
of
member

Patton’s third
Germany.

Scout

Boy

American

food

the

O.P.A.;

Park

Ravinia

the

Robert

son,

His

of the last
as a
army

in

served

he

War
of the

Master

Great

if elected.

After 48 years
in the business
world, Bob
Walker retired as vice president of one of the
country’s
largest
advertising
agencies.
He
has

of

partment

Two

job

World

during

Social Service,

Park

of the board of the Highland

worked

maximum

Walker

to

Walker is a member of the Executive committee of the Highland Park publie library, a member

Scout

funds.

Only a business man seasoned by long years
of
familiarity
with
business
matters
such
as
these could hope to bring to Highland Park’s city
management
the sound judgment necessary for

will

groups

organized

no

grind,

to

axe

private

serve.

It calls

ability

He has

Park and all its people at heart.

Highland
no

job.

down-to-earth

business

and

of

pants

man

with

France

and

Walker

will

of Mayor we want in Highland
your mind
now
to—vote!
‘Too

many of us take lightly the right to vote—our
most priceless possession. In the last Mayorality
election

voters

a

large

failed

that’s bad.
To
got to work at

The

cast
keep
it.

WALKER

ballots.

priceless

of

the

In

Democracy

possession.

qualified

these

working,

for MAYOR

F. J. NOSEK,

of

is your most

percentage

to

Chairman

times,
we’ve

Committee

�blame 22, Mumber 1

} *Bannockburn and Factory Wants To Locate
_ Deerfield Village

Here; Board of App eals to
Hold Public Hearing April 7

_ Election April 15
DEERFIELD
_ The

Village

of

Deerfield

will hold

its election on Tuesday, April 15, with
_ two polling places. Deerfield road is
e dividing line for the precincts. Citiens living north of Deerfield road
ill vote in the Town Hall, Deerfield
road, precinct 1. Those living south of
se

Deerfield

road will vote in the base-

ment of the Masonic Temple, the vil_ Tage offices, on Waukegan road, pre~ cinet 7

_ Where is no opposition and the canare:

erm).
.

King for trustee

aniel Hunt
year

Polls
pm.

(4 year term).

for police magistrate

term).

will be open

from

6 a.m.

(4
to

(See page 8)
The

Id

Village

of

Bannockburn.

will

its election on Tuesday, April 15,
the Bannockburn school as the

x place.
Polls will be

There 1s no opposition.
open from 6 a.m. to 5

‘Candidates will be:
Edwin M. White for president
term).

(2 year

V. ‘T. Mertz for village clerk (2 year

K

erm).
M. Conley for trustee (4 year term).

.K.

public
April

hearing
7,

at

will be held
8

p.m,

before

Towler

for

trustee

(4 year

the

Board of Appeals in the Deerfield Village offices in the Masonic Temple.
Here is the first test of Deerfield’s
real opinion on the question of light
manufacturing. Does Deerfield want its
light manufacturing area increased to
allow factories to build here?
Who
wants
light. manufacturing?
Who does not want Deerfield to become a factory village?
Tractomotive Co. Applies
A petition of the Tractomotive Corporation of Findlay, O., for the erection of a modern one-story factory
building on County Line road, just east
of the Milwaukee tracks is being presented to the Deerfield Village Board
of Appeals by the owner of the property, James A. Flynn.
the land already zoned for light manufacturing to include a tract large
enough for this proposed factory. With
the 9.8 acres zoned in 1924 for light
manufacturing, Mr. Flynn requests an
additional 16.4 acres, making a site of
26.2 acres.
Complete details of this proposed
factory were reported in last week’s
Deerfield Review.
Also on the agenda will be the petition of Percy Wilson &amp; Co. for the
re-zoning of Class A residential lots on

South Waukegan road, across from St.
Paul’s church, to Class B multiple
dwelling units.
The Board of Appeals includes John
A. Benz, chairman; Henry Clifford
Hawes of Brierhill road, Eugene Englehard of “Wilmot road, Walter Lige
of Forest avenue, and Hubert Kelley
of West Deerfield road.

Chamber of Commerce
Honors Retired Officers
ee
cast with
James
Mailfald,
Fred Labahn, and Mrs. Albert Tortt as winners on Tuesday.
For road commissioner,
Mailfald

otes.
_ For
elected)

library

directors

unofficial

count:

(2

to

Fred

be
La-

ee Bowling Tsuihomant
1 Los Angeles, Calif.

icive out to Los
owling
“pies

Angeles National
tournament
two

J.
eam with William Chambers,
tellari, and Frank Goffo, (the Duf&amp; Duffy team of Deerfield Bowlacademy) and bowled in the tourna-

. Herbert Engstrom substituted on
am for a regular member, MarFredericks, who did not go.

Tuesday, April 29
North

Mon-

Mr. Flynn requests the extension of

BANNOCKBURN
_

A
day,

Bus Hearing Is
Postponed To

A roast beef dinner “fit for a king”
was set before the Deerfield Chamber
of .Commerce members Thursday eve-

ning, prepartd by women of St. Paul’s

CALENDAR OF

EVENTS

THURSDAY, April 3:
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
3 p.m. High School PTA,
8 p.m. Amvets auxiliary.
8 p.m. Eastern Star.
8 p.m. Grammar school PTA board
meeting.
FRIDAY, April 4:
Good Friday, beginning of school
vacations.
SUNDAY, April 6:

Easter

services.

MONDAY, April 7:
8 p.m. Re-zoning hearing in Village
offices.
TUESDAY, April 8:
2 p.m. Woman’s club book review.
8 p.m. Village Board.
8 p.m. Fireside club.
WEDNESDAY, April 9:
8 p.m. Township Board.
THURSDAY, April 10:
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
7:30 p.m. Royal Neighbors.
SATURDAY, April 12:
12 noon to 7 p.m. High school elections, and all grade school elections,
with time set by various boards; also
election of township school trustee.
8 p.m. Amvets Auxiliary Box social.
TUESDAY, April 15:
6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Deerfield and Bannockburg village elections.
‘THURSDAY, April 17:
12:15 p.m. Rotary club.
za p.m. Presbyterian Woman's association.
2:30 p.m.. Deerfield. school PTA.
Sam Campbell’s lecture.

Harold Huhn Dies in Tucson
Following a Long Illness
Funeral

services were

held Saturday

for Harold Huhn, 33, in Tucson, Ariz.,

church. Fifty members were present.
where he passed away Thursday folMilton A. Frantz, newly elected presi- lowing
a long serious illness. The
dent, presided. Retiring officers were ashes will be brought to Deerfield and
honored, and a gift was presented to memorial services will be held later.
Roy Moore, out-going president, in apHe is’ survived by his wife, the
preciation of. his services. Allan Adel- former Frances Jenkins of Highland
man made the presentation speech. Al- Park, and three little children, Priscilla,
bert Arentz paid tribute to Edward F. 10, Richard,, 7, and Donald, 8; his
Segert, also a retiring officer.
tather, John Huhn; a brother, Andrew
Chief of Police Percy McLaughlin, of Racine; his aunt who reared him,
membership chairman, has presented 18 Miss Louise Huhn, and ‘an uncle,
new members in the past two months Clarence Huhn of Springfield avenue,
bringing the total membership up to all Deerfield.
Born in Deerfield, he attended the
93. His goal is 100.
Arrangements were made to have the local schools and was graduated from
next meeting on April 24 a ladies’ night. Highland Park High school where he
Roy Clavey, chairman of the ways and was prominent in basketball and basemeans committee, heads the ladies’ ball. In the Boy Scouts he was also
active and attained the rank of Eagle
night committee.
The Deerfield Chamber of Commerce Scout. He was employed by several
went on record as unanimously endors- dairy companies. The family moved to
of his
ing the proposed Highland Park-Deer- Tucson last spring because
health.
j
field bus service.

Shore

Continues

Line

Its Fight

.

i

Testimony on behalf of the Highland Coach Lines, Inc., proposed bus
service between Deerfield and High-land Park was heard Thursday by
the Illinois Commerce Commission
The North Shore Line, opposing the
bus
service,
asked
for
and
was
granted
a postponed
hearing for '
April 29, for which their attorneys —
stated they wanted more time “to
fight the new testimony”. Attorney —
Stout used the word “fight”,
Proposed New Route

David Axelrod, attorney for the
Highland Coach Lines, Inc., presented —
an amended
petition to have the
route in Highland
Park
turn off
Central avenue at First street, north
on

First

street

to

the

Vine

—

avenue

underpass, thence east on Vine ave-:
nue to the high school, and south
on St. John’s avenue to the Central
avenue railroad crossing, then west

on Central avenue to Deeriieid road
and

Deerfield.
The Opposition
Attorney
Stout,
for
the
North yi
Shore Line, wanted to have the buses —

turn

around

in

the

Highland

Park ©

business district. Not being a resident of that city, he knew very little sa
of such traffic hazards as he ane?
gested.
The North Shore Line attorneys
are opposing every step, and even
tried to keep the Deerfield Review

press notices from being entered on
the court
ruled.

records.

They

were

over-— e

B. F. Bills Wants Bus Service

_

Benjamin F. Bills, president of B.
F. Bills Realty Co.,, speaking in sup- —
port of the bus service, said his com- —
pany had over 500 home sites Stabe
along the proposed route that would - 7
benefit from the transportation.
Another witness, Paul E. Barton,
whose new home at 840 Westcliff
road, in the Briarwoods subdivision is
just
about
ready
for
occupancy,

stated that he approved

He

has

the busline.

_

an 18 year old daughter,
(Continued on page 15)

Not Even a ‘Thank yaw

For Returning $1,700 |

|

Herman Frank, owner of the Dee
field Powder Box found a wallet on
the floor in the Deerfield State Bank
last
Monday
morning,
containing
$1,700. Mr. Frank gave it to Chester Wessling, cashier, who in turn re-—
turned

To
been

it to

the

owner.

date Mr. Frank has not even
thanked by the owner for re-

turning

it! The

owner

employed in Highland

is an

ex-GI

Park.

peat Will Close
riday Evening
The West Deerfield Township library :
will be closed on the evening of Gaod
Friday,

April

4.

ae

�Page 4

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

April

3,

V. Murphy and
The Rev. C. O. Sullivan

Vol.

1947

Deerfield Foorum |

Introducing:
The Rev. James
22,

No.

|Bannockburn Mayor's Letter
Tells of Road Repair Plans

OF HOLY CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH

1

To

the Editor-:
I have just returned to the city
after some weeks absence and received your letter of March 7th.
The Village Board is acutely aware
of the condition .of Wilmot and the
North section of Telegraph Roads
and is now taking bids to repair them
as soon as the weather permits.
#4
I cannot now give you the name of —
the trustee in charge of roads as this —

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
Chestnut St., Deerfield,
Illinois
Ruth Pettis, Editor
Phone
Deerfield
485
Published — Weekly every Thursday
745

Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per
Domestic Rate — $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND
FARK
OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone H.P.
4500

year

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
‘Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at Deer~
of March
Act
the
under
Tinois,
field,

chairmanship

8, 1879.”

Don’t Be Discouraged
About the Bus Service
Sitting in on the Illinois Commerce
Commission hearing of the petition
of the Highland Coach Lines, Inc.,
in Chicago, for bus service between
Highland
Park and. Deerfield was
well worth the time spent,—even to
missing a bridge party and luncheon
last Thursday at Deerpath Inn.

Commissioners

hearing

the

outcome”,

in

an

off-the

record

con-

versation, and came away from the
hearing with visions of new buses
running
regularly
within
a
few
months.

to 6 p.m.,

in

the

Deerfield

Grammar

school. The other two polling places
are the First National Bank in Highland Park for Highland Park-Ravinia
citizens,

and

Oak

Terrace

school

for

Highwood citizens.
This township school trustee serves
the two townships which were originally

one,

and

the

school

districts

106

through 113.
Samuel R. Rosenthal, 228 Bronson
lane, Highland Park, is a candidate
to

succeed

Herbert

Lautmann,

re-

tiring after serving the past 13 years.
Each term is 6 years.
Incumbent
members
are
Henry
Siljestrom of District 107, Highland
Park, and Ralph Peterson of District
109, Deerfield, who have two and four
more years to serve, respectively. Mr.

Rosenthal is from, District 108.

C. C. Kapschull St., Gets Big
Waukegan Building Contract
Charles

street,

C.

is the

Kapschull

building

Sr. of

Spruce

contractor

with

for

the proposed $2,400,000 Illinois Bell
Telephone Co. building to be erected in
Waukegan. The site is the west side
of Utica street across from the County
court house.

you.

Editor’s
Photos

Left

to right:

Father

Sullivan

This week’s introduction is to the
Rev. James V. Murphy, pastor of Holy
Cross

church,

and

his

assistant,

the

Rev. C. QO. Sullivan.
The Rev. Father Murphy came to
Deerfield in January of 1937. During
his

pastorate

the

parochial

school

has

been built and was ready for occupancy September, 1937. The rectory
was erected in 1938. Plans are already
underway for a new school when building materials are available.
,
The Rev. Father Murphy grew up in
Chicago and attended DePaul academy,
Quigley Preparatory seminary, Chicago; St. Mary’s seminary, Baltimore,
Md.; and Sulpitian seminary, Washington, D. C.
he

Parishes
and

voters
trustee
3 p.m.

to

the

Village

from

time

to

time, I shall be happy to discuss them a

to

S. R. Rosenthal Is Candidate
For Township School Trustee
West
Deerfield Township
will vote for’ township school
on Saturday, April 12, from

relative

case

were just and fair in every way. A
woman’s intuition seemed to whisper,
“Stop worrying about those North
Shore Line attorneys. They will hurt
their own company by making Deerfield antagonistic, even though Deerfield wants to ride the North Shore
Line to supplement the hours when
the Milwaukee service has no trains.”
The editor was impressed with the
fact that the earnest efforts of Deerfield citizens are sure to bring about
this bus service. It does not seem
possible that the ICC
could turn
“thumbs down” on a deserving community.
She was assured of “ “a favorable

will not be determined —

until after the April 15th election.
It has not been the practice of the
Village to oil any of the gravel roads
within the limits, _
ei’
If you have any further questions

Deerfield

served

included

St.

coming

Sylvester’s

Chicago,

in

Presentation,

before

and

St.

Odilio in Berwyn.
Two of his brothers are also priests—
Rev. ThomasJ. Murphy, C. M., pastor
of St. Vincent’s, Cape Giratdeat: Mo.;
and Rev. John P. Murphy, US.N., Ci
as
C. Father John was on active duty
a chaplain in the Pacific area.
With added duties of a growing
parish, the

need

for

an

became necessary and
the Rev. Cornelius O.
Deerfield.
The Rev. Father
lain in the navy, for

assistant

pastor

in January, 1946,
Sullivan came to

Sullivan, a chapabout three years,

School Elections Will Be
Held on Saturday, April 12
Grade and high school elections all
will take place on Saturday, April 12,
with the hours of each election. set
by

the

various

school

boards,

Next

week there will be complete details
of each election, the candidates, and
the hours set at each polling place.

Firemen.
Go to Roof Blaze at
Fireman’s House Saturday
Deerfield volunteer fire department
answered a call Saturday noon when
Fireman Alfred Gastfield’s house on
Deerfield road caught fire. The roof
was burned just east of the chimney
and the blaze was quickly extinguished.

and

Father

by

James

Kilcoyne

Murphy.

served 18 months in the Pacific. He
was reared in Chicago and attended
Quigley Preparatory seminary and St.
Mary of the Lake, Mundelein, Ill. He
served St. Sabina’s parish in Chicago
for six years.
There are now two daily Masses at
6:30 and 8:15 a.m, and four Masses
each Sunday.

The Catholic church in Deerfield was
organized in 1909 in a meeting in the
home of the first “mayor” of Deerfield,
the late John C. Ender. Among the
members represented were those of the
Ender, Duffy, Karch, Kress, Love,
Franken,
Ryan,
Schneider,
Dawson,
Zahnle, and Knickerbocker families.
The large living room in the Ender
home was placed at the disposal of the
parish until a church could be built.
Previous to that time Catholics had
attended services in nearby communities.
Holy Cross church was dedicated on
28,

October

1909.

It

was

a

mission

church of St. Patrick’s of Everett,
now West Lake Forest, and the parish
priests were the Revs. Thomas Quinn,
William Ryan, and J. K. Fielding.
Deerfield became a separate parish
in 1929 and priests who have served
Deerfield are the Revs. Charles L. McDonough, Joseph Savage, and the two
present

note:

A

letter

from

a

Ban-

nockburn resident deploring the bad
roads appeared in a recent issue of |

The Review, a copy of which. was —
sent to Mr. White. Thank you, Mr. i
White,

for

your

reply.

To West Deerfield Township Public
Mr.

Arthur

Baker,

Supervisor

The “Church of The Covenants”, —
through the medium of the “Deerfield —
Review”,
desires to express public |
thanks and appreciation for the —
of the Town Hall for Divine worship’
_
services and meetings the past. “ae
teen months. The kindness and co-,
operation of the personnel, in chargé |
of the Town Hall, was commendable.
As a congregation of Christian be
lievers we leave Deerfield with th
spirit of good-will to all, and with

the sincere wish for Deerfield’s material and spiritual growth within the é “|

Body Politic of our beloved country,
called by George Washington, “the
second land of promise”.
a

We welcome anyone desiring to se
our recently
acquired
“House
O
Prayer”
in
Lake
Forest,
Illino

which

is

to

be _ re-dedicated

an

ever you worship, may all the Divin
peace, joy and blessings of the Easte
Season abide with you.
Church Of The Coens
Arthur C. Kuehn, Pastor.
APPRECIATION

pastors.
To

Bob-Mari Team Will Bowl
Deerfield Amvet All-Stars
On

rae
Sincerely yours,
c
Edwin M. White
Village of Bannockburn ~

Saturday,

April

5, at 8 p.m.

in

the Deerfield Bowling Academy, the
will have a match
team
Bob-Mari
game with the Deerfield Amvet All-

Star team.
The All-Stars are reported by their
opponents to be a “powerful team”
with Bill Peterson, who placed in the
money
in
the
Barrington
sweepstakes;
Christ
Willman
Jr., who
placed in the Deerfield Men’s Singles
tournament;
Melvin
Mailfald,
Edward Horenberger, and Phil Scully
ae

The Bob-Mari team includes Bucky
Walter, Marshall Fredricks, Walter
Schmauss,
George Moen, and Gail
Meintzer.

the

Editor:

In behalf of the “Church Of Thea
Covenants”, it is a
you for your service
the notices of our
services and Bible
the past
thirteen.
“Deerfield Church

account
quired

of
in

the

Lake

pleasure to thank
in having printed
Divine worship
study meeting,
months
in the
News”, and the

church
Forest,

building ac-.
Illinois, in the

March 13th., 1947, issue of the “Dee
field Review”.
Your service to the community and
to the spiritual life within it, through
the

medium

of

the

weekly

paper

merits a word of praise and appre
ciation. We wish for you continued
success and blessing in your oe
Sincerely yours,
Church Of The Coven

Arthur

C.

Kuehn,

Pastor

�|

FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. B, E. Vanderbeek,

Manse:

1024

Phone

Ve

ee

Story

ae the end of the Sabbath,
dawn toward the first day

e Mary

Magdalene

as it began
of the week

and the other Mary

See the sepulchre.
“And, behold, there was a great earth; quake:
for
the
angel
of the
Lord
deded from heaven, and came and rolled
ae the
stone from
the door, and
sat

e; His dacubinaber was like lightning,
nis raiment. white as snow:

ye

and

nd for fear of him
the
keepers
did
e, and became as dead men.
nd the angel answered and said unto
women, Fear not ye: for I know that
seek Jesus, which was crucified.

He

is risen,

as he

said.

where the Lord
go quickly, and
he is risen from
he
goeth
before
hall ye see him;
they
departed

chre

with

n to

fear

bring

and

his

CROSS

CATHOLIC

C.

O.

Sullivan,

“Week days Masses:

HOLY’

essions
a.m. —
all

Holy

Mass

of

p.m. Way
Way
ion

' »

m.

CHURCH

Pastor

Ass’t.

8:15

a.m.

Communion

Procession;

to the Blessed

OOD
Veneration

m.

and

é
Version.

6:30 and

Mass;

‘p.m. Giayers

joy;

THURSDAY

and

145 a.m.

Sacrament.

HOLY

Proces-

Presanctified.

of the Cross.
of the Cross.

Sermon

SATURDAY

Blessing of the
Paschal Candle.

6:30
Adora-

FRIDAY
of the Cross;

the

the

word.

Bible
Revised

J. V. Murphy,

Rev.

see

28 :1-8

The Holy
American
LY

great

disciples

Matthew

_ Rev.

Come,

lay.
tell his disciples
the dead; and, beyou
into Galilee;
lo, I have told you,
quickly
from
the

New

Fire,

on

Easter

essions: 3:30 to 5:80; 7:30 to 9:00.

EASTER

7 am. High
Masses

E

Mass.
at

SUNDAY

8:00,

9:00,

BETHLEHEM

(Evangelical

10:00

and

CHURCH

United

Brethren)

am.

The

4—
Good

e will be held
hlehem choir will

Communion

Friday

Communion

in the church. _ The
sing.
The theme of

Meditation

will

be

‘‘The

from the Cross.”
SUNDAY,
April 6—
a.m. Easter Sunrise service will be held
the Sanctuary of the church.
The girls’
somposed
of Miss
Anita Pagel, Miss
arjori
Hurt,
and
Miss
Barbara
Merry
will sing.
The pastor will speak on the
neme: “The Resurrection Fact.”
a.m. Following the sunrise seryice the
ua!

es

Easter

breakfast

Auxiliary will be
of
the
church.

sponsored

held
For

by

pastor

:

wi i

speak

on

the

theme:

SUNDAY,

April

6—

6:30 a.m. The Tuxis society joins with
the Highland
Park
Tuxis
society
in an
Easter Sunrise service at the Central avenue beach in Highland Park.
9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Two Easter services with music by the choir and a sermon
on
the
topic:
“I
Have
Overcome
the
World.”
The
Junior
and
Intermediate
depart-

ments

of

the

Church

school

will

attend

the 9:30 service.
The Primary department
will meet
in the west
room
downstairs.
The Sunday Kindergarten will meet at 11.
Our New
Members
We sincerely welcome the following into
our membership:
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Winston
S. Porter,
by
confession and reaffirmation, respectively ;
Robert E. Rainer, by confession; Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew E. Savage, by reaffirmation ;
Charles Savidis, by letter from the Morgan
Park Methodist church, Chicago; Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Schwarm, by letter from the
Wilmette
Methodist
church;
Mrs.
John
Smith, by confession.
Baptisms
Robert
George
and
Lynne
Susan, the
two children of Mr. and Mrs. Winston Ss.
Porter, were baptized at the service Palm
Sunday.

ST. PAUL’S

EVAN.

6
Phone
Rev. Hugo

&amp; REFORM.

CHURCH

THURSDAY,
Saas.
1:15
p.m.
St. . Paul’s
Woman’s
Guild
at Erle Slown home.
7:30
p.m.
Maundy
Thursday,
German
communion
service, open to all.
GOOD
FRIDAY—
7:30 p.m.
Communions
service.
Last
sermon in the series, ‘‘Personalities of the
Passion.’
SATURDAY, April 5—
2 pind.
Easter
party
for
the
Sunday
school.
Annual
egg
hunt
for
primary
department,
EASTER SUNDAY—
6 a.m. Sunrise service and communion.
New
junior
choir
ictured
on Deerfield
Review cover) will
sing.
9:30 a.m. Sundae school.
10:45 a.m. Easter worship service.
Reception
of adult
members
and
baptism.
Communion.
Roll

Call

Saturday evening the new confirmation
class members
of St. Paul’s church were
hosts to all the former classes beginning
with
1876.
Roll call showed
one living
member
of
the
class
of
1880,
Edward
Horenberger of West Deerfield road, and
none for the four earlier years.
A true reunion of church classes, many
acquaintances

were

“‘Life

a
DAY, April 8—
Fireside club will meet at the home
and
Mrs.
Ambrose
Cox.
The
i'l
be
Harry
Shigeta
who will
peak en Photography.
EDNESDAY,
April 9—
;
final
auarterly
conference
of the
will be held in the social rooms of the
r.
I.
L.
Sehweitzer,
district’
ntendent of the Chicago area of the
‘lieal United
Brethren
Church,
will
urge.
Baptism
‘alter James
Woods,
son of Mr, and
Chester Woods
(Helen Theroux)
of
- Waukegan road was baptized at the
nday
morning
worship.
service.
November
17,
19438,
his
sponsors
Mir, ‘ana
Mrs.
Richard
Theroux
of

Presbyterian Women’s
Association Has Election

Glies Editorial

The annual luncheon meeting of
the Deerfield Presbyterian Women’s
association was held Thursday at the
D. L. Dewey home on County Line
road.
These

are

officers

of

the

Women’s

association:
President,
Mrs,
Walter
W.
Lige; first
vice-presidnet,
Mrs.
C. A. Wolf;
second
vice-president, Mrs. Edward Ludlow; secretary,
Mrs.
Dudley
L. Dewey;
treasurer,
Mrs. Edward Selig.
Circle chairmen: One,
Mrs. Charles Johns; two, Mrs. Frank
E.
Glotfelty;
three,
Mrs.
Evan
M.
Davis;
four,
Mrs.
L. DeFreitas;
five,
Mrs.
Winston Porter.

The annual. re-assignment of the
women
new circles groups took
place at
this time, also.

St. Paul’s women’s organizations of
the church for April are announced:
Sia
e
April 3, 1:15 p.m.: St. Paul’s
Guild at home of Mrs. Erle Slown; Mrs.
James
Mailfald, assisting hostess.
Thursday, April 10, 1:15 p.m.: Circle 1 at
a
of Mrs. Robert Herrmann, Wilmot
roa
Thursday, April 17, 10:30 a.m.: At church,
Mrs. Arthur Johnson, hostess for sewing circle.
Friday, April
18, 1:15 p.m.:
Sodality
at
home of Mrs. Martin Murphy in Highland Park.
Wednesday, April 23, 1:15 p.m.: Circle 2
at home of Mrs. Floyd Bock in. Highland Park.
4
Saturday, April 26, 8 p.m.: Fellowship club
at home of Mr. and Mrs. Pred Brandwein, with Mr: and Mrs. Floyd Bock as
assisting hosts.

renewed

and

numerous

old pictures
of the former
class
groups
were shown.
The class of 1947: Janet Antes ,Nancy
Antes,
Arliss
Johnson,
L. Barbara
Kapschull,
Jean
Ullmann,
Robert
Adamson,
Robert
Daniels,
Donald
Grabo,
Norman
Petersen,
James
Reagen,
Henry
Tuttle
III, and Harold Visoky.

Birthday Anniversaries

Are Celebrated With

Parties

Eleven
*
‘
William P. Carrolj III was 11 years
old on Sunday and celebrated by
having a party for 12 guests at his
home on Spruce street.
Twelve
For her 12th birthday anniversary,
Maurita Morgan
was hostess at a
party last Sunday at the home of
her parents, Mr. and
Mrs.
C.
E.
Morgan of Forest avenue.
Eight
Being eight years old is quite a
event for all boys and girls. March
21 was the 8th birthday anniversary
for Paula Carr and she celebrated

Diane Jordan Is President of
Presbyterian Girls, Circle 2
Sunday Circle 2, which includes the
sixth
and
seventh
grade
Sunday
school
class.
of
the
Presbyterian
church, held its bi-annual election
on Sunday, March 30. New officers
are Diane Jordan,
president;
Lynn
Street, vice president; Audrey Allen,
secretary;
Sally
McChesney,
treasurer; and Mary Lloyd, social chairman.
Since the circle was organized in
September, the girls have had two
seasonal

parties

and

have

completed

two projects on their own time, suppiemented
by
Saturday
afternoon
gatherings
at the
home
of their
teacher, Miss Patricia Lige of Forest
avenue.
The projects were scrapbooks for
the hospitalized, and picture books
of greeting
cards for a children’s
hospital. A number of the girls plan
to attend a junior young people's
church conference this summer.
Scaliepchblice ila

ag

Presbyterian Women
Plan Rummage Sale

os

Men. of good will throughout tie.
world agree that the best remedy for
present

dices

fears

onc aae

Beira

and

ee

doubts

is a regrowth

and

preju- —

of positive reli- 2

gion,
You
and I know
that
religious
principles lead us to respect and feel
kindly toward our fellow men. If
everyone felt that way would any- —

thing more be needed to solve today’s

or tomorrow’s or indeed any day
problems ?
Personal
adherence
to redigtaie

gives inner peace

and se-

curity to the individual, but that a
can be vastly enlarged if we maintain
means to further not only individual
but general adherence to those principles. Of prime importance is the
means of instilling the right principles

of living in the

mind

and

heart of

youth.

Your

own

serve

Church

both

is the. means

ends—your

very

to
Own

Church that is as strong as we teas
gether make it and as effective as
the sum of your own efforts plus
that very tangible addition that results from the concerted effort of a
sincere group under earnest leader- —
ship in a great and worthy cause.
Perhaps what you have just read |
will justify re-reading and a bit of
serious thought. Think for a moment _
of the full meaning of your Church ~

—first

to

us

as

family

units

and

members of a local community, to us”
as citizens of a nation, and then t
us as One of the harassed and frightened peoples of the world. Do you

not share
of
of

the

belief that a re-birth _

religion with
its principles

needs

earnest
is what

application —
the world ©

most?

You and I can’t change the wp
thinking and habits within the next
few days or years. We can, however,
by our own efforts combined with
those of a few score of others here
and a few millions of others there
have a cumulative effect that no human scale is large enough to measure.

4

That joint effort is now being made
by thousands of churches like yours.
You and I owe it to ourselves and our
families, to our community and to
the world to contribute unsparingly
of our spiritual, mental, and material
resources to further that part of the —
effort for which we are responsib!:. |
How can you contribute? By ta’ - —
ing a sincere part in the worship a: d_
other activities of your church, by |

encouraging

all

and

your

church

work

that

members

your friends

of

to

do

your

generously
providinz
support
that
ena les

|
—

to do its full part in the
is

so

vital

to

all

of

us.

Miss
Margaret
Harris
is leavin:
her home in Stourbridge, Worche ter-

shire,
England,
tomorrow,
2nd
‘s
crossing the Atlantic by plave to
New
York. Her marriage to Dale

Berning

—

like-

Fn Route From England
For Her Wedding Here

of Osterman

avenue,

field, will take place Saturday,
12, in St. Paul’s church.
Sper

gy

Regrowth

wise,
and
by
the
financial

at a party on March 23 at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Carr of Hazel avenue,
AO

Religious

family

“When you are house cleaning this
month, don’t throw anything
away.
Save it for the Presbyterian rummage
sale,” urges Mrs, Albert Arentz, chairman of the sale.
The Presbyterian Woman’s association will hold a rummage sale in the
Sunday school rooms in the church
basement on Wednesday, Thursday, and
Friday, April 23, 24, 25.

if

By Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek
World Needs Positive

principles

St. Paul’s Women’s Groups
Announce April Meetings

egan Road
Deerfield
858
Leinberger, Pastor

the

in the social
reservations

18.
a 45 a.m. Church school meets.
10:55
a.m. Easter worship service.
The
ethlehem
choir
will sing
two
anthems.
2

Road

775

FRIDAY, April 4—
8 p.m. Good Friday Communion service,
“All that humbly put their trust’ in Christ,
and desire His help that they may lead a
holy life, all that are truly sorry for their
sins
and
would
be
delivered
from
the
burden: of them, are invited and encouraged
in His name to come to this Sacrament.”
The Confirmation class of seventeen of
our young people who will be received into
the membership of the church:
Gregory T. Armstrong,
Alice Rosemary
Black,
Selden
W.
Clark,
Barbara
Ardis
Dewey,
Marlene
Easton,
Frank
W.
Glotfelty,
Diana
Lura
Jordan,
Sally
Anne
McChesney, Donald Reed Meyer, Mary Ann
Meyer, Barbara Jean Morrison, Jacquelyn
Grant Russell, Wendell
T. Savage,
Elizabeth Lynn
Street, Joan Morley Thomson,
Lucinda Lee Thomson, William R. Winters.

Confirmation

Seuuris Boelter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace

‘RIADAY, April

Waukegan

Deerfield

CHURCH
Minister

DeerApr

4

�FRED

and

OFFICE SUPPLIES
“North

RED

% | William “Bill” Saielli of the famous golfing Saielli’s is a candidate
for alderman in Highwood.

E Dick Tew of 367 Oakland Dr., a‘
Highland Park High alumnus, is in
his sophomore year at Harvard...
Dick is majoring in Bio-Chemistry.
- How about giving that man in your.

fife

a

Stetson

Hat

Certificate

Check

. . . Dick,

Park

for

High

T Yuast arrived . ... 100 dozen Adler
fe ink Controlled ‘Sweat Soxtsacs 4

10-13

- store
pee

. . . Call

H.P.

to door servick
as you like.

362

for

wie » Ofder

as

- Al Gerken, Jerry McCaffrey, John
‘Moran and Bud Moroney head the
ommittee for the VFW’s Big Spring

Dance—"Snafu

Session”—May

10th

recreation

and

|)

Ed Brogan,

College
tion,

home

last. week

spent

several

from

for
hours

Iowa

State

spring

vaca-

each day in

“the air... Ed,a HPHS grad, was a
~ Marine pilot during the war.
~
Big Roy Nelson, former star ath- lete at our local high ard: prominent
campus figure at Bradley, has signed
hea contract
with
the
Philadelphia

While

Our

A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Snavely,
26 South
Central —

avenue, Highwood, at Highland Parke

parents

FILE

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No amount of sedatives, :
eareful use of sleep inducit
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human

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Consult

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doctor

cannot sleep well.
Rafferty has’
“Sonny”
in! the Air aha with»

you

Sheets

. Eagles.
ie Larry
enlisted)

|

March

$4.00

STORAGE

PENCILS

A Complete
&amp;

at Highland

Saturday,

CARBON

4x6 FILE CARDS, 1,000 $1.80

Letter Size

Carry

born

A daughter was born to Mr. |
Mrs. Leonard Johnson, eee
avenue, Highwood, at the St. Fr.
cis hospital in Evanston on Is¢ de
March 25.

:

NO. 2 LEAD

FILE FOLDERS

on

Mr. and Mrs. George Slack,
Pleasant avenue, Highwood, are
parents of a daughter born at t
Highland Park hospital on a
March 30.

(15 colors to choose from)

CARD

a son

Park hospital on Saturday, March 29.

$1.08
$1.35

$1.39 &amp; $1.75

of 100 Sheets)

SIZE

of

hospital

A daughter was born to Mr.
ar
Mrs.
James Sullivan, 217 Burch
avenue, Highwood, at the Highla

PADS 19x24

(1) 3x5 FILE CARDS, 1,000 $1.10
0 LETTER

Mrs. Hubert Kloepfer, 913
road, Deerfield, are. the

of a daughter bornat Highland Park —
hospital on Saturday, March 29.

Sheaffers.)

CARTER’S

28.

Mr. and Mrs. John Fiore,49 Prairi
avenue, Highwood. are the parents

84x11 MARVEL BOND TYPE PAPER
[] 814x1l YELLOW SECOND SHEETS
(J ‘WEBSTER

March

.

PTS.

popular

Friday,

Mr..and
Waukegan

4-Drawer LEGAL SIZE LETTER FILE
AUTOMATIC GIANT PENCIL SHARPENERS
METAL OFFICE WASTE BASKETS
SPONGE RUBBER CHAIR PADS from

(All the

ath-

“Jetic activities” is the project P
i Treasurer for the drive is Harry S,.
Temple of 280 Laurel Ave...
. As old
iy
Elm Place grads we’re offering our}
‘- support.

LETTER

CT] QTS. INK

at pake

supervised

Today

(] 4-Drawer

[1 DISPENSERS

‘ A worthwhile project to be supported is the Morgan
Playground
“Improvement Plan. . . “To improve
Morgan Playground (which is located
“across
Sheridan
Road
from
Elm
“Place School) so that the children
will have adequate. facilities for out-

door

Items

Complete.

Park
29.

oO

Johnny Heyman,
fotmer
HPHS
lineman, is one of the standout can“‘didates reporting
to Coach
Ralph

sessions

Office

Most

Mr. and Mrs. Hubert J. McGuire,
494 Sheridan place, are the parents of
a son born at Highland Park hospital
Friday, March 28.

C1) HANDY HOME ALL METAL LETTER FILE
(Ideal for Home Use—Small, Compact &amp; Fireproof)

% Dick Bruce of Cavell Ave. has mas‘tered the ABC’s of skiing at Colotado A&amp;M.

spring grid
College.

is

of

hospital,

(] 50-LB. POSTAL

. Johnny Olin’s band will play .
“dThe shindig’s to be held at the Labor
pauple

‘Jones’
Forest

to Get

Stock

from $10.50
[RUBBER BANDS 1-02. pkg. 10c 14 Ib. box 50¢ 1-Ib. box $1.50
CO PAPER CLIPS 1,000 in carton
1) STEEL CASH and BOND BOXES
( 2 drawer STEEL LETTER FILES |
CO 2-Drawer FILE and SAFE COMBINATION
O
(]
C)
1

‘product, is taking courses in pharmacy during his off duty hours.

‘Sizes

Hard

Complete

‘(] FLUORESCENT DESK LAMPS

of Walereen’s has his
a pharmacist’s
career

a Highland

These

Most

Stock

Easter . . . Mentioning hats reminds
us that all of our spring numbers
are in... Drop in and try as many
a you lice on.
.
it&gt; Dick Ward
goal set on

V

Shore’s

vise

re-.
his

rs

# wartime rank of Captain. . . . Sonny’s
flying record during the war was one
pot the outstanding of Highland Park.

|

you

scription

what

to

;

if yo

He will addo,

his

can be trusted. —

Have this filled by a ca
pharmacist.
—

en W. Gsell &amp; Ce
COR. CENTRAL &amp; SECOND

Tel. 3100.

Highland Park, Ill.

—Pharmacists—
Highland Park
Phone

2600 .

_

By
|

�ee
wi

a

oe
Am

ig
ae

\
\ \\

y

”

\\
-

A unique

spectacle

crowdsof Highland
day morning,

when

will ~hypnotize

Parkers
Harlan

SaturTarbell,

‘famous magician and man of many
mysteries who will be presented in
benefit performance at Highland
k High school by the Kiwanis
» April 11, will drive a car com-

lety blind-folded

along the above

lesignated route. As passengers he
will have Mayor Joseph B. Garnett,
_

Chief of Police Rex R. Andrews
_ Harold Finch, president of the

and
Ki-

—

School children have been given
handbills containing numbers, and as
Tarbell drives along, always blindfolded, he will call out an occasional
number and present the holder with
a free ticket to the performance the
following Friday night.
Starting at 11 a.m. at the community center, the car will proceed east
on Central avenue to Sheridan road,
north on Sheridan to Elm place, west
on Elm place to Green Bay road,
north on Green Bay to First street,
(Continued on page 45)

New Thousands Are Now
| Investigating Christian Science »
They are finding health and peace far beyond
their expectation. You, too, if you wish, may
investigate it at no cost. The BIBLE, the
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE textbook and
LITERATURE containing testimonies of
healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at

Pure

Linen

is News

It’s back again ... pure linen in
a tailored
classic, in luscious
shades of green, blue, pink, natural, and black. Come and feast
your eyes, and have one for yourself. Sizes 12 to 20.
’

43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN

DAILY++

YOU

ARE

WELCOME

�Re ah

Thursday,
j

Buys Home on Duffy Lane |

R. Mitchell, local real estate broker,
made the sale. The Rossmans are moving to Washington in about two months.

;
Jerry Bryant of Saginash, Ill, has
purchased the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Rossman on Duffy lane. W.

Mr. Bryant’ has his
business in Chicago.

Nx:
SS

r

advertising
:

od

MND,

ie

Mrs.

Mrs.

Ms}

Permanent Waves Evenings
by appointment.
Frank

+

«

Books

Robert

E.

road,

Jordan
Deerfield,

of

a

member

of

the

maid

George

Moen

of Deerfield—
:

Both the groom and his fiancee are
employed by the Chicago Milwaukee
road.

A

Mrs.

re-

R. O. Clark

Legislation

Attends

Conference

Mrs. Robert O. Clark of Brierhill
road, president of the Deerfield Gram- —
mar school PTA, attended a meeting

of the Illinois Congress of Parents and

—

Teachers

|

board

on

of

March

education

Legislation

was

and

the mother of five little children,
finds time for book reviews which
she does so charmingly.
Enjoying
the books herself, she radiates the
pleasure to her audience.

= Wee

and

will serve as best man.

South

club,

27,

rooms.

effecting

discussed.

in

Mrs.

member of the Chicago
cation, was among the

Village
VILLAGE

schools — ;

Utley, —

board of eduspeakers who —

explained the legislative picture.

4

The meeting attracted over 200 members from all over the state:
ae

2

Ballot

OF DEERFIELD
ILLINOIS

Tuesday, April 15, 1947
TWO

CITIZENS
By
Term

PRECINCTS

PARTY

Petition

FOR VILLAGE TRUSTEES
of

Four

HOMER
ERIC

FOR VILLAGE TRUSTEES
Term

Years

of

Four

Years

G. CAZEL

C. BANFIELD

JOSEPH W. KING
‘FOR

POLICE
Term

of

DANIEL

MAGISTRATE
Four

Years

FOR

eed

public

Election

LAKE COUNTY,

Chicago

Clifton

~

Specimen

-

C. J. Meintzer of Walnut street. Miss —

for

will

Mintzer

Jewell and Mr. Meintzer have selected
Saturday, June 21 as their wedding
date.
es
Shee
The ceremony will be solemnized in
—
the First Methodist church of Elginat —
four o'clock in the afternoon. Miss |
Guyla Syler of Elgin is to be the brides-

view two books for the Deerfield
Woman’s club on Tuesday, April 8
at 2 p.m. in the Deerfield Grammar
school. Mrs. J. W. King, book review chairman, will introduce Mrs.
Jordan.
She will review “Mama Takes Up
Traveling” by Kenneth Horan and
“Hiroshima” by John Hersey.
Mrs.
Jordan,

623 DEERFIELD ROAD

Two

=

Announcement is made of the engagement of Miss
Neva E. Jewell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S.
Jewell. of Spanish Town, Elgin, and
Gail F. Meintzer, son of Mr. and Mrs.

R. E. Jordan Will

Waukegan

ranging

from $10.00 to $25.00 until April 15.

Mr.

Thomas

Woman's Club, April 8

FEATURES
A 20% REDUCTION
permanents

son,

road.

Review

attractive

older

Gail

Ronald Kloepfer, 9, and his sister,
Carol, 8, are looking forward to meeting their new brother, George Russell
Kloepfer,
who
was born Saturday,
March 29, in the Highland Park hospital, and tipped the scales at nine
pounds. They are the children of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Kloepfer of 913
Waukegan

in our

William R. Mitchell
are proudly announca seventh grandchild,
Miller. He is the secand Mrs. Wesley F.
Mitchell) of Colum-

bus,
Wis.
Their
Weseley, is two.

;

~

&lt;

7

.- sae

; VILLETTE

||:

own

Mss Vova Aewell
WU Be Bride of

RECENT ARRIVALS
Mr. and Mrs.
of Deerfield road
ing the arrival of
Robert Malco!m
ond son of Mr.
Miller (Margery

April 3, 1947

POLICE

Term

of

MAGISTRATE
Four

S. HUNT

Village Clerk
eds.

5

Years

�Thnisdns,

April

3,

1947
Clausens

OF
APPENINGS
IGHLAND
PARKERS
Park

News

Looneys Leave for
Vacation In Florida
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Looney and
three children, Barbara, Nancy and
Sandy, of Blackhawk
avenue,
left
Saturday for a three-week vacation
in Daytona Beach, Fla.
Pledged to Sorority
Miss Chelsia Webster was recently
pledged to Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority at Newcomb
college, Tulane
university,
New
Orleans, La.
Miss

eWVebster, a freshman at the college,
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George M. Webster, 744 Marion avenue.
Highland Parkers Leave On
Extended Southern Tour
Mr. and Mrs. James McClellan and
Mr. and Mrs. George Webster of
Highland Park will leave soon for
New
Orleans, La., where they will
remain a week. The McClellans later will leave for Los Angeles, Cal.,
and
the Websters are going on to
Houston, Texas. and Tucson, Ariz.,
where they will attend the graduation
of their son, Chandler, from Univer-

sity

of Arizona.

Local

Phi

Men

Selected

Eta Sigma

for

at Illinois

Three
Highland
Park
men
are
among
first year students at the
University of Illinois who are being
honored for outstanding scholarship
by

selection

for

membership

ter |

a

girls’

Years”,

production,

and

Miss

Phi

FOR BEST BUYS
PHONE

H. P. 1500

Canadian

Club
5th $555

Miss Gloria
Mr. and Mrs.
648

Delta

Holland, daughter
Gordon B. Holland

place,

returned

to

(One Limit)

of
of

P. M.
Sth .... $3.45.

Mon-

mouth college, Monmouth, Iil., Tuesday following a week’s visit at home
between terms. A member of Kappa
Delta

sorority,

she was

elected

IMPERIAL
oth :... $3.39

presi-

KING
5th .... $3.88
CORBY’S
5th .... $3.37
HUNTER
Sth .... $4.23

dent of the Panhellenic
union at
Monmouth just prior to the holiday.

|
£2
ZN

For

EASTER

CHAPIN
GORE

Carte «ane nied
cts att
a ome oe em

Wag wousny
is © YEARS OM

5th .... $4.95
OLD SMUGGLER

ORDER

NOW,

a cute
get

$175up

&amp;

5-yr.-old str.
Kentucky
Bourbon

eee we rneer

bunny.

Be

sure

Imported

Scotch,

ANCIENT

yours.

AGE

Straight Bourbon,

$5 85
5th

$552

5th

All Colors

Widmer's

Best

Holt, 1330

Judson avenue, designed settings for
the play, which
was presented
at
-_ University of Michigan
March
27
pee
through March 29. “The Best Years”,
written and produced according to
- Michigan tradition by junior women
students, was the forty-second annual
“3 junior play.

LIQUOR SERVICE Co.

Miss Gloria Holland
Returns to School

LIVE RABBITS

of 281
the jun-

“The

Nancy

in

Eta Sigma, national honorary scholastic fraternity. They are Richard O.
Hagen, 415 McDaniels avenue, Orcutt W. Frost, 706 Yale lane and
Robert S. Brand, 219 Park lane.

you

Watson
directed

heeatiag:

22&gt;.

- Help Produce Junior Play
At University of Michigan

- Miss Kathleen
_ Marshman avenue

to

WS=

Highland

Go

Mr. and Mrs. Niels Clausen of 2702
South Deere Park drive will board
a plane in Chicago
on
Tuesday,
April 15. Destination?, Europe. The
Telephone H.P. 4500
'Clausens ‘will fly the Atlantic from
New York City to Sweden, where
Park,
Bradford,
Mass.,
in Winter
they
will spend two months visiting
Florida, and New York City.
relatives,

THE WAGTAIL
6 No. Sheridan Rd.

Highland

FINEST
NEW YORK
WINES

SHOP

Park

Tel.

H.

P.

206

Port, Sherry,
Muscatel
5th $] 66

Miss Stafford in Florida
_
_

And N.Y.C. Between

Semesters

Burgundy,
Sauterne
Sth $] 39

Miss Ann Stafford, daughter
of
Mrs, Arthur H. Emerson of 600 Bob- QO-Link road, is spending the spring
recess from Bradford Junior college,

F. I. WINE
Port,

PACKARD
OWNERS

MILLER’S

Improve Performance
With

»

+

os4

Enaine
G
In a single operation your old
worn engine is removed and a
new factory built replacement
unit is installed.

RAVINIA MOTORS,
Inc.
22 So. First St.

‘-H. P. 1854-1855
ok,

BEER
Case

BRANDS
Careful

ARE

motorists

look

for

and

observe

signs

BEER

of safety

while driving. Wise people who have that well groomed
appearance look for signs of quality in their dry cleaning.

When

cleaning

you

that

speak
has

the

of quality remember
“Know

How”

RELIABLE’S

BAY

RD.
Highland Park

TEL.

oP,

LIFE

PRAGER

$350

BEER $275

BLUE

RIBBON

$363

Case of 24

SCHLITZ

Case of 24

BEER

$370

Special Case Lot Price
on Your Favorite

of experts.

Whiskey

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618 N. GREEN

HIGH

of 24

PABST

IMPORTANT

Muscatel

eee ccecercccccseosee

Case of 24

ATLAS

A

New PrecisionBuilt Replacement

Sherry,

Half
Gallon
Full Gallon

Liquor SERVICE Co.
337

177

Waukegan

Ave.

Highwood . . Phone H. P. 1500 |

DAILY FREE DELIVERY

|.

�- Page 10
Logs
:

Damage North Shore Train

Logs

ACCIDENT

laid across the tracks of the

North Shore line north of Ravinia
park were responsible for slight dam-

age incurred when

a

train

Mar.

ment.

Rt.
Rev.
Rev.

Deerfield and Green Bay Roaas
Highland Park 20z
Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison,
» Pastor
Edmund
John P.

J. Skoner,
O’Connell,

M.A.,
M.A.,

22-29,

1947

Distribute Blanks
For Hobby Show —
Entry

Rev.

S.T.w.
S.T.v.

MASSES:
Sundays—6 :30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00
and 12 noon,
Weekdays—6 :30 - 8:15.
. CONFESSIONS
Saturdays
eves. of First Fridays ane
Holy Days
4:00 and 7:80 p.m.

Absentee Balloting

Mar.

23-30,

1946

Total

Non-Injury Accidents .... 4
2
Injury Accidents ............
0
]
Fatal Accidents ........2:.
0
0
Contributed weekly by the
Highland Park Police Department

struck

them at 8:30 p.m. Monday, according
to the Highland Park Police depart-

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

REPORT

‘Midnight March 22 to Midnight March 29

annual

blanks
hobby

for the Rotary
show,

to be

held

club’s
at the

community center Saturday, April 26,
were
distributed throughout the
Highland Park
schools
this week,
with the stipulation that they, be returned by April 23. Every teacher
has

been

pils

to enter exhibits in the show.

asked

to

encourage

her

pu-

Residents of Highland Park
who will be out of the city on
election day, April 15, may cast
their votes
for city officials
in the following manner:
Official applications may be
secured at the city hall up to
five days before the election (to
April 10.) These must be notarized and
returned
to the
city clerk.
In other words, you
can’t just write in for a ballot!
Votes may be cast in person
at the city hall up to three
days before the election, or until Saturday, April 12

1947

63
9
0

Chicago Taxi Driver
Kidnapped, Slugged
Here Early Sunday
According to a report from the local police department, a taxi driver,
kidnapped in Chicago by three thugs
and brought to Highland Park in his
own taxi, was slugged early Sunday
morning at Sunset and Park avenue.
This incident was discovered when
the injured man reached Highland

Park hospital for treatment.
The stolen car subsequently was recovered in Chicago when the same
three men attempted another holdup
and were captured.

wit.

GOOD

|

NEWS ...

For Amateur Photographers!
ANNOUNCING

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE

Be

AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC CONTEST

$400
|

ENTER

|

STOP

In Monthly

And

Grand Prize Awards

YOUR

FAVORITE

PICTURE TODAY

F.|

IN FOR

RULES

AND

DETAILS

ts

COMMUNITY CAMERA EXCHANGE
6 North

Sheridan

Rd.

Phone

206

Tt 4

�of the Art club on Tuesday, Thurs- |
day and Saturday mornings, and of
the Craft club on Monday, Wednesday and
Friday
._mornings.
Game
rooms will be open daily for informal
play from 9 a.m. to 12 noon and from
1:30 to 5-p.m., for grade school children, and from 7 to 9 p.m. for high
school students..
If weather
permits,
softball and
other games
will be organized on

FP
: ree T hrow, Ping Pong Checker
Tournaments for Easter Week
~

Community-Center Open at All
Times to Children on Vacation
AY city-wide

free

throw

tournament

at the various grade schools, and a
checker and ping-pong tournament at
Community center will highlight the

program

planned by the Playground

and
Recreation board in cooperation
av with the schools for, Easter vacation.
_.
ixth,
seventh and eighth grade
oa boys and girls are eligible to parti-

- _cipate in the free throw tournament.
Preliminaries will be conducted at
Elm Place, Lincoln, Braeside, Ravinia
“and Ridge schools under the direction
of the school physical education in_-structors.
Winners
will
represent
their schools in the city-wide tourna_ ment to be held at Braeside school
on Friday, April 11, starting at 2
; p.m. School winners Will be awarded
ribbons, and the city-wide winners,
medals. Children interested in taking
part in this tournament are asked to
2
their school physical education

students and will be held on April 9
and 10:from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Gold and Silver medals will be
awarded first and second place winners in each division of the checker
and ping pong tournaments.
Next week’s vacation program at
the. center also will include meetings

the

various

school

day through
to 12 noon.
iums

playgrounds,

Adolph’

LIQUORS|
THE

STORE

for play.

Furniture

Penn

Calvert Rengtyea ,

ceca
Preferred

Saturday

At

Schenley

| Calvert) |

GO

DUFFY

&amp; DUFFY

CLEANERS
HIGHLAND

Blend

WINNETKA

PARK

HILL &amp; HILL |
er

At Cokes Me Inn

as

best

as to the

are

urged

to

will

be

prizes
costumed

best

couple,

costumed

boy

girl.

gives

smoother

you

greater

of Straight
Whiskies
90 proof, 5th $4, 46

Col-;) 7

comfort,p
OLD

fit.

GRAND

Bonded,

Pint

Bonded,

5th

$425 | 6

DAD

OLD TAYLOR

Can’‘t

wilt,

stays

fresh,

neat

automatic

in—can‘t

fold-line

$635

FLEISCHMANN‘S

all

day without starch.
The

$675 a

woven

Bond,

TAYLOR'S

5th

New

York

State

wander.

_ PETRI

4%

Roger Morrison’s band will play for
dancing.
Another
feature
of the
‘party will be a comedy floor show, of
which Mary Lou Cameron and George
Weil Jr. are chairmen.

lar,

Heusen

Blend

2,

to the

as well
and

guests

district.

ous one-piece Van

GOLD

FINE ART

with the fam-

se

- awarded

and

costume

school

Broadcloth

2% x? x*

in

$4. 09

se

fembers

come

High

White

eo eo 8
eR ae
ie = A8:8,oe MPae y a" &gt; 28,RBi pe a eS
83
SR
&gt; ogeee ®
r= Ot om
2 ass
‘) °
eae
8.
ee
ASS &amp; °
o.6 6 oo 228 wot
eee&gt; fe
a
a
ae
oe &amp;
* x *%$6
28 Oo @ 2,2&lt;a
a xs ° sk
sx
Oo ¢ 3
Be
3°60 8°¢
P
s
nO,
2

be open to all teen agers living in the
Park

Sunnybrook

BLACK

- Highland Park Teen Age club will
hold a costume party and dance in
Cokes Me Inn, Community center,
on Wednesday, April 9, at 8 p.m,
according to Dick Eubanks, president
the club. The party, as usual, will

+

68 a|

Van Heusen

|

Delay
to Order

E Also Cleaning and Pressing
aR
Pick up Tuesday before
10:00 a.m. and Delivered
on Fridays
. N. Second St.
H. P. 1712
AW
LM Mas oe PIE

oy

$1.75.

Port,

Sherry,

........

es,

os

F.

|.

Muscatel

Y% gal.

: -Men’s anal Women’ s
:
Clothes
Without
Suits Made

Se

Sth

2

z

'e*
e
e 'e*,
*

Tailor

ALTERATIONS

CHRISTIAN BROS. |
California Wine
A

a Sox een
&amp;
2 “y
‘oo

$395

WALTER
The

q

of Straight | —
Whiskies

FOUR ROSES 5th .....
HUNTER’S 5th
Seagram’s 7 Crown 5th $3. ‘94
OLD UNDEROOF |

Plan Costume Party

ighland

a
$3.90

eso

~ PRIVILEGE»

afternoon.

Grade school boys and girls will
compete for first and. second places
_in the checker tourney on April 7 and
8 from 1:30 to 5 p.m. in Community
- eenter.
The ping pong tourney is
open to both grade and high school

s

LORD SS

_ instructor.

Entry blanks for the ping pong
and checker tournaments have been
' distributed at the schools this week.
_ They should be turned in at the Com“munity center
before the deadline

5th

IMPERIAL 5th
50 GRAND 5th

It Cleaned

Have

SERVICE

335 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
Phone 4579
William

Your

OF FRIENDLY

Mon-

Saturday from 9:30 a.m.
Otherwise the gymnas-

will be open

DELIVERY

=

-

FREE

Van

Heusen

Ties $1.00 and

BEER
MEISTER
Case

of

GOLD

up

Case

CROWN

CENTRAL

AVE.

HIGHLAND PARK —

$37)

Of 24

HIGH

Casé-of

26

PABST

BLUE

Case

$790

24.50 es

MILLER

_ GARNETTS MENS STORE

BRAU

LIFE

$350

RIBBON

33%

3

of 2

Phone 4579
af REE i DELIVERY

a

.

�Crgeynes - Whigs - Clb Na

Ly for WOMEN
“LUTE SONG” LUNCHEON TABLE

Many Fascinating Antiques to
Be Displayed Here April 15-16

Mrs. Edward Keogh
and Mrs. J. D. Pickett
are
caught
by
our
photographer _ beside
the special
occasion
luncheon
table
they
are helping
to prepare as the entry of
the Garden Guild. of
Highland
Park
in
“‘Eqshions in Flowers,”
being held under auspices of the Garden
Club of Illinois Mar.
24 to April 5, in the
ninth
floor
galleries
of Marshall
Field &amp;
Company,
Chicago.
“Luncheon
before
Matinee, ‘Lute Song’ ”’
is the
title of
the
guild’s exhibit.
Mrs.
W. O. Heath is committee chairman,

Percy

Photo
Prior,

H.

by
Jr.

“Overstreet Colloquium” for
- Ravinia Woman’s Club April 9

Meeting

Comes

to Town”,

and

other books.
One of the most experienced and
skillful of lecturers, he makes difficult subjects clear and important to
the average person. He was educated
at University of California and at
Oxford
university,
and
served for
many years as head of the department of philosophy and psychology
at the College of the City of New
‘York.
Mr. Overstreet’s concern, however,
has always
been
with
people
in
everyday life, and the minds of American adfilts and the problems they
have

to

solve.

He

has

search
associate
of
Association for Adult
a
of

served

as

re-

the American
Education, as

member
of the board of trustees.
Town Hall, New York, as director

of adult education in summer sessions at University of California and
at

Harvard

of

the

shops

university,

staff
at

adult

Claremont

as

a

member

education
and

Mills

workcol-

leges, California; as co-director with
Bonaro Overstreet of the Readership
school at Town Hall; and as a member of the lecture staff of Town Hall
(Continued on page 14)

11

am.

to

Wess

Bidate

4 BS

Sol

lt

Married in
The

Moveis,
ee

Beer

Presbyterian

church

at Aspen,

Colo., was the scene of the “ski wedding” of two Highland Parkers, Miss
Barbara Frances Morris, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Morris, and
John Kinsey Snobble, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. Snobble
on Thursday,
March 27, at 5 p.m.
The bride and bridegroom, attendants and wedding guests were attired in ski clothes.
Miss Morris
wore
.

navy

blue

ski

pants,

red,

white

and blue shirt and white windbreaker
jacket.
The bridegroom’s sister, Mrs. Jean
Snobble
Everett
was
matron
of
honor, and hig brother, James Snobble,

was

best

10 p.m.,

at the

club

on

the

corner of North Sheridan road and
Elm place. Mrs. Wilford Shipnes is
directing the show, and Mrs. T. L.
Osborn is chairman of the collector’s
division.
The

antique

exhibit

is

not

a

sale,

but a showing of fine choice antiques
from the homes of discriminating collectors all along the North Shore and
the Western suburbs. No comparable
show has been attempted since the same
club sponsored a similar exhibit a number of years ago. Those who recall
the fine quality of that display are
assured that this year’s show will equal
it in every way and in fact exceed it
in number of exhibits.
Rare collections and table settings,
important examples of various patterns
of pressed glass, a variety of Pennsylvania Dutch items, china, furniture,
ornaments

A rewarding afternoon is in store
for members and guests of the Ravinia Woman’s club when they assemble
in
Ravinia
Village
house
Wednesday afternoon, April 9, at 2
o’clock for an outstanding program
entitled “The New Image of the Parent”, to be presented by Harry Allen
Overstreet,
distinguished
educator
and atthor, and his wife, Bonaro
Wilkinson Overstreet, poet and author in her own right.
Mr. and Mrs. Overstreet will be
introduced by Mrs. William N. Alderman following a brief business
meeting to be conducted by Mrs.
Francis P. Linneman, president.
Mr. Overstreet, one of America’s
most distinguished educators, is in
addition a philosopher, psychologist
and author. He has written “Influencing
Human
Behavior”,
“About
Ourselves”,
“The Enduring Quest”,
“Town

An antique show of unusual distinction will be held by the collector’s
study group of the Highland Park
Woman’s club April 15 and 16, from

of all description,

and useful

and beautiful articles in a wide variety will be included.
Following is a partial list of exhibitors and their collections:
American
Mrs. Neal D. Howard
Historical Staffordshire
Mrs. Leroy F. Harza
Lacy Sandwich glass; Currier &amp; Ives prints;
Staffordshire trinket boxes
Mrs. Jessie E. Wrenn
William B. Wrenn
snuff jars
Mrs. Edward J. Loewenthal...Various
Staffordshire items with maxims
Mrs. Arden B. Lapham..Gaudy Dutch
Miss Edith Lapham....Wine. Service
in Early Bristol, with Old Sheffield
tray and candlesticks
Bennington
Mrs. L. D. Sasscier
Parian

Mrs. George

Mrs. Tracy Knight
Mrs. B. F. Ramsdell
Pennsylvania
Dutch butter prints and other items
Mrs, Sarah W. Cregier
Porcelain '
lambs
Mrs. T. L. Osborn
Inlaid papier
mache items: old drop leaf table
Mrs. Harry Hooker
Staffordshire
figurines
Pree
Mrs. Kendall Clough
Mrs. James S. White
Miss Evelyn Taylor....
enamel boxes
Mrs. Kent Wonnell
Mrs. George Rasmussen... . Silhouettes
Lamps in
Mrs. A. J. McMaster
pairs
Drs. 2). Hall. . Staffordshire cottage

ornaments

Canary lustre
Mrs. Leon Harriss
ware
Si
Robert Robinson
English ceramics
Mrs. Carl G. Bingham...Ship captains
desk; Audubon prints
i
Mrs. Sigmund Livingston
vania Dutch fractur; lustre ware
|
Mrs. George Crittenton....Mirrors and
clocks

English:

Mrs. Erastus S. Phelps
porcelain vases, Regency

period

Mrs. Paul Fischer
Syllabub set |
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Fox....18th
Century chairs; lamps
Ce

Hough,

Mrs. L. F. McClure
cutters; Pennsylvania Dutch items
Mrs. Charles G. Mason
oi
lustre ware
;
Mrs. A. V. McPhee
Mrs. C. W. Haupt
porcelain
Mrs. Wilford C. Shipnes
ween |
Anne lowboy; lacy Sandwich and
Flint glass salts; painted tin —
Mrs. Joseph E. Brown... —
stoneware

(Continued

on page

14)

Jr., As “Hattie”

man.

A

reception for 14 guests was held
at the “Red Onion” inn, in Aspen,
with wedding cake and decorations
in true Western style.
Mrs.

Snobble

was

graduated

from

Vassar in June of last year and Mr.
Snobble,
who was graduated from
Fountain Valley preparatory school
in Colorado

Spring,

Colo., was

among

the June graduates at Dartmouth last
year. He is now on the factulty of
the Fountain Valley school and also
is a skiing instructor there.
The newlyweds
will
make
their
home

in

Colorado

Springs.

Woman's Club Rummage Sale
Will. Be Held Next Thursday
A rummage sale will be held at the
Highland Park Woman’s club, Sheridan road and Elm Place, Thursday,
April 10, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The
sale

is sponsored

mittee.

by

the

finance com-

at

Crowned
“Hatt
the
March ©

meeting

of

Inf.

Weltare juniors w
Mrs.
George |
Hough
Jr., whose arrangement.
of
hats

and

costume

on a
hall

jewelry

replica

anti qu

Erie.

hat

creation,

e

seen

is

4

wi

the prize hat donated
by Marshall Field ons
company
Forest for
sion.

Hats

of
Lake
the occa

fashioned

by

the
members’
were
contributed
to
the
Thrift
shop for
;
Easter
collection
merchandise...
Photo. ‘we
Percy H. Prior,

;

�Thursday, April 3, 1947
S Waisé Nichols to Give
_ Program of Songs At
DAR Meeting April 10

Music Club Members
Hear Talk on Music
Of Romantic

Miss Jean Nichols, talented young
Highland Park soprano, will appear
in a musical

to hear a talk on “The

Festival

of the Romantic

ter,

Daugh-

ters

of

the

their meet-

century,
Robert
hannes Brahms.

ing Thursday,
April 10, at 2
o’clock in the
piternoon.

Kellogg
road.
As

Speed,

her

“These

530

South

accompanist

of

grounds,

Mrs.

Schumann

were

but

not

great

and
}

only

men

Jo-

great

as

well.

they

achieved

equal

success

and acclaim and their modesty and
even humility in accepting their wellearned laurels was unusual in the
lives of great musicians,”
Madame

Sheridan

Miss

pre-

Their hearts were as big as their
creative ability.
With
entirely different social
and _ financial
back-

gather-

home

men

composers,

ing will take
place at the

Nichols

Song

Years,”

sented by Madame Daniel Harmon
Brush of Glencoe.
The talk in reality was biographies
of the two geniuses of the nineteenth

Revolution,

The

Nichols

will have
Miss Eloise Matthies, a Brush told the audience. Illustrating
young artist. who won the Chicago the talk was the delightful rendition
Woman’s
Musical Club scholarship of Schumann’s and Brahms’ beautiin 1945 and recently has played with ful songs by Mrs. Ruth Goodkind, sothe Chicago Symphony orchestra and prano, and Mrs. Ellen Kempner of
the University of Chicago Symphony ! Glencoe.
orchestra. She now is pianist for the
Assisting Mrs. Lyman
and
Mrs.
Chicago Civic trio.
George Hinn,
hospitality chairman,
_
Miss Nichols is the daughter of were Mrs. Paul Downing and Mrs.
_. Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Nichols and Franklin V.
Nelson.
Pouring
tea
Niece of Dr. and Mrs. C. V. Nichols were Mrs. Edward Christenson and
_ of
Highland
Park.
In addition to Mrs. Arthur Raff.
receiving many earlier honors, she
At the close of a short business

recently
test

won

the Young

sponsored

American

by

Musicians.

the

Artist conSociety

Claudia

meeting,

following

Miss

Cassidy,

Nichols’

bril-

More

_liant commencement recital in Kimball hall in February.
Reports
from the DAR state con- ference, held at the Drake hotel in
Chicago during March, will be given
_ by the chapter regent, Mrs. George
g O. Strecker, and the delegate, Mrs.
a 8 Frank Waggett.

Assisting
William

Lillie

Mrs.
C.

and

Speed

Melohn,

Raff

than

quired

gave

125,000

No Greeting Could Have
More Appealing Warmth . .
More Friendly Charm!

ALDEN HARRIS

are

American

I 3 St. Johns Ave.

Phone 435

unteers.

H.

PRIOR,

Jr.

Photographer
Specializing
in natural
unposed pictures of your
party, wedding or reception

Walter

Tel.

Patterson.

H.

P. 3199

Highiand

Park,

of Deerfield

Ill.

Machine and
Machineless

NEW
DRAPED

wr

on skirt, draped
effect, too.

and up

COLD WAVE

See

$1Q00
a

@

- $1500

FASHION!

New Spring Silhouette. . .
exciting draped peplum

Permanents
$6.50

Highland Park, Ill.

MILDRED
WALLDREN

re-

Legion

Auxiliary memorial poppies on Poppy
Day each year. All serve as unpaid vol-

PERCY

—

PHOTOGRAPHY

an. explana-

women

to distribute

will be Mrs.
Mrs.

Mrs. Kellogg

Mrs.

tion of the newly organized “Friends
of the Highland Park Library,” with
an urgent plea for membership and
a request for a ‘yes’ vote on the referendum for increasing the Library tax
at the April 15th election.

of

pa
in her column in The Chicago Tri_ bune, wrote an unusually enthusiastic critique of the young singer’s

voice

ee

home
of
Mrs.
910 South Linden

avenue,

at

Jean

at
the
Lyman,

Shore’

chap-

CT

Highland
Park
on
Wednesday,

program
beforethe North

American

Miss

26,
M.

amas

Years

Members of
the
Music
club
met
March
George

||
|}

OPEN

- $2Q00

MONDAY

EVENINGS
FURTHER

*

bodice

UNTIL
NOTICE

Specials for Easter Roux Tint, expertly applied $3.00 &amp; up
A flattering, easy to care for
We have a special oil wave.
oil permanent, complete with shampoo &amp; set at
$6.95
Powder
Box
Special
Cold
Wave
$7.50
js
Other permanents $10 and up

oa
es
see

Open
&amp;

1 The
|
a

“The

Evenings Thursdays and Fridays
Open All Day Wednesdays

POWDER

365 CENTRAL AVE.
Tel. H. P. 415

Shop With
Mind’

Charge

Accounts

You

in.

Invited

BOX

HIGHLAND
for Appointment

PARK

639

Deerfield

Rd., Deerfield,

III.

Tel. Dfld. 806

|

�at

Received Gruen,

-Watches—Men’s

Franklin Alexander

Antique Show

Bulova

(Continued

- Ladies’

from page

Passes Away At

12)

Table settings of antique porcelain,
pottery and glass will be exhibited by
Mesdames Leroy F. Harza, L. F. McClure, Charles G. Mason, W. B. Spengler,

Joseph

E.

Brown,

Ernest

Loeb,

Francis
F. Patton,
Harry
Hooker,
George Crittenton, Mason Smith, A. J.
McMaster, Sigmund Livingston, Carl
G. Bingham, Robert) L. Johnson, Wilford C. Shipnes, Miss Ruth Spengler

and Leon Harris.
Everyone is cordially invited. A small
fee will be charged to cover expenses.
All who delight in beautiful ~ things
will want to share in this exhibit of the
fine objects d’art of yesteryear that
grace the homes of today.

17 jewels

$5250
Purchase on a Charge
Account

Swims

Across

Repairing

from the Bank 35
Tel. H. P. 630

Water

Years

(Continued from page 12)
the New School for Social

search.

Ballet

Miss Margaret Frost, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Orcutt W. Frost,
Yale lane, recently swam with
Cornell college aquatic club in
water ballet entitled “Parisian
houettes”. Margaret is a freshman
Cornell.
,

JEWELERS-OPTICIANS
Watch-Jewelry

in

of
706
the
the
Silat

Re-

:

Co-author
with
her husband
of
“Town
Meeting
Comes
to Town”,
Bonaro W. Overstreet, poet, psychologist and author of “The Poetic Way
of

Release’,

“Footsteps

on

the

Earth”; “A Search for a Self”, and
“Brave Enough for Life”, is peculiarly fitted to give her audiences a new
perspective on life and a new courage
for living.
Her special wisdom about human
behavior is drawn from a variety of
sources. Following graduation from
University of California, she taught
in junior college and in adult schools
in California and New York. She has
traveled from one end of America
to the other many times as a student
of American
life and
a lover of
American tradition.
In their program,

—s_—

Lake Forest Hospital

_

Franklin
E.
Alexander
of
1540
Judson avenue passed away Wednes- —
day,
March
26, of chronic heart
disease at Lake Forest hospital. Military services for him
were
held |
March
28 at Mt. Hope
cemetery
chapel, Chicago, the Rev. Wood B.
Carper Jr. of the Lake Forest Episcopal church officiating, followed by .
interment

in

Mt.

Hope

“Overstreet

Col-

loquium”,
the Overstreets “explore
conversationally and put forth their
conclusions on the topic. This duo

of

the

Spanish

American

war,

_

born in Chambersburg, N. J., October — :
12, 1873, and had lived in Highland —
Park since 1940.
Early in his business career he was
credit manager of the St. Louis Asso- —
ciation of Credit Nen, and served in
the same capacity with the Chicago
Association of Credit Men from 1912 —
until 14 years ago, when he organized - Wes
the Credit Bureau of Paint and Wall- .

paper

Dealers

of

became

manager.

Mr.

Alexander

Cook

County

and — aaee

jon

was

eee

preceded

in

death by his wife in 1922, and is sur- —
vived by one son, Franklin Jr., of —
the Judson avenue address.
program,

patterned

after

the

ins

tutes conducted by them for Univer- —
sity of Michigan’s experimental program in adult education, proved to
be one of the most successful educational undertakings of the unive
sity.
oe
Later in the afternoon, Mrs. Joseph

G.

Bulmer

and

her committee will

serve tea from spring
decked tea tables.

flower bePoe

carry
Or.
HEEL

You can count on

tailored clothes.

;

$9.95

|

%
ea

Blue,

Black,

WALTER'S
389 CENTRAL

AVE.

oo

Brown

CORSAGES:

SHOE

SHOP

|

HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.
‘Ns

PLANTS:

¥

hav- —

classics

those pure American classics .
no matter how the fashion winds blow.
Two beautiful examples ... these
Magic Stride spectator pumps . . . always ready
to do smart service with your favorite

i
+a

cemetery.

the

HIGH

%

Mr. Alexander was a naval veteran
ing first gone to sea in 1894. He was

Overstreets
and

I. H. NEMEROFF
Fine

Special appreciation goes to
the Henry C. Weiland flower
shop on South St. Johns avenue
for the cooperation of the management in securing the photograph of Easter lilies which appears on our cover this week.
When a truck bearing an expected shipment of lilies broke
down in Chicago, the shop’s delivery truck
was — dispatched
post haste to pick up some of
the lilies so that Percy H. Prior,
Jr.,
could
photograph
them
ae in time to make our deadine.

The New Chatelaine,
Rose,
Cabbage
Rose,
Gardenia, Carnation, Orchids, etc.
Lilies, Rambler Rose, Hydrangeas, Hyacinths,
a
Tulips, Azaleas, etc.

Roses and Assorted Cut Flowers Fresh From
Our Greenhouses.

ee

�‘Thursday, April 3, 1947

_ Bus Hearing
(Continued

from

page

Primary Grades
Present Operetta
At Wilmot School

3)

who will enter Lake Forest college,
and two other children, ages 10 and
12, who would all use the bus.
f
The Editor Speaks
Editor of the Deerfield
Review,
Mrs. Robert Pettis, also a witness,
said she favored the amended petition
providing
service
from
the
high
school to Deerfield for the extracurricular activities, in which many
Deerfield students are not participants because of lack of transportation

after

school

hours,

and

evening

because

after

football,

basketball,

baseball practice.
“Mrs.
Pettis pointed out the
the route would afford school

dren

and

2 affairs,”

parents
is

active

quoted

from

in
the

or

help
chil-

Penny

Wauke-

100

per

cent

desire

for

Germany—‘“‘Auch

du

Visoky,

Armstrong,

Lieber

Sue

Duane

Attorneys

hearing

on

Stout

and

Thorney

Tuesday,

April

fast

as

Ib. 57
Ib. 69c

OSCAR MAYER ........00 2.

29.

FRESH

DRESSED

CHICKENS

-------- Ib. 53¢

FRESH GROUND BEEF ~~~

of
|

Ib. 45¢

SMOKED BUTTS ------ ie lors ib. 75¢
FANCY POT ROAST ~~~

Ib. 43¢
Gon. ote
|

TREETS or RITZ CRACKERS ------------------ 27¢

take

off

children

dirt

as

can put

it on!
Just skim it off
with this rich, smooth Cleaner. It
not only cleans, and cleans FAST,

}

LEG OF LAME .

CHOCOLATE PUFF COOKIES 7-2. pkg. 19¢

CLEANER

It can

lb. 7] ¢

BONITA TUNA FISH ~~

Sani Wax
MIRACLE

Pox. 55¢

9F Sort

BACON

George

the North Shore Line were instructed
by the Illinois Commerce Commission
to complete their case at the next

this

ILLINOIS

Morton.

Victoria
China—‘‘Chinese
Lullaby,”
Waite.
dancers,
Russia—‘‘Volga
Boat
Song,”
Leonard Lace, Bobby Rudolph.
Mexico—‘ ‘LaPaloma,”
Judith
Growney,
Martha
Oestreich,
David
Rudolph;
castinettes,
Emilie
Wolter,
Dietmar
Wagner;
tambourine, Donna Sedgwick.
America——Entire group, Maryn
Carter,
flag bearer.

transportation.

THE

BUTTER

Augustine,”

Baarsch,/

Road

FRESH WHITE EGGS ~~~.

Canon.

Marilyn

Waukegan

DEERFIELD,

Ireland—“Irish Fantasy,” Narrator, June
Swift; leprechauns,
Lee Sahlin, John_Visoky, Roger Becker; fairies, Bonnie Jean
Becker, Gail Haugland,
Susan Whitehead,
Carol Williams; giant, Bobby Rudolph.
Ballad— ‘Danny
Boy,’’
Eugene
Johnson,

school

gan News-Sun’s account of the hearing.
_C. Norman Elsy, president of the
bus company, told the commissioners
that the company could set up service immediately,
would have three
new buses in 30 days and would con_
sider using four buses if the traffic
- warranted it.
John Heinemann,
who will have
charge of the local buses, presented
a petition
with 175 signatures re_
questing bus service. A preponderance
of evidence pointed to Deer-

_ field’s

811

Captain, John Price, announcing.
Anchors ‘Aweigh—Thythm band.
1
Seotland—James
Leverick,
Susan _ Silence,
David
Kinsey.
Dancers,
Joanne
Carolyn Becker.
Phyllis Becker,
Willman,
Billy
Zee,”
Zuider
the
Holland—‘ ‘By
Darling,
Linda
Nelson,
Karen
Alexander,

_ her son has to hitch-hike home every
_

CENTRAL FOOD STORE

A spring program was given last
evening by the primary grades of the
Wilmot school. The stage was the deck
of a ship, made as an eighth grade
project. From the deck, the captain,
portrayed by John Price, took the audience on a mythical trip to many lands.
Miss
Marilyn
Thompson
directed
and accompanied the group at the piano.
The program:

FANCY WAX BEANS --------- 2 cans for 47e

FANCY CUT ASPARAGUS -------- Can 33¢
FANCY JUICE ORANGES ---------- doz. 35¢

but it leaves a polished luster. Buy a

FANCY RED POTATOES ----

bottle, and see! For WOODWORK,
FURNITURE, BATHROOM and

CORN

CENTRAL

Vacuum

Packed

.... 2 cans

for

3 3c

[erro
CLEANS

with

.... 3 Rolls for 25
SCOT TISSUE TOILET PAPER
(9c.

| Quarts .
mi
Halves .
) Gallons.

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
AND PAINT COMPANY
DEERFIELD

295

.
.
.

$1.39
2.39
3.95

CARROTS or HEAD

LETTUCE --- 2 for 15¢

GRAPEFRUIT FANCY SEEDLESS ..._ 3 for 17
Yes—We
TURKEYS

|

2 cans for 35¢

PEAS SILVERCUP ...22

a SHEEN!

Have

Fresh

DUCKS

Frozen
-

GEESE
i

)

�ae

Authorities Cite

including

Community Needs in
~ Panel Discussion
The last of the discussion series,
“Growing Up in Post War Highland
Park,” a panel discussion, pointed up
important needs for this city.
Participants
were
George
Scheuchenpflug, Mrs. Marian G. Fisher, Rex
Andrews, Louis Haller, Dr. Douglas
_ Boyd and Mrs. Walter Neisser, mod- erator.
_
Dr. Boyd summed up the discussion in his talk on, “Is Highland Park
Measuring Up as a Good Community?”
He brought out the following
-

points:

(1) There
are educational
lacks,
such as guidance personnel who would
work with the parents and Family

_ Service

to

help

the

unusual

child.

We miss the support of having the
‘teachers as part of our community,
_he-said, because the housing, even in
normal

times,

is not

adequate.

(2) As surveys of this area have
pointed out, there is a lack of overall community planning for health,

school

examinations,

im-

munization, clinics and better public
health standards. in the city.
(3) Group services should combine
with the guidance personnel of the
school and Family Service to help
meet the needs of the maladjusted
child. There should also bea recreation program for the elderly group,
which forms an increasingly
large
percentage of the population.
(4) Realization that Highland Park
is part of Lake county and should
be more closely identified with Waukegan, rather than Chicago.
(5)

That

we

should

question

whether our tax rate is adequate to
meet the needs of Highland Park
citizens, rather than to run our com-

munity

facilities

by

volunteer

con-

tributions as is often done at present.
_ Discussion
for

closer

agencies,
and

brought

out

cooperation

schools,

the organization

the

need

among.

churches,

the

police,

of a professional

workers council was suggested.
The
group expressed appreciation to Mrs.
Neisser for her excellent leadership
and also a desire for another discussion series at some future date.

MORAINE

Home Repair Plans
In County Provide
Huge Job for 1947

tures,

is

the

the

men,

study

most
with

revealed.

Painting

wanted

improve-

often

about

a third

of all owners

planning to redecorate
iors of some room of
About 10 per cent of

home exterthe interior.
all dwellings

Sunday,

Apple or Grape Juice
Cream

of Fresh

Tomatoes

Iced Celery Hearts

As

Canape Moraine
Grapefruit Juice
Half Grapefruit
Broth, Vermicelli

Mixed

Jumbo

Olives’

Buttered

New

Peas and

Candied Sweet Potatoes
Fresh Asparagus Hollandaise

Potatoes
Carrots

Easter Salad-Cottage Cheese, Pear, and Red Cherry
or

Crisp Head

Lettuce and Tomato

Salad, Chef's Dressing

Hot Rolls
Boston Cream Pie
Apple Pie
Strawberry Shortcake, Whipped Cream
Sherbet
Cherry Pie
Fudge Layer Cake
Butterscotch Sundae
Strawberry Sundae
Chocolate Sundae
Jello
Baked Apple
Liederkranz, Camembert, or Blue Cheese with Crackers
Coffee

Tea

Milk

evidence

expected

Room

Broiled Whole Live Baby Lobster, Melted Butter
Broiled Fresh Lake Superior Trout, Beurre d’Anchois
Fried Jumbo Frog Legs, Biloxi, on Toast, Tartar Sauce
Baked Sugar Cured Ham, Orange Rum Sauce, Creamed Spinach
New York Cut Sirloin Steak or Filet Mignon, Bordelaise, Vieset Carre
Medaillon of Sweetbread, under Glass, Belle Helene
Roast Prime Ribs of Beef au Jus
Roast Stuffed Tom Turkey, Chef’s Dressing, Giblet Gravy, Cranberry Sauce
Milkfed Half Spring Chicken, disjointed, Fried in Butter
‘
Roast Stuffed Fatted Capon,.a I’Anglaise
Creamed Whipped

during

to the

the

year,

report.

of

ae

the

increase

in

to

hit

an

all-time

high

_

this year.
e.
“Stepped-up production of materials means that the construction
industry *can both build record num- —
|bers of houses and do the repair

work neglécted during the war,”
he

Orange Juice
Tomato Juice
Wine Herring Tidbits
Chicken
aux Croutons
Radishes

installed

building supplies, Ortman pointed out —
that floor and wall tile volume is |

April 6, 1947

Garden

Fer- —

Fuel
|
company; C. H. Perry, division engineer, Chicago &amp; Northwestern railway; Philip Cole, city engineer, and
Frank
S.
Wichman
of
Highland
Park High school.
es

showers

APPETIZERS AND SOUPS
Fresh Crabflake Cocktail
Florida Fruit Cup

&amp; Mocogni
company;
Borchardt,
Borchardt

according

PARK

12:00 Noon to 8:30 p.m. in Our New Amsterdam

Menoni
dinand

need new roofs or roofing repairs,
and large numbers will have water- —
pipes repaired, bathrooms
tiled or

Special Easter de Luxe Dinner
Served from

Discuss Snow Plowing

non-farm
home
A meeting to discuss the problem
Lake
county’s
owners will spend an estimated $5,- of snow plowing of streets and side/walks has been called for tonight at
£73,000 on repair and modernization
the city hall by Oliver §. Turner,
work during 1947.
commissioner of streets and public
At least a third and probably more improvements, who has issued invithan half of all dwellings in the tations to a number of citizens encounty will be improved or repaired
gaged in businesses most affected by
this year, according to estimates re- winter conditions of streets.
leased by the Tile Council of Amer‘Among those asked to attend are ~
ica.
L. C. Nusser, Bowman Dairy com“Increased supplies of building ma- pany;
Robert
Denzel,
Highland —
terials
and
easing
of restrictions Park Fuel company; Earl Sheahen, ©
should make possible a record vol- Mutual Coal company; Philip J. Me-ume of home modernization through- Kenna, Highland Park Plan commisout the country,”.said F. B. Ortman,
sion; Henry Siljestrom and Roland
chairman of the council’s residential Bleimehl, Siljestrom Coal &amp; Ice comconstruction committee.
pany; Victor Glader and John TaziThe county’s 30,237 single-family oli, Glader &amp; Tazioli company; Louis
homes will account for most expendiTazioli, excavating; Joseph Menoni, —

HOTEL

HIGHLAND

Commissioner Turner _
Calls Conference to |

Buttermilk

said.
Home
county

ee
repair expenditures in the —
are
part of a $293,054,000

modernization
taken
to

program

being under-

in Illinois this year, according ©

the

,study.

ee
a

VOTE

2

In City Election

APRIL

15

Well

4

Mit a

WATCH

FOR

WARD |
EEK |
AT

CATALOG

OUR

OFFICE

28 N. FIRST

ST.

TELEPHONE

4800

|

—

�ae
4

Why

High School District

Needs Added Taxing Power
Salary Increases Have Made
Request by Board Necessary

In 1942-43 the tax rate for Educational purposes was $1.22. For the

The increase in taxing power requested
by
the
Deerfield-Shields
Township High School District. is al-

year

1946,

calculated

on

the.

same

basis,

it

estimated

that

the

taxes

most

in

entirely

the

result

of

increases

rate

was

salaries.
The

present

tax

author-

ized by the voters in 1941 to become
effective for the school year 1942-43.
It permitted a tax for Educational,
as distinguished from Building, purposes
of $1.50 on each
$100. of
assessed
valuation.
Since
property

was

then

assessed

at about 20%

of

its true value, this meant an actual
tax rate of 0.3% or 3 cents on one
dollar.
In that year salaries payable out
of the Educational fund amounted to
$285,930. For the current year, 194647, they will amount to $378,070., an
increase of $92,140. In the same perjod of time the Educational budget
of the school grew from $358,000. for
the year 1942 to $453,000. for the year
1946, an increase of only $95,000.
Thus

the

increase

in

salaries

almost

equals the total increase in the Educational budget for the period.
Of this increase, $18,490. was the
result of a mid-year salary adjustment
in January
1947 when
the Board
- amended its budget and reappropriated

its

reserves

for

_

done

the

budget,

ary increases
$471,490.

without

for.

1947-48,
,

_ These
increases
in
large when measured

“expenditures,
opinion

is
|

further

the

would

salaries
in total

but the Board

that

salaries

sal-

be

seem
dollar

would

be

The
be

in

the

rate

to

1947-48
of

they

are

not

sufficient

industry.

Increases

exceed the amount which
levied under the present
and

the

amount

trict which
were
paper last week.

The

Board

of

opinion

that

the

maintain
of

the

education

which

be

considered,

but

discussed

Education

in

is of the

taxpayers

want

present

high

in

Highland

the

has approved for
tial to accomplish

1947-48 are essenthis program.

Is Delegate

to Athletic

Convention

in Greensboro

Miss

Ann

Rose

the

six

year

Election

daughter

of South St. Johns avenue, is one of
two delegates of MacMurray college,
Jacksonville, Ill., who will attend the
eleventh
national convention of the

Athletic Federation of College Women, to be held April 18 at the women’s
college of University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Miss Murfey will
participate in discussions on the value
of

organized

sports

in

college

life.

ens

SISOS RR ARI

ERIGID PREEZE

Zig

|

“FREEZER
FOOD Pe

est

C—O

|

Rg

amt]

Oy 3 6?
oh

iy
MANN)

Sp aeek:
ALIN

CC

are
-

pg G

We specialize in processing whole, half or quarter Beef, Veal
or Lamb. Cut, wrapped and frozen for your freezer. Call for
price. We will cut your meat, or sell you the meat in wholesale cuts.

ta eae
Up
ya

BEM

ee

STOCK UP NOW ON THESE BARGAINS

IIS

VOW

Ready to Cook — No Waste
CAPONS—Fancy Milk Fed Birds, Eviscerated, —
Ready to Cook. A Delicacy for Easter Dinner,
CHICKENS FOR FRICASSEE
CHICKENS, EVISCERATED, FRYING, Cut Up ............
DUCKS, Clean, Eviscerated, Ready to Cook ................

wyea,

Y,

4

Yj

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION

PEAS, Fancy 12-0z. pkg. 25c SPINACH, Cleaned .... pkg.
BEANS, Fancy,
.......-...- kg. 25c¢
Ready to Cook
Wax or Wecce Style
Peas &amp; Carrots, 12-0z. pkg.
CORN, Whole Kernel, pkg. 25c APPLE SAUCE 16-0z. pkg.
STRAWBERRIES, Whole, Sweetened
16-0z. pkg.
RASPBERRIES, RED, Whole, Sweetened
16-oz. pkg.

TWO

FOR

@ CREAMED

ONE

SALE

SALMON, Ready to Use, 16-0z. 57c

e@ FISH TREATS, Ready to Use, ........ 8-0oz. 49c
@ CHERRIES, Pitted for Pie ................ 16-0z. 39c
@ PINEAPPLE CRUSHED .................... 16-0z. 35c

Tel. H. P. 77

WE

52

FUNERAL HOME
N.

Second

Tel. 3878

lb. 79c
Ib. 59¢
Ib. 69¢
Ib. 59e

Reduced Vegetables &amp; Fruits—Your Choice 25c pkg.

period.

SEGUIN

y

WE DELIVER IN HIGHLAND PARK, NORTHBROOK,
WEST LAKE FOREST — DEERFIELD
PHONE DEERFIELD 860 — ENTERPRISE 1215

in the mediun

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
_ A SPECIALTY

the

of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. R. Murfey

laa

| 322 N. First St.

in

Coming

Murfey,

\

City Commissioner

present
educational
staff. The salaries which the Board of Education

have

9 See

during

annual increase

for

Park

not

the
Salaries.
being
paid
by other
_ schools of equal scholastic standing.
_ Accordingly, the Board has approved
a salary program
for the coming
school year which will increase the
charges against the Educational fund
for
this purpose to $418,130. The
mediun salary for 1942-43 was $2,850.
and for 1947-48 will be $3,850. This
$1,000. increase will mean only $166.66
average

to

standards

to insure

so,

his

Candidacy

this

is of the
have

granted

more

to

can

and Lake Forest High schools. This
is largely a problem of retaining the

not breached the gap, and it is not
the Board’s intention necessarily to
do so. This competition is a factor

to

Your Attention

will

$500,000.

a

_.
_

for

be levied under the Butler Bill limitations on the taxing power of the Dis-

the retention of the best teachers.
Some teachers have already been lost

_

budget

neighborhood

This will
could be
tax

|

invite

required.

actual

kept pace with the increases in the
_ cost of living in this community and
that

Walter E. Meierhoff

which are now being billed will be
at the rate of $1.45. If the $18,490.
reappropriated for salaries in January, 1947 should be added to the budget, a tax rate in excess of $1.50

contingencies

and other
balances which, largely
because materials to be purchased
were
still unavailable,
it appeared
_ would be unexpended on June 30,
_ 1947. These items should be restored
to the budget for 1947-48. If this were

is

Friends of

St.

NOW
HOME

CAN TAKE
FREEEZERS

25¢
25¢
25c
49¢
49¢

Today

2 pkgs. 57¢
2 pkgs.
2 pkgs.
2 pkgs.

49c
39¢
35¢

CARE OF YOUR NEEDS IN
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY

FRIGID FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
724 Deerfield Rd.

|

Dfld. 860 or Enterprise

1215

¢

�e

Boy! oh
ing
ever
Pack
50
when the
delay of

boy! Was that last meetfun!... Every
fellow in
was
pretty
disappointed
blizzard caused a four day
the big night, but it was

certainly

worth

while

waiting

for.

‘This way the boys all had the time
of their lives and a chance to sleep
it off Saturday morning

_-weren’t
the

those

plays

Indian teepees

were

“pretty

darn

..

. and, gee,

swell ...?

And

that I’d been

told

good”

were

won-

derful!
The prize winning project was the
combined effort of-the cubs in Den
1, but the others certainly deserved
honorable
mention ... Golly, were

‘your

parents

ever

thrilled!

It’s

DEN

NEWS

: &lt; Den 1—
Geoffrey Armstrong’s home is the
_seene of real activity now that this
den has moved there. And Johnny
Wolter told me to be sure to mention
that they have a new member...
Yep,

fold,

John

Pierre.

Welcome

to

the

John!

While

the

fellows

nibbled

on

home-

made fudge Geoffrey and Timothy
Silence gave two book reports to add
to

their achievements.

After

that,

den

‘chief Phil Growney proved to be a
champ in a game where each boy
_ took a very deep breath to see who

could

whistle longest . . . Nice work,

Phil.
Den 2—
Wow!
What news! The meeting
last week was barely over when this
“tribe captured and killed an opossum
on Mr. Drucker’s farm. Talk about
__excitement—my
star reporter, Paul
_ Dasso, could hardly phone me fast
enough. Paul also reports that he,
Billy Vogg, John Price, and Bobby
Rudolph are hard-at-work on their
bear books while Gene Johnson and
Pat Carroll are headed for some nice
awards in May.
_Incidently, that swell
skit these
fellows put on last Friday was written by the boys themselves with no
help from either their den chief or
den mother. Congratulations, gang!
Den

_

ople Away _AE Shel

Richard Lige, son of, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Lige of Forest avenue, now in
eighth grade at Deerfield Grammar
school, plans to attend Shattuck school,
Faribault, Minn., next fall. Eugene
Finley, son of the Adin Finleys of
Hazel avenue, -is a senior this year at
Shattuck.

nounce that to our public until next
week.
The entire den helped Bill Neill
celebrate his tenth birthday last Saturday ... Whatta weekend with a
pack meeting one night and a party
the following afternoon! Did anyone
ever tell you kids how lucky you are?
Boy!
5—

Den

a

shame the whole village couldn’t have
been in on the fun, but maybe we'll
give them a break next time—how’s
about it, gang?

Young

Cole

and

walked

off

Bobby
tainly

awards

Kilcoyne

Joe
with

some

cerfancy

last Friday, but did you know

that they just missed out on a couple
extra .. ? Yessir, the only thing that
stopped them was the deadline Mr.

Nelson must follow mpiere each meeting
And

you

did

rae

about

the

new

den visitor at No. 5? He’s Billy Darling who'll be a bobcat in a couple
of weeks now. Good luck, boy!
Dennis Carroll more than achieved
his

bachelor

cooking

award

last week

when he played nurse to his mother
and Bill who had another dose of flu.
Preparing dinner for a three year old
sister was also part of his task since
his dad was out of town at the time.
I was really proud of him. Only a
true ‘cub scout could do the job he
did.
Den

Nice
6—

work,

Dennis!

Come
on, now, gang, we know
youre just getting fully organized,
but we want to hear from you. How
about appointing
a den reporter to
keep me posted on your news?
My
telephone number is 685, so call me

after
Pack

your meetings. Good
50 has surely grown!

luck, all.
Ah, me!

William Van Keuren, sophomore at
Lake Forest college, appears on the
upper honor roll for the first semester
of the 1946-47 academic year. Bill attained a 2.6 average. He is majoring
in business administration and lives
with his wife on Wilmot road.
Private Francis Jones is on his way
to Europe and his destination is Frankfort, Germany. His brother, Private
Jay Jones, has sent some interesting
souvenirs from Korea where he is stationed. They are sons of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Carr of Hazel avenue.
After three weeks between semesters,
Jack Gagne and Carl John Bates, are
back at the University of Illinois extension school at Navy Pier, Chicago.
Victor (Buddy) Carlson and Robert
Tennis have given up their studies at
Navy Pier and are now in the business
world.

the

naval

air

corps

and

he

should

have

a

Two Deerfield
have roles in the
etta, “The Belle
Saturday, May 3,
rises

at

Auken,
parents,

8:15

p.m.

young people will
high school operof Barcelona” on
when the curtain
Miss

Anita

Van

who lives with her grandMr. and Mrs. Charles Johns

on Thornhill Farm, will be cast as
Gloria de Montero. John Mennenoh,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mennenoh
Sr. of Waukegan road will be Fran-

cisco de la Vega.

Air

Squadron

By

BILL

51]

WINTERS

Last Thursday night
the best meetings ever

was
held

one of
by the

Deerfield Air Scouts. Due to heating
troubles the meeting was held in the
Presbyterian Church. Karl Hout, Bob
James
Spahr,
George
Kerrihard,
Diener, Gerald Juhrend, George Pope,
Don Ubl, and Ed Nichols passed the
Apprentice rank. One of the requirements

for

passing

the

Mississippi

of this

Trip

— wi

Ag
y

is the

pane

rank.

Tonight is the last meeting night
before the trip. The boys have already received their list of necessities
and desirables, and the duffle will be
packed on Saturday afternoon at Bob
residence.

Veterans

from

the

last trip will supervise the packing
of the gear. The scouts will take two
boats and two motors and will rent
another boat and possibly a motor.
in

Savannah,

Ill.

The minimum cost for each boy Me
going on the trip is ten dollars. This —
amount caused most scouts to cut —
down on the after school sodas and
candy bars. A physical check up is&gt; |
required and written permission come
boy’s

parents.

geet

The decorations for the dance were
put up on Saturday afternoon, On
the stage was a bright, red nylon supply parachute and running the width |
of
the room were red and white
streamers. There was a variety of
colored lights and most effective was
the
indirect
lighting of the dance
floor, The lights were donated by the _

courtesy

of

the

Deerfield

Stagers. —

Bob Rainer was in charge of the
decorations with assistance by Karl |
Hout, Don Ubl, Jerry Juhrend, Bill
Notz and Bill Winters.
Refreshments
were
sold by
the
P.T.A. with the help of a few Air
Scouts. Coat checking was taken care —
of by the P.T.A. and the Air Scouts /
were door men. Those that attended Se
had a very good time.
Don’t forget the air meet. being
put

on

at

New

Trier

High

School

on

April 27th at one o'clock for the
North Shore Area Boy Scouts. The
skill of the model builders will be
shown in the airplanes built and there “
will be

stunt

and.combat

flying. Com-

ie

bat flying is really fun. A paper.
streamer is fastened on the tails of ©

name

the

two

planes

with

ing in the same
is to tear
plane.

ever proud of him! His mom is chief
den mother of No. 3, so how about

Until

sending her a nice card or dropping
her a note soon? Come on fellows,
she’d love it!
Den 4—
When the crowd moved over to

the

next

both planes

circle and
streamer

week.

off

Happy

figs"

the object
the

—

other:

Landing

fee

Keep physically fit—alert to see
and hear. (Air Scout Ground Safety
Rule No, 1)

High School PTA
Meets This Afternoon

home _ they
tour of the

place. All agreed that it was really
“sumpin”! Bob. George acted as assistant den chief to Jack Frable for
the day.
These boys are getting started on
the new project, but we won’t an-

re-

od ,
x

each

before he registers
. Wanna know
‘who he is?—O.K. Ronnie Kloepfer’s
new baby brother! And is Ronnie

Kenneth
George’s
new
_held a regular inspection

his

Operetta May 3
At High School

3—

perhaps

since

lease has been attending the University
of Illinois.

News

a

Newell’s

Leslie Brand Jr., son of the Leslic
Brands of Highland Park, formerly of
Deerfield, has enrolled in the American
Airlines
school
at Ardmore,
Okla.,
where he will take an administrative
course. During the war he served in

Though this den has just been split
because of its number, it has just
acquired a potential new member. Of
course, it will be just about nine years
before the boy is old enough to join
and

LERRBRABBY

Wiel, es

Squadron

FAREWELL TO WINTER!—-WE HOPE

;

Highland “Park. High -schiool, PLAN s
will meet Thursday afternoon, today, —
opening with a tea at three o’clock. At.

‘
The photographer, Ezra Smith, took the above picture at the
skating rink on the high school grounds. With the big snow storm
on the first day of ee
and the continuous snow flurries the past 3:30 Miss Elizabeth Blaul, director of |
two weeks, these chi dren, now weary of winter, are waving farewell guidance, will explain the role of ap- |
ernest for spring weather.
}titude and interest tests in guidance, ._

�ae
6

»

‘

MS

oe

&gt;

Ae
*

td
te
ay

.

‘

Scout Jamboree in France
‘First. World Meet in 10 Years

a

to respect

of

Nations

each

brother

Will

At
Moisson, 40 miles from the
French capital, Scouts from 46 nations, representing four and a half
million Scouts, will meet for their
first world jamboree in ten years.
Scouts will come from lands devastated

by

war

and

looted

by

aggres-

world

Scouts and Scouters—will sail

of

can

go

are

if

the

notified

council
within

head-

the

the

executive

board

of

the

North

Shore Area council, has this to say
__ about the coming Jamboree of Peace:
“The coming World Jamboree in
France
this- summer
brings. back
memories of high adventure and a
great

mission

of

who

have

of us

Pes " jamborees.”

good

will

to

attended

friends

peace;

Lita

ullelin

with

whom

he

will

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co:

Make Good Use of Leftovers
When

ARKS

OZAR
SMOKIES

Tours

CALIFORNIA

to:

MEXICO

GREAT

Cruise

on

LAKES

From $98.50

H.

and R. ANSPACH
TRAVEL
BUREAU

370%
Central
Avenue
George L. Lundberg, Manager
Phone: Highland Park 1211
Book Now and Avoid Disappointment

936 E. 47th
Street
Chicago

Do

Phones

"

IMPORTANT

Kenwood

0700

ANNOUNCEMENT

We
offer complete
and
highly
adequate
facilities
ight near you on the North Shore using the well known
staff

of

Easter

oes

in Toast Boats

Make

2 cups medium white sauce (using 4 thsp. CERTIFIED

MARGARINE,

Add

4 cup flour, 2 cups milk and \ tsp. salt),

2 cups cooked CERTIFIED HAM
or WILSON’S TENDER MADE HAM,

directors.

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

diced

Ys cup diced green pepper
Y4 cup diced pimiento
Just before serving, stir in, slowly

2 egg yolks, beaten, which have been mixed with a small
amount of the hot white sauce.
Serve in
6 toast boats, each made by overlapping the corners of two
thin slices of bread, pressing into the cup of a muffin pan, and toasting
in a moderate oven, 375° F., until sufficiently browned, about 10 min.

Other Uses for Leftovers
Use the smaller, irregular pieces of
ham

for ham

casserole

and

a la king, ham

noodle

similar dishes.

Grind

omelet,

and sandwich

spreads

(mix

ground ham with finely chopped celery, pickle and enough Wilson’s

Mayonnaise to moisten).

and heated in a raisin sauce or served
cold in sandwiches. Here’s my favorite

raisin sauce recipe: Cover 4% cup
washed,
ess raisins with boiling
water,

cover and

let stand

Boil two minutes. Add drained raisins
and salt if needed.

Make It a Party
Ham ala king in toast boats makes
a grand piece de resistance for a ladies”
luncheon. Start the luncheon with an
apple shrub cocktail (apple juice with
one tbsp. of orange sherbet in it); a
tossed salad or a stuffed pear with fruit

French dressing served with plenty of

An Old Favorite Returns
Larger pieces of ham may be sliced

Furth

the

talk,

GUATEMALA
7-Day

HY eg

All

leaves

spaced farther apart.

Without A Care!
SPRING AND SUMMER

4 &lt; x- H

‘

ham

TRAVEL

Funeral

Directors

beautiful

vantage. Wrap well in waxed paper and chillimmediately. By so doing, the leftover dishesmay bes

a

still smaller pieces of ham and use in
meat loaf, timbales, fondue, souffle,

and

that

table, resolve to use every bit of it to good ad-

EET bed oon a

&amp; COMPANY

Adviser.
sers

On

those

former

“Around the World in a Day” will
3 again be possible for the Scout from
-_- your community who represents the
Scouts of America, while campBoy
4ing with the youth of all nations. He
will
be thrilled with the friendly
greeting from brother Scouts who
look to the Americans for hope and
Ay
eadership in a world so in need of
so
fearing
of another
- . ~peace—yet
world conflict. He will find that living together with Scouts of all countries gives him a love of fellow men,

FURTH

H. P. 181

will be his contribution to A world
peace.”
Any Scout or Scouter who wishes
to attend the jamboree must fill out
an application provided by the North
Shore Area council headquarters. The
American delegation is limited; get
your application and fill it out at
once.

A veteran of a world jamboree, an
Eagle Scout and at present a member
of

in

Park

regard-

Ideas

together

STORAGE
374 Central Ave., Highland

man”.

the

next

few weeks.
-.

‘living

LINES

“The financial cost to the Scout or
his community will be repaid many
times over by his enthusiasm and
hopefulness for a better world in
which to live. The speeches he will
make, the articles that he will write,

will be among those present, although
quarters

Trade

AGENT ALLIED VAN

practical application of a brotherhood

from America in late July, Organized
into thirty troops, there will be representatives from nearly every council
in the United States. Two
Scouts
_ from the North Shore Area council
_ others

Scout

He will ‘swap’ his badges and part
of his uniform; he will trade ideas of
camp cookery and troop programing;
he will exchange promises to correspond when the jamboree is over. He
will come back to his own country,
city and
troop with the glow of
international friendship that only a
jamboree Scout can know. For he
has learned the true meaning of a

sors. American boys will meet and
live with Scouts who, despite the
edicts
of invaders,
kept
Scouting
alive and growing.
The
American
contingent—1,050

picked

is

i

46

which

less of race, color or creed. Around
the campfires he will discover that
many of them have great ambitions
for a life devoted to the statesmanship and welfare of their native land”.

Peace.
Represent

peace

eoecccccoose

in a gigantic Jamboree

world

See

gregating

for

AND PACKING OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS

_

In August, two years after being
freed, the boulevards of Paris will
again be swarming
with uniforms.
However, this time it will not be the
gray-green uniforms of conquerors
nor even the olive drab of liberating
Gls, but
rather
the multi-colored
uniforms of 50,000 Boy Scouts con-

-

hope

MOVING

kindled deep within his heart.”
“He will discover that
although
the Scouts of his country are better
equipped and better organized, the
Scouts of certain foreign lands are
more rugged campers, others more
adept at handicraft, still others more
expert in nature lore. He will learn

To Be Held in Moisson in August

%

1 hr. or

until plump. Add % cup water, 2
tbsp. ham drippings, and 1 cup pineapple juice; thicken with 2 tbsp.
flour mixed with a little cold water.

hot rolls and delicious Clear Brook
Butter will finish off the meat course

to perfection. With a dessert of angel
food cake topped with whipped cream
into which sweetened, crushed strawberries have been folded, you'll have
your family envious, so plan to repeat
the same menu (plus vegetable), come
Sunday dinner,
‘
Sincerely,
George Rector

�Extended Illness

Rudolph Roslund Dies
After Brief Illness

CATALOG

Takes Life of

Rudolph Roslund, 63, of 232: North
avenue, Highwood, died March 25 at
the Highland Park hospital following
a brief illness.
A plumber by -trade, Mr. Roslund

OFFICE

was

born

in

Sweden

in

April,

1883,

and came to Highland Park in 1907.
Five years later he moved to the
North

avenue

address.

He leaves his widow, Annie;
a
daughter, Mrs. Leon Patt, of Niagara
Falls,

Ont.,

Funeral

and

two

services

grandchildren.
were

held

Thurs-

day at 2 p.m. at the Kelley and Spalding chapel with
burial
in -North
Shore Garden of Memories.

42 C 1967,-8,-9
2-Pe. Outfit $7.89

Services Tuesday
For J. Christensen
Funeral services were held March

25

for John C. Christensen, 63, of 52
Deerfield place, who died Saturday,
March 22, at Highland Park hospital
where he had been confined for a
week.
He

was

born

in ‘Sionee

Denmark,

April 8, 1883, and had been a Highland Park resident for the past 25
years. He was a painter and decorator

by

four

Jennie

Bloomen

sisters, Mrs.

Wilson

and

of Highland
Henry

New-

Woe
Du-Alls

ant! Two-tone shades of Blue, Tan or Green.

pleated

back, 14-17 inch neck, proportioned sleeves!

PANTS:

shade,

was
13,

born

1910,

in

and

Bevier,
had

Mo.,

lived

Au-

here

for

Allen,

6.

Surviving besides ie husband are:
her mother, Mrs. Josephine Giambi
of Highland Park; three sisters, Mrs.
Agnes Corsini and Mrs. Leno Corsini —
of Highwood, and Mrs. Eva Ugolini
of Italy; three brothers, Aldo Giambi
and

Gilbert

Giambi

of Highwood,

Mando of Westville, Ill.
Burial was in Ascension

and

Semmeteey

Libertyville.

Alfred Hill Expires
After Short Illness

Alfred Hill, 88, of 53 North Green4

Bay road, died “March 25 at his home
He

was

to

an
this

He moved

illness of several

born

in Sweden

country

in

April

days.

1859

28,

and

1882. oa

first to Joliet and to High-

land Park in 1894. His
died March 4, 1947.

wife,

Vendla,
\

Surviving are two daughters, Helen 2 ae
at home and Mrs. Carl Bergstrom of —
Maywood,
IIil., and four grandchil- |
ren. A son, George preceded him in ~—
death in 1925.
Services will be held at the Sepiit.
Funeral home on Friday, at 2 p.m.
Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery.
‘

Young Set Fashion
Show At B’nai B’rith
Tea Here April 15
A “Spring Carnival of Fashions” will z

presented

at

the

Suburban

B’nai

room

tapered legs,

Moraine

hotel

Tuesday, — |

to this unusual and delightful afternoon ©
of fun and fashion. Admission will be
| asked.

cuff bot-

toms, four toolproof, seamlocked pockets, watch pocket,
Waist 29-44; Inseam 29-34, 36, 2-pe. Outfit...

TELEPHONE 4800
28 N. FIRST ST.

of the

April 15, at 1:30 p.m. The gala and —
colorful array of spring attire for —
tots, “glamour grammar girls” and the —
smart teen age set is being staged by ©
the fashion bureau of Carson Pirie
Scott &amp; Co.
Mothers and daughters are invited

SHIRT:

collar,

8-oz. fabric in darker

10

B’rith tea to be held in the grand ball-

Catalog
3-way

Monday‘ at

Conception

the past 15 years, where she and Mr.
Perin made their home with’ Mr.
John Salbego, 619 Deerfield avenue.
Following the death of Mrs. Sal- ©
bego, Mrs. Perin reared the Salbego
children, John and Angelina with her
own
daughter Marie,
13 and son

be

Long-wearing service twill! Sanforized. . . fade resist6-0z. fabric in lighter shade,

She
gust

came

Vander

held

illness.

two

daughters,

were

Immaculate

church for Mrs. Frank Perin who
died on Thursday, March 20, at Highland Park hospital following a long

trade.

mayer, Mrs. Martha Cook, Mrs. Robert Mailfald and Miss Emma Christensen, all of Highland Park, and a
brother, Alfred, of Lake Zurich. A
son, Alfred, was killed in Germany,
September 25, 1945.
Services were in charge of the Kelley &amp; Spalding Funeral home. Burial was in Memorial Park cemetery.

Wards

in

following

Park;

From

Services
a.m.

Surviving are his widow, Mabel;
a son, John W., serving in the U. S.
Navy and a son, Robert, of Chicago;
Emma

Durable

Mrs. Frank Perin

7.89

Don’t take a chance on an unknown appliance. Buy the name
brands at
Columbia
Household
Appliances.

FREE ESTIMATES
GENERAL REPAIR
and

WO
and

Radio

Washer
Te) Pate

RTT MTL aR NIN
KP
a.

eA
.
ee

ucele Umm ee ees
aR

CONSTRUCTION
Dormers, etc.

Tel. Niles 9805

—

�”
ee
oe
rena
ke
Thursday, April 3, 1947 —

Page 21

Three Civil Service

League of
Women
Voters

Examinations Are

OR DISEASE?
UP TO US
IT.

Examinations

For several years the League of
Women
Voters has been studying
public health problems in our county. They

recommend

a post

war

plan

for health, by the establishment
a County Health Department.

of

seven non-salaried
by the supervisors

One

must

Who

Two

must

a

dentist.

be

does

professional

the

be

physicians,

work?

‘staff

A

full-time

composed

of

&lt;

public health officer, as many sanitation officers as needed, as many publice health nurses as needed, specialists as needed. A clerical staff.

Who

makes

the health

rules?

Who
recommends
policies?
The
Board of Health. The Health Officer
and his professional staff. Medical
and dental advisory committees, Citizens’ health committees. Other community health agencies.
Who endorses the plan? American
Medical’

Association.

Society.

Illinois

Public

[Illinois

Dental

Association.

Society.

Illinois

Public

ciation.

Illinois

Welfare

and

eligibility

employees

water

in

department,

labor service lists for the city, and
eligibility list for city hall janitor,
will be held Thursday, April 17, at
8 p.m.

in

the

council

city hall, Harry
of the Highland
cémmission,

chamber

at

the

G. Pertz, secretary
Park Civil Service

announced

examinations

this’
will

be

week.
held

the

sewer

to

water

department

will

Oriental

will depend upon amount of experience and type and quality of work.

Porcelains

Application
from
city

blanks may be obtained

V. C. Musser, city clerk, at
hall. All
applications
must

filed with
Wednesday,
Interested

establish eligibility lists to run for the
next two years. All applicants must

and

Health

Mr.
Pertz
April 16.
persons

by

are

6°

this

issue.

ee

Asso-

In City Election
15
Now, you can be doubly sure of enjoying all the nourishing
goodness of fine-quality butter, fresh from the creamery.
Because Meadow Gold is doubly protected for you by the
greatest butter packaging advancement since the flat, refrigerator carton. The exclusive new Aluminum Foil Wrapper
that keeps butter fresh twice as long as ever before!
This new method of wrapping butter preserves its fine,
delicate flavor from the creamery to your table. Each quarterpound has its own separate wrapper
—so the last quarter
tastes as fresh as the first—and only Meadow Gold has this

TEA

Wrapper.

‘

Carpets

China

Jewelry

—_

—

Libraries.

&amp;

WILLIAMS, BARKER
SEVERN COMPANY

Martha Mooney, Auctioneer
229 South Wabash Avenue
Chicago

4,

ype.

ce Wa

Why not have Meadow Gold Butter for dinner today?
And listen to your family say, “Please pass the Meadow
Gold Butter again!”’
Don’t throw away the wrapper until you've finished the quarterpound. Re-wrap the unused portion, keep it flavor-fresh.

—

—

Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service

_. Kevolutionary New

new Aluminum

—

Harrison

VOTE

MONARCH

to

the
legal
advertisements
of these
examinations appearing elsewhere in

Association,

AT YOUR
DEALERS

Pianos —

the
be

referred

Rugs

Silverware

p.m.

Illinois
Congress
of
Parents
and
Teachers,
Illinois
Federation
of
Women’s Clubs. League of Women
Voters. Illinois Federation of Home
Bureaus, Illinois Education Association, Illinois Statewide Public Health
Committee. And many others.
Do other counties have health departments? Yes, over half of the
counties in the United States have
health departments.

APRIL

FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought for Cash

be $2,400, and for janitor at the city
hall,
$2,310. Salary for the labor list

State

American

Health

sewer

The

supervisors or commissioners pass the
health ordinances for the county on
recommendation of the County Board
of Health.

Medical

the

to establish

semi-skilled

citizens
or com-

©

missioners.

for

These

Who manages the County Health
Department? A board of health composed of
appointed

lists

United States, and
in Highland
Park

for at least six months prior to date
of examination.
Starting salary for the opening in

Scheduled April 17

lil

HEALTH
IT’S

be citizens of the
must
have lived

Illinois

3777

�Junior League
Elects Officers
The following new officers, to assume their duties in April, have been
elected by
the
Junior
League
of
Evanston:

1

Immediate

Service

| Typewriters, Adding Machines,
4
Calculators, Registers,
Pick up and delivery
511 Waukegan, Highwood

Tel. H. P. 5505

“i

ms

Mrs. Frank J. Madden, president;
Mrs. Frank F. Morr, first vice president; Mrs. John G. Patterson, second vice president; Mrs. David Sampsell, secretary; Miss Monte Richard-

son, treasurer; Mrs. Medora Elliott,
charity treasurer; Mrs. John Palmer,
magazine chairman; Mrs. Bruce Simpson, publicity chairman; Mrs. Harold F. Yegge, education chairman;
Mrs. Chester N. Goltra, future policies chairman
and Mrs. Edwin C.
Ward, arts chairman.
Mrs. Frank Madden will take over
the presidency at the April luncheon,
Monday, April 14, succeeding Mrs.
Edward Cullen. She is well equipped
for the office, since she has an extensive background in Junior League
work.
a

a

eo

ee

:

Announce

ey

5

rer ma)ae

ae a

:

April PTA

_

Wastepaper Pickups
Schools are continuing to benefit
as a result of the cooperation of
Highland Park residents in salvaging
their wastepaper for the monthly
pickups, the parent-teacher associations stated this week in announcing
the April schedule.
At Ravinia school, for example, a
new microphone and new motion Picture films and slides used for visual education have been purchased with
_
money received from recent drives.
The drives start the first Monday
of each month. Paper and magazines
_
should ‘be tied in bundles or packed

in

cartons

and

placed

on

the

curb

the day before the scheduled pickup, _
regardless of weather conditions.
Following is the April schedule of
pickups:
aoe
Elm Place school area—Mon., April 7
Lincoln school area—Tues., April @Ravinia school area—Wed., April 9
Braeside school area—Thurs., April 10
West Ridge school area—Fri., Apr. 11
(a. m.)
(ee
Green Bay school area—Fri., Apr. 11

(p. m.)

q

Y

Y

YG

Xp,

were

“a

Elm

QUEST

FOR

QUALITY

PORTERS

WELL

LEAD

10

AT RACINE

school

school
school

home furnishings. Your very first visit will reveal many reasons
why. You'll find FURNITURE, having met rigid standards of style,
materials and craftsmanship, displayed in scores of
from scatter rugs to

custom sizes . . . the DRAPERY department aglow with
all-purpose fabrics, frilly with pretty curtains

. . APPLIANCES,

only the dependable, nationally known brands . . . the
refill lL dik

pm ttrhoH |
1g!
a

demonstrating

rooms

inspiring

nine

GALLERIES,

“'Mixable Matchable Magic’ with co-ordinated colors
and furnishings . . . the BOUDOIR BAZAAR, a separate shop
devoted to an exciting correlation of bedroom ensembles,

curtains, furniture and accessories . . . the GIFT
SHOP, hundreds of things for giving and keeping. All
these and more at one store, Porters at Racine.
Available

at

Porters

interior decorating
charge

. . . and

There

Is

No

is an

intelligent,

workable

service, offered without
of

course,

Sales

Tax

deliveries
in

are

:

area
area

West Ridge school area
Green Bay school area

..

3

Local Participation

on Porters for decorating ideas, guidance and quality

COVERINGS,

ahi
:

Fire Chief U ieee

For neariy /5 years nomemakers from miles around have depended

settings . . . FLOOR

P

area

free!

Wisconsin.

:

Week

In Cleanup

GUILD

Fire Chief William J. Hennig early

this week issued a statement urging
Highland Parkers to take an active

part in the annual cleanup week campaign, saying that factories as well as
homes must be given a good “spring
cleaning” if the city’s fire losses are
to be reduced.
gigs
an

“Many disastrous fires can be prevented by cleaning out trash and other

combustible

materials,”

Chief

Hennig

said. “At the present rate, the nationis —
burning up thousands of dollars worth —
of valuable housing, goods and equip-

ment every day. These fire losses must
be cut down.”
ae
“Industrial plants should be thoroughly inspected and all rubbish removed,”
the chief said: “Metal containers should
be supplied for waste material.and fire

extinguishers,
ency escapes

fire doors, and
in all factories

emergin the —

city should be checked.”

oe.

Home owners, he continued, also ~
|should inspect and clean up their residences. He emphasized ‘the - need to
remove rubbish and oil rags from the —
premises and suggested inspecting electric wiring and
possible defects.

“Check
Mr.

your

Hennig

heating

systems
SN

for —
ie

fire extinguisher too,”

said. “Every

house should —

have at least one approved fire extin- —
guisher.”
“The nation’s
was the worst
GIFT

fete
eh
fire record last year
in many
years,” he

pointed out. “Spring

SHOP

the time to take
good cleaning will

DESTINGTIVE

DECORATIONS

INTERIOR

FURNITURE AND
/

z

¢

F

ays

ee

%:

“4

ies on

5

Fie

a

get

saat
Spa OB a

8

Eo

Na

se eee gS stati

Cleanup week is
positive action. A Z
greatly reduce the

chances of a damaging fire in your
home or factory. A clean place seldom

burns.”

;
hfe

re CO

;

ae:

as follows:

Place

Lincoln
Ravinia

YOUR

|

If the collection truck misses your |
contribution,
call
the
Suburban
Waste Paper company, H. P. 1256.
Results of the March
collection —

ORTE
Use

|

;

ei

�Pamagopolis,

at present a Univer-

sity of Chicago student recommended
by the Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations, called for a broadening of
representation in the present Greek
government which would break the
backbone of the guerillas. He stated
that the resistance movement is led
by communists, but the majority of
the members were liberals forced into

_

_

_
:

communist

camp

by

the

reac-

meeting

is

April

community

9, 8:15

p.m.,

at

— New Address —
62 E. VAN BUREN ST.
HARRISON 3747-3748

the

house.

TOM TAPPER OF DEERFIELD,
@ member of the Highland Park
Boy’s Boxing club, will appear in
the Elks All-Star CYO Boxing and

Wrestling

Park
April

—

the

tionary British puppet government. —
Professor Hartzo viewed the Greek
situation as part of the international
struggle for power. He expressed the
belief that the Russians were stalling
until they could produce an atomic
bomb and that now was the best time
to take a stand against them.
The next regularly scheduled AVC

CYO

show

at

High
school
25. The young

the

finalist last fall.

Highland

gymnasium
boxer was a

| Two AVC Speakers
Urge “Stop Russia”

_ Policy, March26

_- “Stop Russia Now” was the stand,
_ adyocated by two guest speakers who
addressed the North Shore chapter
of the American Veterans commit|
tee Wednesday, March
26, at the

Winnetka

Community

house.

In what was hailed as one of the
top AVC meetings of the year, the
veterans heard Greek patriot Nandos
_ Pamagopolis and Professor Hartzo,
_ head of the Lake Forest college po_ litical science department, review the
Greek crisis from both the international and internal viewpoints,
_ Former Greek soldier Pamagopolis
expressed

_

conviction

that

A

although

the present Hellenic government is
anti-democratic, the most important
issue is to stop
Soviet
expansion.
Pointing to the economic
ruin
wrought by the Nazis and a Greek
scorched earth policy, he stated that
American economic aid is vital
to
continued existence of the Greek nation.

navy wool skirt and white pique gilet.

The seid stquin sedan wives
brilliance. Sizes 10 to 20, $79.95.

i
NEED

A

OR
Prepare

‘2

NEW

JED BOLERO tops this

-

,

ROOF

REPAIRS?

your

roofs

before

the

rainy season!
:
Roll &amp; Shingle Roofing
Is Our Specialty

Phone Highland Park 1356

THE

DRAKE

SHOP

THE

950

THE

EVANSTON

’. ‘THE NEW

SHOP

OAK

¢
-«

IN
950

SHOP

PARK

THE

SHOP

DRAKE

HOTEL

N. MICHIGAN
«¢

1636
«

730

AVE.

ORRINGTON
LAKE

STREET

�“Peace of Mind” Will
Be Reviewed Thursday
For Johanna Lodge

Reduce Government
@

WALL

Expenses, Church Says

PAPERS

in House Address

VENETIAN BLINDS

In

a

speech

House

WINDOW

SHADES

on

FIXTURES

the
the

Waukegan

reduction

on

the

Ave.

PHONE

531

ELECTION NOTICE
SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1947
to 7 p.m.

Illinois,

has called an election to vote on

5

a sound

fin-

Aaron

Loth

Kanter

“Peace

of

Glencoe

Thursday,

Mind”,

Although

at

thousands

expect

who
a

PLEASE

NO

Township

(except

High-

this

Bannockburn
mar school.

and

Those living
Grammar school.

Those

living

in West
Lake

in

Deerfield

Forest)

at the

Bannockburn

in Lake

Township
Deerfield

at the

(except
Gram-

Bannockburn

Forest at the City

Hall

of

Forest.

.
Those living
Lake Bluff.

in Lake Bluff at the Village Hall of
.

in

1 p.m.

heard

is

Mrs.

her first
Shore.

North

have read the book may

stimulating

afternoon,

ac-

cording
to
Mrs!
Ralph
Grossberg,
North
Shore
chairman
of Johanna

lodge, and those who have missed
it will thoroughly enjoy Mrs. Kanter’s
presentation,

fers

a_

The

better

many

Liebman

work

understanding

problems

of

the

of-.

of

the

day.

to be sold at a resale shop in Chicago.
Proceeds. will go to Braille work,

control

over

must

travel

on

employees.”
hardly necessary”,

Church,

“to

speak

of

the

be clos-

the

part

of

said

Mr.

savings

that

can be made in the elimination of the
great bulk of printing that is done
by the departments and agencies. To
be sure, some of it is very necessary

and

very

amount

know

of

for

years,

\impof¢tant
it

a

has

fact

agency

and

been

that

after

a

great

waste.

during

We

has

is-

sued great streams of propaganda.”
Mr. Church further stated that the
Conciliation Service of the Department of Labor had expanded beyond
all reason, its appropriation in 1938
Service,

dismissed

Mr.

Edgar

39 conciliators

L.

Warren,

in the

field”,

said Mr. Church, “and was thus able
to take care of his ‘friends and colleagues’ without having to care about
Civil Service,
by appointing
them
the

‘field’

as

conciliators,

but

the event,
bundle of

scholarship
funds,
work, entertainment

ac-

a dessert
rummage,

adult
education
projects for hos-

pitalized. veterans
and
numerous
_
other
philanthropic
endeavors
in | ,
*
which Johanna lodge has been actively engaged for the past 70 years.
Clothing,

jewelry,

bric-a-brac

every other type of
priate
as rummage.

recent

agency

to
a

article is
Articles

and

approwhich

cannot be brought to the meeting
may be. picked up by telephoning
Mrs.

M.

Grossberg,

C. Goldman,

Glencoe

9,

or

Mrs.

H. P. 870.

“As characterized by our committee,
this as a definite fraud.” “And there
is
this
additional
fact,”
said Mr.
Church, “Mr. Warren has a record
of membership on Communist-front
organizations.”
Congressman Church stated that he
had

of

no

doubt

this

very

them

serve in the depart-

covered
with a

ment where they
ciliators at all.”

didn’t serve as conMr. Church stated,

agencies.

of

the

but

same

that other

be

un-

as his committee
proceeas
close scrutiny of operations

various

departments

and
:

For Ideal Sunday Evening Entertain-

sng and Dinner. Open at 4, Dancing
From 6, Excellent Cuisine in a Spacious and Beautifully

instances

thing will

Appointed Rooml
~

Fashion Parade and Dansant

Those living in Highwood at the Oak Terrace school.
living

temple

have

vote at the Highland Park high

school.

review

10, at

New Ftorizon Room

VOTE

in Deerfield

wood and Lake Forest)

Those

a

best seller,

the

April

Kanter in Chicago,
appearance on the
Those

in

Liebman’s

be establish-

_ The purpose of the election is to provide the income
necessary to continue the present standards of education
in our high schools.

Lake

on

Mrs.

of Joshua

official business. There

tually have

value?

living

bill

fulfillment of those propart of our program to

sent

Admission
luncheon, is

to

ed at .50 per cent on full, fair cash

Those

of peo-

This

The
North
Shore
Committee
of
Johanna Lodge, No.9 UOTS, will pre-

Kansas
City
and
to
manufacture
some excuse for making the trip.on

the

Shall the maximum tax rate for
the educational fund of Township
High School District Number 113,
County,

number

payroll.

being $273,000, while for
1948
they
requested $2,678,400. “The Director of

the following proposition:

Lake

the

expenditures

Mr. Church further stated, “It “is
not uncommon: for someone to decide that he would like to spend a
weekend in New York, Chicago or

VOTE
DEERFIELD-SHIELDS TOWNSHIP
HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT

Board of Education

in

Federal

government

Federal
“It is

The

government

and

er

12 noon

Federal Secur-

ancial basis and to take this government out of the hands of petty bureaucrats and return it to the people.”

THE HIGHWOOD GLASS AND PAINT CO.
ILL.

of Labor,

ple

put this

Now open for business

PARK,

the

connection with consideration of
bill
making
appropriations
for

is in partial
mises. It is

“Hooker Paints”

HIGHLAND

of

in

duction in

Repairs”

9612

Floor

March

ity Agency
and related independent
agencies, Congressman Ralph Church
said, “We promised the people a re-

Electrical Equipment

“Sales and

the

24,

Department

LIGHTING

on

Monday,

Each Saturday at 2:30.
Reservations Advised!
WHitehall 4100

�epee OF
mark of 877.
In this game Ray
231
and
Joe
had
207.
Ray’s
coupled to 178 and 217 in the

Deerfield
Bowling Academy
MONDAY

third games
of 626.

WO
a

SE

mance

gs sos nsd sk wages wack duaieces
Minty wet spchancgreemneattleauebee

L.
26
26

2

29

ie

ac

eat

ac
cm its eas ee wae ws LC
44
Lorette’s Girls
51
wuun Gourley © Co, 3.2:....6.¢2..55.; 35
52
eres
-D-+X Station: «-..25...50..6.6004.4 at
60
Re
26
61
Reliable Garage Be See Os ae
* Major
League
The Duffy &amp; Duffy team of the Major
league is one of the two teams which Lake
County sent to the National Bowling congress

at-Los

includes

Angeles,

William

chietti,

Frank

Calif.

Chambers,

Goffo,

J.

The

team

John

Pic-

Castellari,

and

Marshall
Fredricks.
Herb
Engstrom
is
substituting for Fredricks on this western
trip.

TUESDAY

EVENING

Chamber of Commerce
Standings to date:
PN
O56
EIN

a

League

ee

MAI
eS
ho iow sscaaptaxars
Cherry
MN
ase heen a3scnncere ck
TN
so
oo

1.
34
Al

8

41

gS

3
44
44
44

SS
2
es ge nt he

45

Tuesday results:
Central took 3 from Walnut.
Park
took
2 from
Clay.
Pine took
2 from
Elm.
Cedar took 2 from Cherry.
Malcolm

Hans

high

for

with

Three

this

Bowling
Holy

were

American

Team
Nov
oO.
No,
No.
No.
No.

standings:

8—F.
oe.
8—W.
4—J.
5—F.
2—E.

- No,

1—O.

No. 7—M.
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team

;
The

of

168-126-184,

a

478

composed

of

men

from

entered

the

Holy

Name

in

Chicago.

Ww.

L.

50

31

TEM
ses
ae
ee
Cunning wae ©. ise
aie

46
41

35
40

Te
Marsicek
mite
es
kg

41
39
38
38

40
42
43
43

eats OE

50

COG

SE

ss tocar
- wore canis

eo ea heh Sota o
......... os eucivan sae
APS BR
Pea
a
i Se

Wachbihics

BS Mayn

eeswsons es caceoetuck
ae hsna ss Ring e¥ ~«
Sige eo
a
a tcek lage yabeaiead

annie d SA cscs

FRIDAY

EVENING

St. Paul’s
League
John
Swanson
had
high
séries—560.
Ed Johnson
had second high series—534
for the evening.
John
Swanson
-had
high
game—232.
Team
place.

St.

7

in

first

Paul’s

Friday

place;

league

6,
NG.

Biome
ie.
(8
Cardinals
No.
Packers
No.
Giants No. l
3ears
No.
6
Dodgers
No.

Team

will

5

not

in

second

bowl

Good

Ww.
Deis terest
teen 0 51
5 SedBecn:cun tect
50

L.
36
37

evening

(tomorrow).
Presbyterian

atieers.
a
cen

45

Art-Hobby

Workshop

is
New
members
were
welcomed
the Art and Hobby workshop at

meeting
qunity

spring

yesterday
center,

term.

the

The

morning

in

by
its

Com-

first

of

the

term

consists.

new

of

10 weekly
lessons and
any woman
who
wishes to attend the nine
re-

charged.

bie

Instructions
in
textile
painting,
sketching in oils and watercolors, and
working with clay and other craft
materials will be offered during the
term

Ella

Rasmussen,

director of the club.

by

Playground

Recreation

Miss
board

sponsors

the

o-Lucky” Sailor

a -G
TEX
U
FISH
,
the quality

APRIL

Legion
Ww.
48
41
40

we
30
37
38
38
39
39

Trute

felt

42
45
46
46
48
48

15

Carpetings, Rugs
and Upholstery

4b

Olson

Safely Cleaned

46
L.
32
33
35
36
39
43
43
43

2
7
6
8
1
3
5
4

EVENING

Bethlehem Bowling League
standings of the teams:
L.
27
82
36
38
38
39
40
49

Duracleaning
ts recommended
nationally by
America’s leading furniture &amp;
dept. stores.

Holy Cross Church League
There
will be no bowling
this
Thursday (tonight) of Holy Cross League, but
-as_ usual April 10.
Last
week ‘Joseph
Wachholder
&amp; Co.,
went to town in their second game against
Hart
and
set a new
team
single
game

Service
You

In the

can

see

furnishings
having

restores

Typewriters
By

Expert

All Work

ee
You
=

Repaired
Repairmen

Guaranteed

We Sell Them
We Repair Them
We Buy Them
can depend on our

CHANDLER'S
525 Central Ave.

* No

them

care

*

resilience
unmats

revive

* Also

sired.

* Charge

your

inconvenience

gone

* Pile

given

to

and

Phone, today

wool

rises

fibers

* Colors

mothproofed,

if .de-

reasonable.

25

.

in

Duracleaning

“Coast to Coast Service”’

experience in typewriter

repairing.

the

Home

The sailor takes to spring
and to your favorite suit
or topper with such a
jaunty air. You'll love the
touch-soft quality felt...
the Tish-U-Tex mark of
distinction. You'll like
the crisp grosgrain banding that slips under the
brim and flirts in a gay
little bow. Choose it in any of the new
butterfly colors. Large or small headsizes.

$595

It’s A

Leighton!

.

Phone Deerfield 444
Chicago

. . . AMBassador

3222

Duraclean Co.
Division of HOME SERVICE Co.
839 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield

127 NO. GENESEE

WAUKEGAN,

art

and

group. |

VOTE

177-

Wrens
Hawks
Sparrows
Orioles
Eagles
Owls
Robins
Crows

.

total

maining lessons is asked to get in
touch with the Community center,
telephone H.P. 2442. A moderate fee

EVENING

Coleman
......................
Danham
....0..0066504....
Johnston
..................
Klemp
Riley
Hurt ....-....-........

THURSDAY

evening’s

New Members Join

In City Election

evening

standings:
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.

an

tournament,
March
30, in
Cross
league
standings:

2138-199—589.

WEDNESDAY

games

teams

league

Wea ing
Niealeve-

Ww.
2.2.52 cacomnecdccelzcles¥obesicelan 50
ol
ONE cea 54 cdnentw am 43

SR

him

series.

Rollers

Mary
Welch—High
individual
game—
189.
Theo
Hamill—High
individual
series
—510.
The
Haven—High
team _
single
game—756.
The Haven—High
team series
—21938.
Team
standings:

ea
RE
EIN

give

had
was
and

among
the
Other
high
series
scores
men were Wachholder, 541; Coleman, 508;
and Killian
500.
Betty Cunningham had a
stellar perfor-

EVENING

Victory

to

Frost
231
first

ILL.

�‘| Another Reader Asks More
Information about Hospital.

March

27,

Letters

1947

the Editor:
May I add these questions to those
of “A Reader” in the current issue

From

Our

To

of

the

News,

record
(1)

by

more
Will

Negro

the

is

this regard
dled?

in

I

that

agree

all

past

relation

accept

your

these

cases

in
han-

correspondent

questions

should

be
publicly
answered,
through
medium of the local press, before

campaign
Thank

gets

under

you

for

cooperation.

Yours

YES

...

sincerely,

Another

i?’s here!
the Scott-Atwater,

tomorrow’s outboard motor, is

the
the

way.

your

Reader

Editor's Note: A complete answer to
these questions will be found in a letter in the adjoining column.

in engineering, new in design,
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;
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;

GENTLEMAN’S

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RE:

te

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Swimming

and

Ballroom

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NOW OPEN
Pool Available

Kenmore

Phone:

BRlargate

and

Ban-

Meetings.
to

the

at Granville

8000

of the Highland

Foundation,

I

am

Park

glad

aren’t many
‘such
cases, although
some have involved quite a long period of hospital service. The point I
want to make crystal-clear is that we

for

are

the

make

opportunity

the

known

to

The

facts
all

ilies,

all.

the

to

readers.

in

1918

by fewer

to provide

us

hospital

is a non-profit

founded

contributed

gave

about

your

hospital

ration,

he

than

hospital

The community’s

corpo-

with

funds

fifty fam-

facilities

for

interest in the

hospital is represented by a laymen’s
board of 45 trustees, who elect from
their membership
11 managers and
officers to supervise and administer
hospital,

without

compensation

and at a considerable sacrifice of personal time and energy. Each trustee
serves for a term of three years, and
15 new
trustees are elected every
to

assure

democratic

trends

in

our

expression

community

Public

Now,

as

to

money

matters.

Within

accept

whether

bill,

to

which

the

hospital

usually

contributes a reduction in fees.
It must be frankly stated that there

love this milk of

Deller late...

Richer Quality’

whom

there

asking

first

We have

no

internes,—and

whose

chari-

table work is usually endowed by affiliated universities or religious organizations. However,
we
do
not
turn away, for money reasons, patients who in the
above
hospitals
would be shunted to charity wards
after a preliminary financial interview.
Ours is simply a community
hospital, responding
to the
actual
needs of the community we serve. If
at any time in the future there should
be an increased need for charity hospitalization not covered by our present method of operation, you may be
certain that the hospital will meet
that

—

:
i¥

need.

land

without an advance partial payment,
without even a preliminary financial
interview to determine ability to pay.
A bill for services is presented later.
In the few cases where the patient is
not able to pay, the matter is refer|red to the Hospital’s Women’s Auxiliary or to the Highland Park Family Service who investigate the worthiness of the case and help to pay the

for

without

they can pay.

student

public

entrance _ fee,

patients

charity wards, labeled as such, as
have the large teaching hospitals for

services—without

an

ALI,

beds,

the limits of its bed capacity, the
hospital admits ALL who need its

eae

“Youll

to

answer publicly the questions about
the hospital, raised in your column
last week by an anonymous correspondent.
Indeed his questions are
so easy to answer that I am grateful

life.

SOUP DU JOUR
MINUTE SIRLOIN STEAK
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Salad Bow! with your
favorite dressing
Cheese or Dessert
Choice of Beverage

Newly

president

of varying

» Stuart Room

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See the new Scott-Atwater
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314

As

31, 1947

Editor:

Hospital

year

and

MOTORS

the

the

here on display today! Now you
can examine this sensational
new outboard motor... new

certified)

March
To

record

to

Frank Selfridge Answers
Questions about Hospital

the

both?

their

with

of

making

complete:

either on a paying or

basis—or

(2) What

of

and

organization

patients

a charity

way

clear

Readers

Opinions expressed in these columns do not necessarily constitute
the opinions of the paper. Letters
should be brief and should contain
the name and address of the writer,
whose name will be withheld if requested,

In a sense, all patients at the High- — :

Park

Hospital are recipients of

bounty.

The

cost

of

services

performed is greater than the fees, which are kept in line competitively,
to stay within reach of the greatest
number of people. So, the hospital
has-a

net

operating

deficit,

and

has

had one every year for the past ten
years—covered by gifts and by the
Highland
Park
Community
Chest.
All of this is shown in detail in the
hospital’s published annual financial
reports—the

current

report

will

t
a

be

ae

mailed to anyone who wants it. And ~ ™
in this connection, may I say that
whenever we
increase
the
special
—
services of the hospital—whether by ~
the future addition of charity or con- ©
q
tagious wards, floors for the chroni- Bro
cally ill or any other facilities that
may be needed—the community will
have to be prepared to bear the added cost, through gifts, endowments —
and increased participation
by the ae 4
Community Chest.

And

now,

that

I have

your

correspondent’s

tions,

let me

go

answered

specific

a step

ques-

farther,

so as

to leave nothing unsaid. Within the
limits of its bed capacity, Highland
Park Hospital does not refuse admittance to any patient for reasons
of

color,

race

or

religion.

Highland

‘4

Park Hospital does not refuse emer-—
gency first-aid treatment to any per- |
son

for

reasons

of

color,

race

or

re-

|

ligion. The only difference that our —
hospital recognizes between people, |
is

that

between

and those
This is not
a bygone
the basic

those

who

again by Board resolution
as two years ago.

All

are

well

who
need
medical
care.
merely a prim platitude of
day. It has always been
hospital policy, affirmed

Highland

Parkers

as recently
should

and

of

its

their

officers

hospital.

and

managers

—

be

It is doing
a good job for the community.
It
isn’t perfect and it isn’t as big as it
should be, but its staff, its employees

proud

f

are

striving constantly to do an ever- |ul
better job. We, whose task it is to
struggle with the day-by-day prob(Continued on page 27) |

_

�(Continued

plans

from page 26)

lems of the hospital invite everyone’s
- suggestions for further improvement.
And we invite everybody’s financial
help in the Building Fund Drive that
begins May lst, so that we may add
the rooms and facilities that will enable the hospital
to serve
greater
numbers of all residents of the North
Shore.
Frank F. Selfridge,
Président, Board of Managers
Highland Park Hospital Foundation
Says

Statement

Advertisement

in Recent
Is

Inaccurate

March
To

the

31,

1947

Editor:

In behalf of myself and the other
candidates for city commissioners of
Highland Park I would like to point
out several inaccuracies in a paid advertisement which appeared in your
publication promoting
one
of
the
mayoralty candidates.
No doubt this advertisement was
written by someone not familiar with
our commission form of government
and I am quite certain that the misstatements

were

not

made

with

any

thought of misleading our voters.
- Quoting from this advertisement it
was said: “He oversees the spending
of public funds.”
The truth of the matter is that the
mayor of Highland Park is not a one
man - dictatorship.
The mayor and
four commissioners act jointly in all
matters of public policy involving tax
money expenditures. Each takes over
a departmental activity for which he
is solely responsible. This procedure
is m accordance with the provisions
of the

pene

statutes

of the

state

of Illinois,

setting forth the commission form of
municipal government.
It is because of this fact that the
election of competent and qualified
commissioners is equally as important
as the selection
of a mayor
who
knows and understands the system

oxing Match to Be
Held in Waukegan
Waukegan
Township
High
school
gymnasium will be the scene of a boxing match
between the Libertyville
Boy’s club and the Homer Dahringer
Post junior boxers Saturday night,
April 5, with 50 per cent of the proceeds to be donated to the Lake County
Crippled Children’s fund. The first bout

will start at 8:15, ~

Northshore Garden of Memories|
A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited
THIS

Miss Bredin To Give

Review at Pi Delta

Book

HILL
372

&amp;

H

What

P. 64

C. Heinrichs

Ballot

each

dollar of

men

in

you

the

can

Regular

join

other

in your community

local

National

Guard

are in college, you

in

unit.

can get

indicating

sommission

in the

R.O.T.C.

if you

served

in the

you

have
can

training
grade

the way

or

resume

and
rank

have

your

Or,

Army,

military

your former

in the

Organized

Reserve Corps.

e

|

perty in said city annually, to 2 mills on each
dollar of taxable property in said city, annually?.

©

know that others depend so much
upon

you,

and

envy

you

spiring fellowship you
e

In the

Regular

the. in-

enjoy.

Army

you

can

have excellent training in valuable
skills or trades. All your necessary *

expenses
travel,
years

are cared
adventure.

at

your

life

up to three-quarters

pay

the

you

can

for.
And

retire

for

years

rest

of

of service!

Get

You

get

after

20

half

pay

full

and

on

after 30.
details

believe in your new Regular Army

-lar Army enlistment at your U. S.
Army Recruiting Station.

A

GOOD

JOB

FOR

YOU

tT ih
CHOOSE
THIS
PROFESSION

NOW!

*

VISIT LOCAL ARMY EXHIBITS
APRIL 7-12

Your Regular Army Serves the Nation and Mankind in War and Peace
VILLAGE

City Clerk.

_

tingle of pride—to

about all the advantages of Regu-

FINE

pro-

and its civilian components. You'll
feel a certain

Ifyou believe in America, you'll

YES

be increased

taxable

Or,

young

pay

your training and Reserve Officer

Towns and Townships to Establish and Maintain
Free Public Libraries and Reading Rooms’ ap7, 1872, as amended,

good

Army.

If you

will you do for your

You can take a full-time

at

your

Shall the tax for ‘Library Purposes’ levied and
collected by the City of Highland Park, Illinois,
under
Section
1 of an act of the
General
Assembly of the State of Illinois entitled, ‘An
Act to Authorize Cities, Villages and Incorporated

on

!

|. “WHAT AM I DOING
FOR PERMANENT PEACE?”
country?

Place a cross (X) to the right of the word
|
you desire to vote.

March

Prices

Phone Maj. 1067.

STONE

Central

GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION
Tuesday, April 15, 1947

1.2 mills

s

INSURANCE

City of Highland Park
Lake County, Illinois

proved

Very Reasonable

CEMETERY

ON ARMY DAY, APRIL Zt, ASK YOURSELF:

Meeting

Miss Elizabeth Bredin will present
a book review at the meeting of Pi
Delta to be held at the YWCA on
Wednesday, April 9. Dessert will be
served at 7 p.m. and the program will
follow. Reservations may be made by
calling H.P. 675.

Specimen

from

GARDEN

Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

job

'

BEAUTIFUL
f

me

The Libertyville club has competed
in Toronto, Canada, and recently was
host to the Toronto club at Libertyville
High school March 22, taking Toronto
8 bouts to 3.
Fifteen bouts will be on Saturday’s
card, with boys aged 9 to 15 years
showing their wares to Lake county
sports fans. Weights will run from 60
to 147 pounds, and both teams will be
at full strength for the first time in a
conference meet.
Jimmy
Labus,
Danny
Bleck
and
either Bob Millimaki or Bud LaDuke
will meet the best Libertyville has to
offer in Bobby Mathews, who has yet
to lose a bout in two years.of competition; Jimmy Stahl, who holds a pair
of wins over Bleck last year, and Bill
Weidner, a young rough and ready boxer. Weights for these bouts are 115,
121 and 128 pounds respectively.

of municipal administration which he
is called upon to administer.
William

Conference

HALL—WINNETKA

�Miss Orpha White At Mother's Guild

Specimen Ballot
City of Highland Park
Lake County, Illinois

GENERAL MUNICIPAL
Tuesday, April

15, 1947

Nominees
Mayor,

Commissioners
of the

ELECTION

for

and. Police

City of Highland

Magistrate
Park

at the
General

Municipal

Election

‘

FOR

MAYOR

(Vote

for

P hoto

One)
:

Mrs.

|

ROBERT

FERRY

ROBERT

F. WALKER

Robert

PATTON

menus?
Needles

Highland Park LIBRARY

COMMISSIONERS

nor summer. Many
wearing the winter

(Vote for Four)

have

worn

for

WILLIAM C. HEINRICHS

cons

to

give

household

CLAYTON

E. MEIERHOFF

EDWARD

J. MORONEY,

OLIVER

FOR

(Vote

HENRY
JOHN

months,

of

looking

new

life

to

furnishings

your

and

Glenview,
Glenview

Rafferty,

home

Designing

women—Byers

sewing—Hall

and remodel

home

furnishings-—

of

drapery

patterns—Ger-

Suggestions

for

the

Table:

Breads and more breads—Sumption
American regional cookery—Hibben
Adventures in good cooking—Hines
Sea food cookery—Wallace
Setting your table—Sprackling
If you are interested in making for
your garden or summer cottage, a decorative fence, trellis, stile or bird house,
the Library suggests:
Furnishing the home grounds—Shepardson
Sundials, how to know, use and make
them—Mayall
You can make it for camp and cOHane
—U. S. Bulletin

daily

AND GLASS
of
EXQUISITE DESIGN

SR.

Alex

U pholstery—Seager
Practical slipcover mabing—Stepeaion

at

MIRRORS

SCHWARTZ

III.

Disabled veterans of both world wars

122R

numbering

12,433

were

employed

One)

ANDREW

by

| the American Legion Auxiliary to make
memorial poppies last year.

MAGISTRATE
for

Jr.

maine

clothes,

the

S. TURNER

POLICE

Prior,

and pins—Duncan

Handbook

people are tired of
clothes which they

“Glass Age”

F. LUNDQUIST

M.

H.

Spears

winter

HUMPHREY

- WALTER

SIDNEY

neither

the same curtains the same furnishings
in the house. The family complains
about being served the same food. Why
not use some of the books in the Highland Park Public Library for sugges-

GOURLEY

A. GORDON

seasons,

Mrs.

Smplifted
Make

It is between

LYLE

Percy

Denzel.

Standing: Miss White, Mrs .JJohn Dompke,
Mrs. Marshall Williams and Mrs. Tom Clark. \

PUBLIC
FOR

by

AT A RECENT MEETING OF THE MOTHER’S GUILD of Immaculate Conception church, Miss Orpha White of the Lake County
Tuberculosis sanatorium was guest and speaker.
Seated from the left are Mrs. J. C. Arens, Mrs. R. S. Sheahen, and

HANSEN

HOMES © HOTELS © RESTAURANTS © STORES
INSTITUTIONS
© FROZEN FOOD CABINETS
Our

P. WHITE

Bonded,

Service

Any

Factory-trained Servicemen are ready
Make and Model of Refrigeration and

Units . . . Home
Contracts.

or

Industrial

..

. We

Specialize

‘Prompt Attention to Your Service
North
Shore Branch

City Clerk.

13266)

Office
Michigan “A
Ave.
=

\

at all
Air Condi

in Yearly

MURPHY &amp; MILLER, Inc.

to

Maintenance

Worries
1083

Gage

Winnetka 4166arstaezee.

�‘TOWN OF WEST

STATEMENT

OF FUNDS FOR

OFFICE
STATE

COUNTY

OF

OF

TOWN

ILLINOIS

OF

LAKE

ss.

Were

DEERFIELD
DETAILED

PUBLICATION

OF

WEST

DEERFIELD

is

a

statement

by

Arthur

M.

Baker,

Supervisor

of

the

Town

of

~ West
eerfield in the County
and
State aforesaid
of the amount
of public funds
_ receiv
and expended by: him during the fiscal year just closed, ‘ending on the 28th
.day of February, 1947, showing the amount of public funds on hand at the commencement of said fiscal year. the amount of public funds received and from what source
received, the amount of public funds expended and for what purposes expended during
the fiscal year ending as aforesaid.
The said Arthur M. Baker, being duly
sworn, doth
depose and say, that the
following statement by him subscribed is a correct statement of the amount of public
funds on hand at the commencement of the fiscal year above stated, the amount of
public funds received, and the sources from which received, and the amount expended,
and purposes for which expended, as set forth in said statement.
ARTHUR M. BAKER.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 28th day of March, A.D. 1947.
WALTER
LOEFER,
Notary
Fublic.
_ (SEAL)

AUDITOR’S

Arthur
M. Baker,
services,
Deerfield
Hardware
&amp;
Paint

Irene

REPORT

SUMMARY

Public

Irene

STATEMENT

OF

CASH

RECEIPTS

AND

hy

eee jo

SE ME
Funds

is

disbursed

Amount
A

aes

during

of funds

on

hots

the

hand

OUP

fiscal

at the

BOE Fea

.

DETAILED

ven
year

close

rac on eo

deeded $12.054.57

.........---..-...--

of the

fiscal

ncn is ccc

STATEMENTS

OF

GENERAL
tote

-

eer ee

Mar.

20

apeenee

Library

ON

re

Source
ORG

payroll

asi.

and

$12,580.28
286.33

$12,866.56
2,043.10

3,725.42

$10,823.46

~

3,805.81

CASH

$

‘

RECEIPTS

FUND

:

Description

ia

deductions,

-

Reena $

Poor
Relief Fund

3,213.29

hospital

Amount

a apenseecan a aE a oth Lob oevnic oc Vincbaemacvancod

plan

ee
SEMIS COI IOO., PORTED ooh oS oicc death ns nskn un sadcdaraswavtescccsosnpeapek
. 24
Library payroll deductions, hospital plan .......................ay
8
Town Hall rental
Lake County Treasurer ..
ae ekee eS eeen CRAP PONORE coh
cca cacecus codon
ay 21
Library payroll deductions, hospital plan
une 21
Raymond
J. Clavey, Township
Collector,
eee es wellet, Cities. rental ©4 5oyGs
yskdtacsboe ck soececeesni
June 21
Library payroll deductions, hospital plan
June 21
Reimbursement
of telephone
calls
July 10
Village of Bannockburn, road Work ...........:.:-0:-0-eees00-- Bae
aS Rit
sos ue
6.00
SS
SE
CST
Pat
co
age ag a
ee
age tas ced kk eg ehcane
50.00
July 24
Library payroll deductions, hospital. I
a
in een aghncve ns eese Na cocny ecdNw ban
1.60
eS
DE
ORI,
SURO
ote
Ns odie nd ndaataippasochcbeienscseseh
count cancucbaeceacshe
50.00
mune 16.
meimpnrsement
Of. telephone calls .......2ic.-&lt;ieicessesacccdesadcordndescassoscoccoresasene
55
Aug.
21
Library payroll deductions, hospital plan .....-...20......c.ccccccececeecececceeeeee
1.60
_ Sept.
weertet
-Ollies : Pentel =&lt;. eet
50.00
‘Sept. 17
Library payroll deductions, hospital plan .....
1.60
_ Sept. 20
Gustaf H. Fredbeck, County Treasurer, taxes ............0........
1,000.00
Peebaee eS
Seeeer “OU Ine rental o-oo cscs
ah asnucdatde oO
50.00
Oct. 16 -Albert Pick, Jr., reimbursements of thistle cutting expense ................
Oct. 31
Library: payroll deductions,
hospital plan

Oct.

31

Town

. Dec.
- Dec.
ee

23
23
30

Jan. 15
wan. 20.
Feb. 19
oun eae

Hall

rental,

Lake

County

Treasurer

7

Aug.

...

SE
Te
OR
osha Ri
nh chica
sales
Library payroll deductions
hospital plan ...
Town Hall rental, Lake County Treasurer ...
Relief Office rental
Guy G. Lunn,
County Treasurer, taxes .......
Library peyece deductions, hospital plan
Richard A. Hedberg, reimbursement of thistle

cutting

expense

1.8
5.00

........

z

—
ept.

Library payroll deductions, hospital plan -..1........... sh
atcce Medien scee
Relief: Office rental 22.005.
Library payroll deductions, hospital plan
-..............ccccccccccccceeeeceescceccees
WRTSOE GILT TO WOMRUINE pecs bo cen os cccov eer coude Seabee Sk ake api AIO BES

1.80 | Sept.
50.00°| Sept.
1.80 | Sept.
50.00
ae
ept.

i. estate eG

$8,383.44 | Sept.
Sept.
Sept.

5

ROAD
1946
may

8.

June 21

AND

BRIDGE

FUND

eats

Vilage

of

Bannockbirt;.

rodd

;
materials «05.00.25. cc5 ockssecacessadepasccgaussve
pices $

Village

of

Bannockburn,

road

materials

Raymond J. Clavey, Township
Gustaf H. Fredbeck
Feter Baker &amp; Son

Collector, taxes -....-.0-.0..0....--

................2-c0cccsseeeeeeeeeeee

County
Treasurer,
taxes
cost of black top refunded

_... 2,008.09 | Sept.
26.00 | Oct

500.00 | Oct
16.78 | Oct

...

Guy G. Lunn, County: Treasurer, taxes .................1.
County Treasurer, road work, Duffy Lame 2.2.22... cccccescccccseececesteeeeeees

955.79 | Oct.
108.19 pa

;

= lemh

Mhceaah eta

Wath
POOR
Source

Cheek No. 1921.

Department

of

ee

senses

RELIEF
and

caches

ict.

Gh Hapinn cane $3,777.33

aoe

Amount

the

att

County Hospital not cleared ........:.-.sscsscseceesesseeeeees $ 112.00

Public

Welfare

reimbursement

of

hospitalization

Insurance

expense

Total Poor

Co.,

Relief

reign puemeet

Fund

of

ai

hospitalization

pee
Nov

66.00
68.00.

expense
burial

ct.
Oct

FUND

Description

MeN Ne Saas sos cca ages ssh ston hay seh pvab shea einn a abe mg thle owen eaaeehi a eidgpaae
F. R. Andresen, reimbursement of hospitalization expense ................
Department of Public Welfare reimbursement of hospitalization
Sterling

ept.
Sept.
162.48 | Sept.

ALLA

nae

11.00 |

and

29.83
$

286.33

Nov.
Nov
hati

me em _mm 09 02 00.09 COLD Co 69 CO 09 CO

PURd oi

ra

General:

OV-

j N

oe

em

Tatal

Service

A.

William

pL

$ 6,938.71

8,248.76

services,

Clerk

Town

ooven

Hall

.

auditing

Co.,

lighting

Rockenbach,

of

services

Town

as

Hall

Clerk

Co., examination
Sr., services
as

in

Supervisor’s

office

..

of accounts
Judge
of Election

Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
Joseph L. Bayard, Sr.. services as Judge of Election
Deerfield Grocery &amp; Market, supplies for Town Hall
Matilda Guess, services as Judge of Election

OF WEST DEERFIELD, LAKE COUNTY, ILLINOIS
FISCAL YEAR ENDED FEBRUARY 28, 1947

General
R
an
Particulars
Fund
Bridge Fund
- Amount of funds on hand at re commencement of
eee
eapesl year) March
1° 1846
o.oo, hk
elaw $ 3,479.53
$3,161.38
Funds received during the “riseat
TRAP Ain kids
8,383.44
777.33
- Federal taxes withheld from payrolls .....................--127.70
Hospital insurance deducted
from payrolls
............
63.90

Rockenbach,

Ashman,
Reedy
&amp;
Joseph
L. Bayard,

PEELE
Pe PP

TOWN

A.

for

oeeee

Edward H. Selig. services, auditing
Edward H. Selig, services as Assessor
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
John W. Bentley, janitor service
William H. Barrett, service call’ at Town Hall
Collector of Internal Revenue, taxes withheld
William N. Frye, Inc., service call at Town Hall
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner
Blue Cross Plan for ‘Hospital Care -

We have examined the accounts of the Town of West Deerfield and, in our opinion,
the attached statements correctly set forth the cash receipts and disbursements
for
the fiscal year ended February 28, 1947.
We have submitted a more detailed report to
the members of the town’board
.which shows the transactions classified functionally
and objectively in comparison with those of the preceding fiscal’ year.
ASHMAN,
REEDY
&amp; CO.
Chicago, Ilinois.
Certified
Public
Accountants.
‘March 26, 1947:

ie

DISBUREMENTS

auditing
Co.,
supplies

F. H. Meyer,
services, auditing
Edward \A. Reagan, service, auditing
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Town
Irene A. Rockenbach, telephone tolls

~~

“Z

following

%

Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseerof the Poor
Edward Bubert, painting interior of Town
Hall
Deerfield Hardware &amp; Paint Co., supplies for Town Hall
Deerfield State Bank, imprinting checks
Paul Fuller, janitor service
James
B. Mailfald, services as Highway
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.
fuel oil
Blue Cross Flan for Hospital Care
Public Service Co.,
lighting of Town
Hall
Trene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s office Irene A. Rockenbach, oil mop for Town Hall
Illinois Bell Telephone Co.. telephone service oode eceanecences gooecewens
Arthur M. Baker, telephone tolls

OFFICE OF TOWN SUPERVISOR
The

a

FUND

STATEMENT
OF
CASH
To Whom Paid

’

SUPERVISOR

TOWN

ay

GENERAL

14

A.

Haggie,

services

as

Judge

of

Election

Highland
Park News,
legal notice
Highland Fark News, publishing Supervisor’s Report
Illinois Association of Supervisors, membership fee
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., telephone service
Florence Jacobs, services as Judge of Election
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner
Northfield Mutual Fire Insurance Co., insurance premium on
DOM
BL IE ic cP heae oo k ieeas cans sana bard cee Leanna acc adomnes aabaiccdtaiaee
Olsen Frinting Co., ballots
P. F. Pettibone &amp; Co., election supplies ..
Public Service Co., lighting of Town Hall
Irene A. Rockenbach_ services as Clerk in Supervisor’s (office
Vant &amp; Selig, premiums on surety bonds
John W. Bentley. janitor service
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Alice B. Clark, services as Judge of Election ...
Atlas Printing Co., copy of ‘‘Aring’s Justice”
Harry F. Clavey, premium on Collector’s bond
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
John
W.
Bentley,
janitor service
Blue Cross
Plan
for Hospital
Care
Deerfield Hardware &amp; Paint Co., supplies for Town Hall
Evérett Garage,
sharpening lawn mower
\
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., telephone service
James
B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner Serene eereereccnce
Mid-Continent Fetroleum Corp., fuel oil for Town Hall
Public Service Co., lighting of Town Hall
Irene A. Rockenbach, stepladder for Town Hall
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s office
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor ...........22.0.20.0... avis
John W. Bentley. janitor service
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Collector of Internal Revenue, taxes withheld
Frost’s.
installing fluorescent lights, in Town Hall
Larson’s, office supplies for Town Hall
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s. office
Public Service Co., lighting of Town Hall
John W. Bentley, labor on Town Hall grounds
Seago, Pipin, Bradley &amp; Vetter, in re title policy:
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor ...
Blue Cross
Flan for Hospital
Care
George Bock
cutting
thistles
..............
George
Bock, mowing © i-2.0.é06562.242.220083-.
John: -W; Bentley, .janitor services 2.5.5.5.
550 ecincs oe odes cence
Township Officials of Illinois. membership
fees .....2....2.00000...2..cceeeees
Gustaf H. Fredbeck, back’ taxes on property acquired adjacent to
Ei
a
a
ai cde rag Wn ae wpe
Es sdb Seal ops one set ano radts Gases npegubaare a
Glenview Publishing Co., printing Town Clerk’s orders ....
Illinois Bell Telephone Co. telephone service ..0........000...cccceceeeeeeeeeeeceeeee
James
B. Mailfald,
services
as Highway
Commissioner
Lester E. Marshall, cutting thistles
Clarence A. Pederson, services as Commissioner of Noxious Weeds
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s office ............
West Skokie Drainage District, drainage assessment
Gustaf
H. Fredbeck,
drainage
assessment
...................
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor ..................22c.0000-Arthur M. Baker, services, auditing
Arthur M. Baker, telephone tolls
John W. Bentley
janitor services
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Bruce Frost, services, auditing
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner

FP.

H.

Meyer,

services,

auditing

&lt;0. 0.03.0... cscsssipctensese gp Steines
dunt apy eugiee

Edward A. Reagan,
services. auditing
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s office
Irene A. Rockenbach, telephone tolls ...
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Town Clerk
Irene A. Rockenbach, services, auditing
Edward
H. Selig, services, auditing
Edward H. Selig, services as Assessor
John Welch, post office box rental
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
John W. Bentley, janitor services
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway) Commissioner
Roy B. Moore,
electric clock for Town Hall
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s
Frost’s, service call at Town Hall
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., telephone service
Public Service Co., lighting of Town Hall
Collector of Internal Revenue, taxes withheld
Deerfield Grocery &amp; Market, supplies for Town Hall
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
John W. Bentley, janitor service
John W. Bentley, labor on Town Hall grounds .
Cooksy Oil Co., fuel oil for Town Hall
Franklin Grimes &amp; Co., building election tables :
Illinois Bell Telephone ‘Co. ., telephone service
xe
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner Oo Baa cucnnaieabe
Northfield Township Mutual Fire Insurance Co. insurance premium
on Town Hall
John Ott, varnishing election tables ae ema ee ecee ace weeps cceesernsenecssecesssscedeasseee

Public

Service Co..

lighting

of Town

(Continued

on

Hall

page

tO Ne ee er ee ce ecee cen ccsceeenetecsecessceceece

30)

�North Shore Scout Troope

LEGAL NOTICE
(Continued
14
14

from

page

29)

#Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Arthur M. Baker. services as Overseer of the Poor
John W. Bentley, janitor service
Blue-Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., telephone service
Public Service Co., lighting of Town Hall
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s
Seago, Pipin, Bradley &amp; Vetter, in re title policy
James
Welch, post office box:rental ....

James

B. Mailfald,

services

as Highway

Prepare for First Aid Meets

office

office

....

Sale at the YWCA

Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
John W. Bentley, janitor service
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Collector of Internal Revenue ‘taxes withheld
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., telephone service
Irene Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s office ...
James B. Mailfald. services as Highway Commissioner
Arthur M. Baker, services as Overseer of the Poor
John W. Bentley.
janitor service
Cooksy Oil Co.,
fuel oil for Town Hall
Blue Cross Plan for Hospital Care
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., telephone service ...
_ Larson’s, office supplies for Town Hall
James B. Mailfald, services as Highway Commissioner ....
P. F. Pettibone &amp; Co., township law book
Public Service Co., lighting of Town Hall
Irene A. Rockenbach, services as Clerk in Supervisor’s office
Vant &amp; Selig, insurance premium on Town Hall
Total

General

BRIDGE

FUND

Paid

Mid-Continent
Petroleum
Corp., gasoline
_ Arthur M. Baker, services. as Treasurer of Road and Bridge
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone and chips
Mercer Lumber Companies. crushed stone and chips
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone
Mercer Lumber Companies. crushed stone
Peter Baker &amp; Son, black top mix
Peter Baker &amp; Son, limestone
Frost’s, drop cord
Vant &amp; Selig, insurance premium on truck
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone
Cooksy
Oil Co.,
gasoline
Everett Garage, repairs to truck and grader
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone
Mercer Lumber Companies, stone chips
Mercer Lumber Companies, cedar posts and limestone
P. F. Pettibone &amp; Co.
budget blanks
Waidner-Sweig Agency, workman’s compensation insurance
Mid-Continent
Petroleum
Corp., gasoline
Peter Baker &amp; Son, black top mix
Peter Baker &amp; Son black top cold patch
Peter Baker &amp; Son, limestone for Bannockburn road
Peter Baker &amp; Son_
black top
Highland Park News, publishing legal notices
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone
Mercer Lumber Companies, crushed stone
sickles

Baker

&amp;

Son,

rental

of road

Road

and

Bridge

Fund

POOR
To

Whom

13

. 13

West
:

Deerfield

Total

Poor

Township.
Relief

rental

Fund

of Relief

Office

Office

and

Ra-

group

sews

for

the

Set-

of

and
Mrs.
publicity.

Arthur

H. T. Eitner of Ravinia will show
movies of Holland at the next meeting of the Mother’s club to be held at
the YWCA,
Tuesday,
April
8 at
8 p.m. The public is invited to attend
this meeting.

the

North

avenue;

Mrs.

Paul

Matthew’s

group,

Study
thur

class, conducted
Tylee,

will

meet

by Mrs.
each

Ar-

Thursday

morning at 10:30 o’clock during the
month at the H.P. Public library.

of
have

Aid meet conducted by Region Seven
of the Boy Scouts of America.
The initial step in a series of contests is the troop first aid meets be-—

tween

the patrols of the troops, the

es

winners, having received
a rating
of 90%, or better, becoming eligible
to take part in the district first aid
meets scheduled to be completed by
April 15.
Patrols qualifying for “A” ratings |
in the district meets will advance
to the council first aid meet which

will

be

held

at

Glencoe

on

Friday,

April 25. Here qualifying patrols from
all troops in the North Shore Area
council will work on merit badge
first aid problems and will receive
NAY

up

Ker

or

“ey”

ratings,

based

on their ability to solve the problems
given

them.

All troops are eligible to bactinane
will

be

pisveied with the proper

problems to be furnished by the Midwest First Aid committee. While the
troop problems stress only Gedanaee
class

first

aid,

the

district

problems

are more difficult and represent skills

learned in passing first class first aid.
Approximately 75 patrols will take
part in this series of first aid con-—

tests,

with

about
first

25

qualifying

for

aid meet.

WITH
the
LODGES

Homes April 7

with Mrs. Raymond Best, 329 Oakland
avenue;
Mrs.
Eric
Molke’s
group with Mrs. W.F.G. Rose, 1413
Wildwood lane and Mrs. C. E. Thorney’s group in her home, 308 Ravine
drive.
:
The board will meet on Monday,
April 14, at 10 a.m. and the Bible

troops

council

goal of all troops, the Midwest First _

Presbyterian Women
To Meet At Members’
Group meetings of the Woman’s
Association of the Highland
Park
Presbyterian church will be held on
Monday, April 7, beginning at 1:15
p.m. in the following homes:
Mrs. Rex Andrews’ group in her
home, 220 Park lane; Mrs. Charles
Brooks’ group with Mrs. L. V. Francoeur, 910 Lincoln avenue; Mrs. W.
L. Buchanan’s group, with Mrs. Philip Bright Jr., 255 Woodside avenue.
Other
group
meetings
include:
Mrs. F. B. Carpenter’s group with
Mrs.
W.
S. Strong, 248 Bronson

month
Area

carrying on an active program

the council

shed

past

Shore

of First Aid in the Troop, which is.
a part of the preparations necessary —
in the progress toward*the ultimate

and

Mothers To See Holland Movies

Amount

Lake County Home, board and lodging
9
West Deerfield Township. rental of Relief
Lake County Home, board and lodging

local

man of sewing,
Raff, chairman

$3_213.29

Paid

Highwood

ficers include Mrs. Edwin
P. Hart,
secretary; Mrs. Robert Billeter, chair-

..

FUND

Deerfield Grocery &amp; Market, food
Lake County General Hospital, hospitalization
Lake County Home, board and lodging
‘West Deerfield Township, rental of net eae
Wilson &amp; Reagan, rent
Lake CountysHome,
board and lodging ..
West Deerfield Township, rental of Relief Office
Mercer Lumber
Companies, fuel
Deerfield Grocery &amp; Market, food ....
i
Lake County General Hospital, hospitalization.
Lake County General Hospital
hospitalization
Lake County Home, board and lodging
West Deerfield Township, rental of Relief Office
Lake County Home, board and lodging
Lake County General Hospital
hospitalization
Lauterburg &amp; Oehler, ambulance service
West Deerfield Township rental of Relief Office
Lake County Home, board and lodging
West Deerfield Township, rental of Relief Office ....
Lake County Home, board and lodging
a
West Deerfield Township,
rental of Relief Office
Lake County Home, board and lodging ........ "
West
Deerfield Township, petty cash reimbursement
West
Deerfield Township, rental of Relief Office
Lake County Home, board and lodging
West Deerfield Township, rental of Nts
Office
Lake County Home, board and lod
West Deerfield Township’ rental of Relief Office ....
_ Lake County Home, board and lodging
West Deerfield Township, rental of Relief Office

Park,

vinia, announce the annual rummage
sale of the Helen Taylor Carr Auxiliary of the Chicago Commons Neighborhood settlement, to be held at the
local YWCA at 9 a.m. Thursday, April 17.
Proceeds
from this sale will be
used to send underprivileged youngsters to the Settlement camp in Michigan. All the active members of the
group will assist that day so that
there will be plenty of saleswomen
to accommodate buyers.
Anyone desiring to contribute articles to this worthy cause may leave
them at the home of Mrs. Dudley
Hall, president,
at 824
South
St.
Johns avenue, or at the home of the
past president, Mrs. Frank Venning,
341 Woodland avenue.
|
The

-o.....c:ceccccceeeecceceesseccceeee
vw

.........

RELIEF

in strategic spots in

tlement at the home of a member the
last Friday of each month. Other of-

roller

Jens E. Petersen, cinders
James Mailfald, Jr., road labor
Everett Garage, truck repairs
James
Mailfald, Jr.,
road labor
Standard Oil Co., oil
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.
gasoline
James B. Mailfald, cutting blades for MOWEY
Total

Fund...

sharpened

Peter Baker &amp; Son, black top mix and asphaltum
Cooksy Oil. Co., gasoline
Everett Garage, repairs to truck and mower
James
B. Mailfald, repairs to truck
Mid-Continent
Petroleum
Corp.,
gasoline
James
B. Malfald, paint
Gustaf H. Fredbeck
rental of county grader
Peter Baker &amp; Son, black top mix
Everett
Garage,
sickles
sharpened
Vant &amp; Selig, insurance premium on tractor
Frank Siljestrom
mowing weeds
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp., gasoline
Mercer Lumber Companies _ fuel and cement for grader
Everett Garage, repairs to truck
Peter Baker &amp; Son, black top mix and road labor
Cooksy Oil Co., gasoline
Vant &amp; Selig, insurance premium on road grader
James B. Mailfald, safety test for truck
Edward J. Barrett, license for truck

Peter

70.00

During
the

been

placed

Highland

$8,248.76

To Whom

Garage,

Posters

Fund

ROAD AND

Everett

Chicago Commons to
Hold Benefit Rummage

Commissioner

Eventual Goal Is Region 7
Midwest First Aid Meet

,

MONDAY
Rate

Club,

p.m.
Kiwanis
6:30 p.m.

Club,

Moraine

hotel,

12: as

Sunset

Valley

club,

TUESDAY
;
Chamber of Commerce, Sunset Valley club, 6:30 p.m.
Highwood Legion Post No. 501, City
hall, 8 p.m.
Odd Fellows Lodge No. 42, Masonic
temple.

Highland
Royal

Arch

WEDNESDAY
Park Chapter
Masons,

Masonic

No.

226,

temple. —

Veterans of Foreign Wars, Witte
hall, 8 p.m.
»
THURSDAY
oa):
Lions
club,
Highland
House,

North

Sheridan, road,

American
Legion hall,
8 p.m.

12:15 p.m.

Legion
Post
No.
21 North Sheridan

145,
road, -

VOTE IN CITY ELECTION»
APRIL 15 __

a

—

�1S

Sia

Oe

We repeat our offer—

: At Society President's
Night Dinner April 18
Fd

To

¢

Gilbert K. Hardacre of 1019 Marion
avenue and Mrs. Hardacre will be honcred by the Chicago section, I]luminating Engineering society, at a “president’s night” dinner dance Friday, April
18, in the Furniture Club of America,
located in the Furniture Mart, Chicago.

i

Prevent

a

Telephone Strike

Let the Public Decide
The Wage Question
“The wage issue between Illinois Bell Telephone
Company and its three Illinois unions can be
settled here in Illinois—by arbitration.”

GILBERT

-

“A telephone strike in Illinois is being called for
next Monday by the National Federation of Telephone Workers in Washington, D. C.—even though
local means are at hand to prevent it.”

K. HARDACRE

Mr. Hardacre is the forty-second national president of the society, an ap‘
pointment which is the culmination of
several years of service on various com-mittees

and

in

several

offices

of

the

organization.
Manager of lighting and commercial
sales for’ Public Service Company of
Northern Illinois, Mr. Hardacre is 4
past chairman of the Chicago section
of IES, and is secretary-treasurer of
Lighting institute. His
the Chicago
works have earned for him the James
M. Gilchrist Industry award of 1932,
_and in 1933 he was second in the James

award.

ee

eee,
Ser
Pertaeent

eez

pe

-E. Davidson

Mrs.. Hardacre, who has attended
~ numerous IES conventions and served
chairman of the ladies’ entertainment
as
committee at the “Century of Progress”
~ convention at Delavan, Wis., in 1933, is
well known to society members” andé
their wives.
Both are active in Highland Park
civic and community affairs, being connected with church and school groups,
n
as the Boy Scouts and League of Wome
‘Voters. Their son, Philip, attends Brae-

“Union demands would represent additional annual costs of $35,000,000. We would simply not have
enough income to cover these costs... an amount
equal to $2 per month on every customer’s telephone bill. Wages of Illinois telephone employees
are paid for by Illinois telephone customers; so it
seems to us, that wages of our employees should
be determined here in Illinois.”
“We proposed that an impartial board of Illinois
citizens decide—through abritration—whether
our wages compare favorably with community
levels for similar work or whether increases are
justified.”
“We repeat that offer.”

side school.

Calendar

YWCA
MONDAY,

April

7:30 p.m. GSO

7:

bility for public welfare are demonstrated by all

meeting.

TUESDAY, April 8:
10 a.m. Board meeting.
8 p.m. Mothers club.
WEDNESDAY, April 9:
7 p.m. Pi Delta meeting.

THURSDAY,
10

a.m.

concerned.”

“There is no excuse for a telephone strike.”

April 10:

Creative

Writers.

SATURDAY, April 12:
8 p.m.

Saturday

Evening

club.

You can help give Elm Place stua _ dents the outdoor play facilities other
children
have.
Contribute
to the
Morgan
Playground
Improvement
The
sooner you send your check to
improve Morgan
playground, the
: _ sooner work wil] start!
SI

ees
eae

“If it is accepted, a telephone strike—with its inevitable harm to everyone—will be avoided. It can
be prevented in Illinois if leadership and responsi-

ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE

COMPANY

&gt;

�oy

Capturing Snow History With A Camera

60
Limit 16 to 45
For

Packaging Dept.
Fine

3
e
Cafeteria

Photo

Uniforms

Furnished

Insurance

Benefits

by

Bud

Shelton

Highland

American

NORTH

29,

League

&amp;

Duffy

Manhattan
Glader

CHICAGO

Joe’s
Onesti

Hat

Service

....

Tazioli
Bros.

APPRENTICE
MOULDERS .
Young men 20 to 35 years of
age, who want to learn a good
trade and earn good compensation while doing so, would
do well to investigate what
we have to offer.

90 Proof

Distilled from 100%
Grain Neutral Spirits

18
:

$3

:

On April 12 we have a school board election and will
closed from noon till 6 p.m.... Tuesday, April 15, we will
closed all day for city election. Please order early.

be
be

LIEBSCHUTZ LIQUOR CO.
Waukegan

Ave.,

Highwood

Daily Free Fast Delivery
TEL. HIGHLAND PARK 443
sie&amp;
Nea Se

staad oe oea tae
eeta

.

Si Soy ee iz ae

s
‘

....

Anchor

Insurance

of

...

Beverage
Inn
Agency

Highland

Men

Park

Store

Series

446 Bowling

Accordion

League

THE CHICAGO HARDWARE
FOUNDRY COMPANY
MAJ.

Groc.

School
&amp;

Mkt.

....

Tavern
Decorators

Seguins
Funeral
Home
North
Shore
Buick
Del Rio Grill
Giangorgi Groc. &amp; Mkt.
Onesti Bros.
Manhatten Hat &amp; Shoe
Northbrook Tavern
Meyer &amp; Brother
Contri
Bros.
Russell’s
Huddle
Farmers

.............-

Beverage

Tavern

Koopman

Are
Seeking

—

GIN

House

Huddle
Secretary
High
Myrna
Jones
Edith Mansfield
Madge Helbling

We

A delicate gin,
favored by connoisseurs
for
Dry Martinis.

317

Dog

Village
Inn
Oak
Terrace
My Favorite

Fred’s

60% Grain Neutra

DRY

1947

Russell’s
The New

VETERANS

86.8 Proof

9

Garage

Esthers

A fime general ©

DISTILLED

Bros.

League

WwW.

service whiskey

os

27,

Larson

Moose

A name that has appeared on the labels of fine
domestic and imported wines and spirits for over
a hundred years,

i‘

Pin Ladies

Garage

Modern

both light and’

200

Ten

Bros.

Paganelli

full flavored.

nase
ee

Marchi

Garino

BIE LLOWS

)

Highland

Fell’s

Gyenbsfer

CLUB

Notagiacomo
Ori
Rogan
....
Paradiso

Dealers

Tavern

IERIE

FINE

A.
A.
E.
C.

Santi’s

John B. Nash
F. Patrick

ROE

Fossbender

Fini

Engel’s
Tavern
Villa Moderne
Scarlett’s
Somenzi &amp; Son
North
Shore Gas

Cleaners
Shoe

Carlson

W.

March

Labor
Temple ’*Tavern
Highwood
Bump
Shop

St.

O.
J.

1947

Casino
Print
Shop

Washington
Gardens
Tommy’s
Service Station
Anchor
Insurance
A.
G.
McPherson

Duffy

14th

Bowling

Vogue Cleaners
Siljestrom Coal

Abbott Laboratories
and

News

Legion
March

Tower
Press

Road

Ten Pin

Bowling

Good Working Conditions

Sheridan

|

577

NORTH CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Take North Shore to North
Chicago Junction and walk one
block west.

Preti
Lindgren ...
Crovetti
Cecotti
Georgeson
Coleman
Crovetti
. Pagnelli

HAVA AAHOQMAS

Age

This lovely photograph was taken at
the
George
Shelton
home,
1824
Rice
street, when the sun
came out the morning
of March 25 and revealed fairy tale pictorial effects of snow
all
over
Highland
Park,
following
the
fantastic blizzard of
the day before that
had
brought
weird
experiences to many
a driver, snapped telephone__
poles, _ torn
down
high
tension
wires,
convinced
homebound _ workers
they
would
“never
MaKe
-1f" &lt;o-.. -ane
shredded the flag at
Central
and
St.
Johns
avenues
until
it
resembled — spaghetti-like
tatters,
still
“gallantly
streaming.”

Shoreline
ROO

FING

:

Company

(repairs-renewals)
Asphalt Shingles—Roll Roofing
Wood
Shingles
repaired
and
preserved with HOT Asphalt or
Stain
Gutters

Cleaned

- Coated

Siding — Insulation
Tuck-Pointing

B. AMIDE
—
C. MORDINI
Highland Park 1203

�- Boy's Boxing Club
Will Enter 44 in

Otto E. Zschau, 189 Harbor street,
Glencoe, for the past 10 years garden

District Tourney

Su p 6
4.n%
tendent on the

Legion Championship Events
Start Monday in Lake Forest
Highland
will

have

Park
44

Boy’s

entries

in

Boxing
the

estate

late

Men’s

club.

The

¥

Max

Marek,

for

- contender

“the

man

who

Garino

and

E.

p.m. until 1 a.m.

During

the

many

requests

North

Shore

garden

Arlington

Heights 7120-M

CENTRAL
Ask
I have
of the
Shore.

color.

for

aid with horticultural problems he
continually
receives from
mémbers
of

STEWART.

for

Mrs.

5218
Stewart

sanded
and finished
finest
homes
along

over 1000
the North

LAWNS!

Now

is the

time

to re-

vive it with a hearty meal of
Scotts grassfood. It’s tops in
lawn feeding and economical—
50 Ibs. does the work of 150
Ibs. of ordinary fertilizer.

Park.

by

oor
ie

Winter is tough on lawns—ex‘hausts grass, drains away

Mr. Zschau says his decision to become a gardén consultant has been
encouraged

Phone

TIME FOR

on the estate of his late employer,
he has for the past few years lectured
to garden clubs
along
the
North
Shore, and will be remembered in
Highland

SHELBY

eo

DINNER

week.
In
addition
to
his
duties

Zschau

orchestra.

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

101 8. PARKWAY
PROSPECT HEIGHTS, ILL.

the evening’s festivities, a Mixmaster,
electric iron and electric heating pad
will be given away.
Dancing, for
both young and old will be from 9

announced this
Otto

his

AND

Scotts Turf Builder

clubs.

the

world’s

heavy-

Mel Mullins, athletic director and

coach,

as

Athletic
crowned

it

did

last

year

club
where
champions.
‘

at

they

Illinois

Party Wednesday

The Emblem club will hold its annual spring card party on Wednesday, April 9, at the YWCA starting
at 1:15 p.m.’ Mrs. M. Mitchell is
chairman
of arrangements
for the
affair with Mrs. Raymond Sheahen
and Mrs. Leonard
Steffen as cochairmen. Reservations may be made
by calling either Mrs. Mitchell or

YWCA

Reconstruction

(100x100)

SCOTT SPREADER—Handy precision machine for quick seeding and
feeding. 25 lb. capacity $7.85; 50 ib,
Rubber tired $14.85.

Fund Campaign
The

local

YWCA

more

than

met

its quota
in the
Round-the-World
Reconstruction fund, Mrs. Edmund
Froelich, president, announced at the
annual meeting on Thursday, March
20. The fund was reached by individ-

SHERONY
314 RAILWAY AVE.

HARDWARE
HIGHWOOD,

Tel. H. P. 2041

ual subscriptions and from the festival held, at the YWCA in February.
During the meeting annual reports
of

both

the

treasurer,

Laubenstein,

and

Mrs.

Mary

executive

director,

Lester

Ann

Mac-

were

pre-

The meeting was attended
YWCA
board and a large
of members and guests.

Five new

board

members

were

pre-

sented
and their election ratified:
Mrs. Louis Schultz, Mrs. L. P. Willison, Mrs. William Savin, Mrs. Jack
Freck, and Mrs. Marvin Lawrentz.
Members

of

the

board

Directory

Telephone

:

Closing

re-electéd

for a second term were: Mrs. Froelich, Mrs. Frank Peers, Mrs. George
Carr and Mrs. Laubenstein,
Mrs.
Froelich regretfully
announced
the
withdrawal

of

Mrs.

Frank~

Austin

who has served her allotted time as a
board

Steffen.

25 Ib., $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft. (50x50)
50 Ib. $3.75 feeds 5, 000 sq. ft. (100x50)
100 Ib. $6.50 feeds 10,000 sq. ft.

Quota Reached In

were L\fadden,
sented.
by the
number

Emblem Club Will Hold
Spring Card

(grassfood )

beat

weight championship.
Other officials will be Joey White,
Howard
Walsh,
Ed Creamer, Tom
Campagna, Phil Collins and “Jabber”
Young, all well known and _ highly
honored boxing officials.
Highland Park Boy’s Boxing club
should again have its share of champions in this tournament, according

Mrs.

of

has
up-

FLOORS SAN DED |

A spring dance will be sponsored
by Highwood American Legion Post
No. 501 on Saturday evening, April
12, at the Labor temple.
Music for
dancing will be furnished by Louis

J

Joe aca will act as guest referee
Marek
will be
re-Mon ay night.
membered by sports fans as the CYO,
Golden
Gloves
and _ International
AAU champion
who
later
became

to

Gary

on
a_ business
of his own as
garden
consultant,
“it ~ Was

semi-finals

ments.

the

John

Glencoe,
embarked

individual

will follow at the Lake Forest YMC
on Wednesday, April 9, and the finals at Grant Township High school
-Fox Lake, on Saturday. April 12.
The boys will be divided into age
and weight groups ranging from 9 to
15 years and from 58 to 135 pounds.
Officials have been selected from
the Illinois State Athletic commission and the Central Amateur Athletic union. All are judges or referees
for CYO and Golden Ssove tourna-

of

Mrs.

W.

club

tournaboys~ boxing championship
ment to be sponsored by the American
Legion
10th
District
starting
Monday, April 7, at the Lake Forest

Young

Highwood Legion Dance Apr. 12

Otto Zschau Scechees
Garden Consultant

e

Your

new

very soon.

member.

telephone

directory goes to press

In order to insure accuracy, we check

and recheck every name, address and telephone

HAVE ALL THE SOFT WATER YOU NEED
AT THE TURN OF A FAUCET WITH—

number
e

before printing,

If you have a telephone, please look at your

present

listing in the directory

is correct.

ILLINOIS

366 Central Avenue—Highland Park
Highland Park

“Kenilworth
2207

342

If it is not,

BELL

call

our

to make

sure it

Business

Office.

TELEPHONE

COMPANY

ILL.

�For the Culinary Artist

Town Talk

ae

3

PUT ON YOUR EASTER BONNET

Spring Fashions, will be dining there.
“Maurice, the famous Chef, will have
Special Easter Menu prepared.

a very

Henri Gendron’s Orchestra playing
for Dinner and Dancing after Nine.
Frank Hutchins to welcome you and
Greetings.

Skokie

x - BE THE SWEETEST

LADY

Easter

extend

County Line.

though you're expecting a Baby

Even

you can still look slender and lovely.
The Frances Welsh “Maternity Shop
shows many delightful Frocks with
Navy

- definitely for you this Easter.
crepe

black

or

blue

or

pink

with

is

which

silhouette

long

Fashion’s

_

insets to add a frivolous not that deSizes

waistline.

your

from

tracts

YOU'LL BE GLAD HE TOOK YOU
PARADE

EASTER

THE

If he will
Dinner and

day with a
at Glenview

climax the
the evening

Country House. A really lovely Dinjing Room where excellent Dinners

Steaks,

in

served—specializing

are.

Fried Chicken, Lobster Tails.

Chops,

the
the cozy Cocktail Lounge
In
to
ng
listeni
on,
and
on
linger
guests

delightful

‘the

Hildegarde

of

music

at the Hammond Organ. Open 4 p.m.
‘Daily. At 12 Noon Sat., Sun. and Hol-

Rd. at Lake St.
jdays. Waukegan

Herbst

Grace

pork

Brown

to fit the needs of your family,
harmonize with your home. Drop

as
to
in

at Miss Herbst’s attractive new shop
place

and

be

may

your

ready

summertime

NOW

order

the

when

that

good

slowly

it

old

And for years to come you'll rem- Gnisce with pleasure about the Summer you spent at the Moraine Hotel
could be
Highland Park. What
in

alluring

this

in

living

than

beautiful hotel of Early American
background, set atop wooded ravines
and overlooking Lake Michigan with
a splendid sandy bathing beach. Stop
in for Lunch—from 80c, or Dinner
from $1.85. 801 Sheridan Rd.
SPRING
SHOWING
DECORATIVE FABRICS

- OF

More than 100,000 yards of distinctive

_ Fabrics,

selected

from

famous

mills,

are shown at Old Colony Home Fashions Studios. Decorative specialists
help you develop plans for the com- plete interior treatment; all mater-

als, draperies, slip covers and upholstery. Talented

these

Craftsmen

Or materials may
the yard for those

M.

Interior
Rd,
Wil
fei

to

make

things in their own work room.

Linnie
Stat

be purchased by
who like to sew.

McComas,

Decorating.
6006.
;
i

THE

Technician
119

Green

in

small

frying

KNITTING
MOVES

tion.

A

wide

collection

Make

pan.

of fine

in
Bay

This

is

elegant with which
Easter

Outfit.

Yarns,

JEWELRY

something

COCKTAIL
OPENS

sooner—so

watch

SPRING
IS

Pins,

you

away

a trip. Be

on

are

taking

individual

to

in 8 squares

on

with

in a

cover

greased

on

top.

baking
Cover

side

biscuit

with.

gravy.

shredded

raw

Nectar Peanut Butter Sauce
cup peanut butter
cup honey
cups apricot whole fruit nectar
tablespoon cornstarch
teaspoons lemon juice
Few grains salt
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
Combine peanut butter and honey

Y%
1%
1%
1
2

F.
is

Loaf

in

carrots

children

a

saucepan

and

stir

and stirring until thick

6 &gt;

EXCAVATING
BLACK

out-door

runways, finest Food. The Doctors
Butterworth have had 45 years experience in caring for Dogs. Licensed
Veterinarian
always in attendance.
2810 W. Park Ave. H. P. 2967.

Ruth Wakefield

TRENCH

DIRT
DRIVEWAYS
S

DAY

AND

WORK

FILLING DIRT
BUILT

&amp;

LOUIS

@

:

TAZIOLI
NIGHT

“A vo

of

— eo

until well —

(2 or 3 min-_

sauce.

AND

.

aS

#5

utes). Serve over steamed puddings
or others of this type.
ee
Makes
approximately 2%
cups

hour.

about

#

*&lt;hi28

blended; add remaining ingredients —
and stir to blend. Bring to a boil, stirring continuously. Continue cooking —

4 cup finely chopped celery
14 cup chopped raw apples
Combine
pork
sausage
and_
bread
crumbs. Moisten with slightly beaten
egg and milk. Add carrots, celery, and
apples. Bake in loaf pan in moderate
oven (350 degrees F.) until done, about
1

ce
ba Rec chai

flavor, is perfect for puddings of this
type. Try it on plain cakes too.
—

1%

cup

|

fruit nectar and nutty

apricot whole

done.

14

_

A steamed pudding is only as good a ae
as its sauce. “Nectar Peanut Butter
Sauce”, rich and delicious with its

Increase

Sausage and Vegetable
pounds pork sausage
os cups bread crumbs
2 eggs, slightly beaten
Y% cup milk

oe

onion

Steamed Pudding
Is Only As Good
As the Sauce

dish, ‘with

dough.

chopped

|

‘

of

moderate oven (350 degrees
vegetables are tender, about
Fifteen minutes before servcooked or canned peas, and

with

pepper

t

thickness

one

sugar
or chopped

¥Y% cup chopped unblanched almonds
3 tablespoons mayonnaise
Combine vinegar, water, cornstarch,
salt and sugar, and bring to a boil.
Remove
from heat, add celery or
pepper, onion and chopped pickle.
Cool.. Add almonds and mayonnaise.
Serve over hot or. cold fried, broiled,
baked or canned fish.
Makes
approximately
1% CUPS
sauce.

(6 x 6 inches).

mixture

our
fish.

1 medium-sized sweet or sour pickle

Combine

%-inch

sweet

2 tablesoons

oven temperature to 450 degrees
and continue baking until crust

en

comfortable

stalls,

cup.

are

|

\

your Dog, while you are away having
fun. The Butterworth Kennels give
every dog the best of care. Large,
modern

green

meat and press edges together. Cut
holes in top and brush with egg and
milk, Bake in a hot oven (425 degrees
F)
about 30 minutes.
Serve with
creamed peas.

it.

the

%

cornstarch

1% teaspoons granulated
% cup chopped celery

grated onion

Roll

meat

Cook in
F.) until
1 hour,
ing, add

VACATION
HERE

Possibly

1 teaspoon

each square of dough. Fold dough over

LOUNGE

for

cut

Pile

sausages

You'll like El Commodore which has
just opened on Skokie, (500 ft. south
of County Line and Villa Modern).
It’s a most attractive place and you’re
certain to enjoy an evening there.
Music for your entertainment. Watch
for the OPENING DATE of the Dining Room, where
they
will serve
Italian and American Foods at modest prices. The Date will be May Ist.
or

and

mix.

in

capturing the fabulous romance and
beauty of the Age of Chivalry. Hand
wrought in brilliant fields of Jewel
Colored Rhinestones. Series $10 to
$30, Ear-rings to match. Davis and
Sherman Aves.
NEW

biscuit

of

truly

escutcheon

make

sauces

popularizing

4 teaspoon salt

2 cups biscuit mix
Grind left-over meat. Brown onion in
fat. Add meat, seasonings and enough
gravy or milk to moisten. Break eggs
into measuring cup and add enough
to

for

Almond Fish Sauce
3 tablespoons cider vinegar
2 tablespoons water

egg

milk

exciting

secret

Even the most ordinary fish becomes
a tasty entree when it is topped with
tangy “Almond Fish Sauce”.

tablespoon bacon drippings
teaspoon marjoram
teaspoon salt
Gravy or top milk

tables

to glamorize your

Regal

tablespoons

and

special

Milk

SHOP

including Tweed Sets, Argyle Sweater and Sox Paks, and the “Who’s
Who” Ribbon for knitting Suits and
Dresses.
“HERALDRY”

New

A wise homemaker is constantly adding new, recipes to her repertoire of
left-over dishes. This helps her to serve
interesting and varied meals, without
wasting even the smallest amount of
food.
Many dishes made with left-over
cooked meat can be just as flavorsome
as a freshly cooked meat dish. What’s
more, they’re in the class of quick-and
easy dishes that come in handy when
time is short for preparing a meal.
)
Armenian Pirags
cups left-over meat

patties.

This popular Shop, long located at
562 Lincoln Ave. Winnetka—has a
location at 918 Linden Ave.
new
Hubbard Woods. In this bright, sunny, convenient spot
the
knitting
needles click merrily as Evelyn Wilson and Helen Richards give instruc-

Ave. Winnetka.

REMEMBER THIS SUMMER
ALL WINTER LONG

more

into

of sausage drippings. Place diced vege-

comes breezing in. NEW

-addreds, 563 Lincoln

sausage

about 1% cups thin gravy, using some

Evanston.

Porch

your

plans

an architect plans a Home! Furniture,
‘Lamps, Rugs—everything is planned

Ae

Make

Pie

famous
House
Made
by
the
‘Schrager, is shown at Chandler’s

PORCH”
NOW

“PERSONALIZED
- PLAN YOURS

7%

1%4
2
1
t
1
1%

Deep-Dish Sausage
pounds pork sausage
cups diced potatoes
cup diced turnips
cup diced carrots
cup cooked peas
cups gravy
Biscuit dough

107

when ordering by mail or phone. 630
hurch. Carlson Bldg. Uni. 7709.

‘TO

Leftover Meat

Here are two combination dishes
in which pork sausage plays the lead
role. They’re “different” and decidedly
tasty. Wlaat’s more, they’re both oven
dishes, so may be used as the center of
an oven meal.

16. Price $19.95. Give regular size

to

:

Starring Role in
Casserole Dishes

at

PARADE

EASTER

THE

IN

—

|Concocted Using

DO

the

of

their

all

with

Shore

North

Good News for Those
Who Are Fond of |
Fish: Almond Sauce

Armenian Dish Is

Plays

DO

‘bered and cherished. The Smart Set

Pork Sausage

=

or Dinner. It will make Easter Sunday 1947 an event long to be remem-

\H
NN

“And drive out to lovely Villa Moderne

ESS

_ WITH THE FRILLS UPON IT

PHONE

H.

P. 4662

Foreign

Wars”

RES

�Seeing

Name Committee
For Highwood’s
Red Cross Drive

Eye Group

Meets to Discuss
1947 Enrollment

is

Mr.

Frank’s

own

second

include

Mesdames

George

e SILENT |.

@ LOW OPERATING COST
@ LASTING ECONOMY
@

LONG

LIFE

Kenery,

Joseph Riley, Fred
Ehrens, Edgar
Benson, Peter
Rettig,
Wayne
Thomas,
Victor
Walecka,
Phillip
Pasquesi and Roy Olson.

John F. Dilles Lead

University of Chicago
Fund

Drive Here

Does Noise Get On Your Nerves?

/

The Servel Is Completely Noiseless

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Dille Jr.,
1138 Lincoln avenue, Highland Park,
will lead the local University of Chicago Alumni foundation drive during
the sixth annual gift campaign starting April 1.
One thousand alumni will take part
in the campaign which is being conducted simultaneously in 400 cities
throughout the United States.
The
1947 gift is expected to reach a record goal of $200,000.
Since the first gift in 1942, the
alumni group has contributed over
$1,000,000 to
the
university.
This
year’s gift will be presented on Alumni Day, June 7, to President Ernest
C. Colwelk at a meeting in which
President Colwell will make his an-

dog.

Buddy I, who was Mr. Frank’s guide

at the time The Seeing Eye was pioneered in this country, died in 1938.
According to Mr. Frank, The Seeing Eye has “stepped up” its training
program since the end of the war
lifted the restrictions.of manpower
shortage.
Classes of blind students
are scheduled in advance and every
daylight hour at the school is spent
by the instructors not only in teaching students how to use their dog
guides
but in readying
additional
dogs for scheduled future students.
_
The Seeing Eye is a national philanthropy and is supported through
public.
contributions
and
memberships. The Chicago Seeing Eye membership committee has set a goal of
1,000 new members for the school’s
support during the four-week period

nual

report

to the

alumni.

With

over

16,000 alumni now living in Chicago
and surrounding
areas, Chicagoans
normally contribute about one-half
the total gift.

ROOFING
SIDING
Gutters

—

CAULKING

Cleaned,

&amp;

of the spring enrollment.

4

@ PERMANENT

Committee’
members
have
been
named for the Highwood Red Cross
drive, which was launched April 1 under chairmanship
of Mrs.
Joseph
Koopman
and will last the entire
month of April. The Highwood goal
in this year’s fund campaign has been
set at $600.
Members of the drive committee

There was “no foolin’” on Tuesday; April 1, when members of the
Highland Park Seeing Eye membership committee met at the home of
Mrs. H. H. Hixson to discuss plans
for the 1947 Seeing Eye membership
enrollment.
Nearly
300 volunteers
will make up the committee for the
enrollment which opens for Chicago
and suburbs on April 22.
Mrs. Michael
Cudahy
and
Mrs.
Loyal Davis are co-chairmen of the
enrollment. Mrs. Hixson is chairman
of the Highland Park team.
Preceding the business session of
Tuesday’s meeting, guests heard a
talk by Morris §. Frank, vice president in charge of the Division for the
_ Blind-of The Seeing Eye, Inc., of
Morristown, New Jersey. Mr. Frank
was accompanied by his own dog
guide, Buddy. The pair have become
a familiar sight to Chicago’s Seeing
Eye
committee
workers
as
Mr.
Frank visits the city each year to
bring them up to date on the work
the Seeing Eye is doing to provide
freedom for blind men and women.
This year he emphasized the importance of the obligation voluntarily assumed by the school to provide
a second and even a third guide dog
to its graduates. Buddy, really Buddy
?

II,

-

Repaired

Coated

Suburban Roofing Co.

VOTE
In City Election
APRIL 15

Free Estimates
Highland Park 1767

EASTER PLANTS AND FLOWERS

The refrigerator without a moving part to wear or
get noisy.—just a small gas burner takes the place of
machinery in the amazingly simple Servel gas refrigerator.
No motor, valves, pistons or pumps. Only Servel brings
you this different, simpler freezing system with no moving
parts at all.
More than 2,000,000 happy owners are enjoying
this

remarkable

refrigerator.

trend is continually toward

From

Servel.

coast

to coast

Enthusiastic owners say, “Our Servel Gas refrigerator is
so silent we forget it’s there. We are amazed how little it
costs to operate.
This beautiful Servel adds to the attractiveness of my kitchen.”
Mrs. J. Cross
S. Deere Park, Highland Park, Ill.
“Even after 15 years of silent and efficient operation,
without a bit of trouble, I can say I’m certainly happy to
have chosen this long-lasting and economical refrigerator—,
the Servel Gas Refrigerator.”
Mrs. J. Kiehl,
Lléwellyn Ave., Highwood, Iil.

YES WE HAVE
EASTER LILIES
€

@
@
@

EASTER
EASTER
EASTER

&amp;

PLANTS
CUT FLOWERS
CORSAGES

At Prices That Are

Still Fair

KOTTRASCH

BROS.

GREENHOUSES
DEERFIELD,
%

ILL.

PHONE DEERFIELD 5
i

the

COLUMBIA HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE
305 WAUKEGAN AVE.
HIGHWOOD, ILL.
PHONE H. P. 1533

�- Hospital Auxiliary

High

To Meet Wednesday
_ The regular meeting of the woman’s
auxiliary of Highland Park hospital
_ will be held on Wednesday, April 9,
at
10 a.m. in the parish house of
Trinity
church.
Mrs.
George
O.
Strecker, president, will preside and
luncheon will be served at 12:30 p.m.
by Mrs. Charles Husting
and her
_ committee.
At the close of the meeting, members will tour the two nurse’s homes
~ on. Vine and Glenview avenues in’
which

alterations

have

just been com-

pleted and new furnishings added by
the auxiliary. This should be an interesting meeting and
it is hoped
there will be a large attendance.

=

@

PLANTS

CALL H. P. 5310

WILLIAMS

P. B. Garrett Is
Girl Scout Doings | Chairman of Session
At Power Conference

Choose Executive
Board of Council
In

the election

for a new

board

of

the student council April 2, 12 students were picked out of a list of 30
candidates. This new executive board

made

up

of

four

seniors,

will take

1947.
Don

Nash,

student

council,

juniors
office

and

in September,

vice-president
explained

of

the

FLORIST

26 N. Sheridan

Rd.

Recently

Troop 27 of Lincoln school
their

entertained

mothers

at _ the

home of their leader, Mrs. E.. P.
Barnes. The girls have been working
eight | toward their
Troop
Drama _ badge

the

voting

procedure to the student body at an
assembly Wednesday morning.
One
of the more important points he emphasized was that this election
not a popularity contest.
Also

was
that

and, as part of the afternoons
tainment,
presented
a_
very

enterclever

pantomine
“Courtship
under
Difficulties,’ and a dramatic skit, “The
Story of St. Patrick.”
The ten mothers present were inspired when the girls repeated their
Girl Scout laws, promise, slogan and
motto.

the board should be as evenly split
between boys and girls.
Janice Shick, president of the coun-

Although Mrs. Barnes was the official hostess, the girls enjoyed being
her assistants and serving the re-

cil,

freshments.

then

introduced

the

candidates,

Britton, Walter Chaffee, Elsie Greco,
Elaine Hutchins,
Welton
Mansfield,
Jerry
Schlung, Holly
Stair, Eugene

FLOWERS
@

Students

telling some of the activities of each
person.
After the short assembly, the actual voting took place in sessions.
The candidates for election are as
follows:
Sophomores: Sue Barker, Barbara

CORSAGES
@

School

Tagliapietra, Dirk Young.
Juniors:
Pat Bartell, Jack Close,
Mike Farrell, Mary Ferguson, Barbara
Floyd,
Wilson
Grady,
Fred
Greco, Ned Greenberg, Nancy Johnson, Bob
Larson, Sally Lautmann,
Bob*Leopold, Mac McCormick, Dean
Olson, Eddie Piacentini, Dick Rietz,
Sheila
Sybeson,
Patty
Walters,
Gretchen
zola.

Wiltberger,

Frank

PIZZA

Zen-

Mrs.

Leonard

Davidow,

bara Barnes, Joan Cedarborg, Anne
Curtis,
Nancy
Dalla
Valle, Joanne
Holden,
Susie
Lencioni,
Mary
Lou
Owens, Debby Ross, Nancy Smalley,

Francis

Tomblins,

and Geraldine Wil-

kinson,

Troop

23

of

just

completed

ward

earning

badge.

Mrs.

troop,

took

where

they

Braeside

school

their

activities

the

Roy

the
did

Winter

Olson,

girls

have

to

B.

Garrett,

2427

Valley,

Mr. Garrett is chairman of the
Power group of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers which
sponsored

the

session

on _ which

George H. Landis and L, F. Greve
presented technical papers. An electrical engineering graduate of the
Colorado State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, Mr. Garrett
is editor of Electric Light and Power

magazine.
The three day conference, which
is the largest annual meeting of its
kind, attracted nearly 2500 engineers,
scientists,

entire
tion,

and

industrialists

country.

Power,

transmission

and

consumption

the

Fleet
and

“All-Engineers”

Admiral
Richard

dinner

William
R:

Deupree

were

of the

Exmoor
skating

atid played -ice-games. Tracking and
snow sculpture have been enjoyed by
the girls also. Mrs. R. C. Ferguson
and Mrs. S. A&gt; Stenberg have assisted Mrs. Olson and the girls in work-

dolyn Olson,
Marcia
Stenberg,
ice Tupper, and Carol Walker.

ITALIAN PIE
AT ITS BEST

Installed Enabling Us to Make Them

_@

OUR

FOR

BROILED

STEAKS

Served from

11:00

SPAGHETTI,
and

MADE

HOME

CHILI,

CHICKENS

a.m. to 1:00 a.m.
{

WE

CATER

TO

PARTIES

WASHINGTON
Liquors

-548-550 Railway Ave., Highwood

and

Mixed

Drinks

GARDENS
of

All

Jr.

speak-

ing for this very desirous badge.
The girls in this troop are: Diane
Brown, Sandra Farrell, Ann Ferguson, Mary Friedman, Lorraine Goodhart, Coralee Griffith, Maxine Joseph,
Nancy McKinney, Etienne Ledbetter,
Nancy Looney, Patsy Murphy, Gwen-

e

FAMOUS

which

ers.

Pizza Served from 4:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.
Sunday Noon to 1:00 a.m.
ALSO

at

F. Halsey

Orders to Go Out

ARE

the

produc-

with its application to industry was
the main topic of study. One of the
principal non-technical sessions was

Visit Our New Remodeled Kitchen

WE

from

its

Taste Better Than Ever.
\

served

to-

Sports

leader

tobogganing,

FAMOUS
SERVED

Our New Pizza Ovens Are Now

Highland

Park Girl Scout Commissioner, Miss
Helen Boyce, and the mothers of the
following girls were guests:
Bar-

P.

as chairman of the Power Cables ses-sion of the Midwest
Power conference,
held
at the
Palmer
House,
March 31, April 1 and 2.

Kinds

Tel. 5587

Jan-

�Lawrence
John

Steenberg,

Tresch,

Susan

Martha

Strauss,

Walker,

Russell

Whitman, and Denny Zeitlin.
The second of the presentations,
“Mexican
Moment,”
a
musicaldramatic fantasy
written
by Miss
Phelps,

included

seventh-eighth
Winona

the

following

sixth-

glee

girls:

grade

Bell,

club

Jeanne

Watkins, Alice Witte,
Marlyn Wilson, Helen

Cederborg,

Ann

Ann Bennett,
Barnes, Joan

Curtis,

Nancy

Nancy
Smalley,
Frances
Geraldine Wilkinson, June
Margaret
Mary Lou

mann,

Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Jr.

MANY HILARIOUS SKITS WERE PRESENTED at the 1890’s
Ravinia Revue sponsored by the Ravinia Woman’s club March 21.
Here Henry Austin is seen conducting a nostalgic chorus in one of the
acts.
Front row: Carl Howard, Lester Ball, Herbert A. Carlson, B. K.
Perrault, James A. C. Kelly and Gordon Parks.
Back row: Mrs. A. C. Heimerdinger, Mrs. H. A. Carlson, Mrs. E. F.
Kapalka, Mrs. Gordon Parks, Joseph Bulmer, Mrs. Alain St. Cyr, Mrs.
E. B. Elmore and Mrs. George Straub.

Braeside and Lincoln
Assemblies Are Held
At Lincoln Schoo!

gene

Two
Latin-American
assemblies,
one a presentation of the third and

Hardacre,
Peter
Kidd,
Paul
Klein,
Nancy
Looney,
Nancy
McKinney,
Marcia Stenberg, Janice Tupper, and
Carol Walker; third grade, Tommy

rell,

seventh-eighth grades girls’ glee club
of Lincoln school, were given on Friday

afternoon,

school

March

28,

auditorium,

tion of Misses
June Kline, of

at

the

under

Lin-

direc-

Myrtle Behrens
Braeside school,

and
and

Miss Anne C. Phelps, music director
of Braeside and Lincoln schools.
The first of the presentations by
the
third
and
seventh
grades
of
Braeside

school,

was

cial studies-music
American dances
polated

by

assisted
Katherine

by

the

the
Boss

a correlated

project, the
and games

third

grade
Mrs.

Gene

Douglis,

Jeannie

Raymond

Snite,

Siensa,

N.

FrieGrif-

Robert
Jeannie
HeimNancy
Susan

Lynn

Edward

Bruce Moulton, Bruce Mudge, Patricia Murphy, Gwendolyn Olson, Eu-

FIRST-RATE
fruit

cocktail
Ns Muliy/,

y\\
N Tb

FIRST

DeLuxe
454 Waukegan

Cleaners
Ave.

Highwood

Now
is
new
roof

materials
roofers.

the time
made
of

laid

by

Cement

FREE

to have
a
the finest

Next

Day

Delivery
on most catalog merchandise
listed in our Catalogs. If you
place your order before 12
noon, your purchases (except
heavy items and a few other
things) will be delivered direct to your home the following day.

topped

with

this

W 4
4

oe

1 tbsp.

of
gelatin on top
of ts cup of cold

DONUT

DELIGHT

Dollars to donuts, your family will
love this dessert made with tender,
oven-fresh
JANE
PARKER
DONUTS from the A&amp;P. Split
donuts and place vanilla or butterscotch pudding between the layers.
Top with more pudding, and—as
a@ special Easter touch — garnish
with
3 or 4 colored Jordan almonds
or candy Easter eggs.

TO

GOOD

PHONE or
STOP IN!

COFFEE

Ever noticed how quickly apples |
turn brown when they’re cut? It’s |
a sign the air is robbing them of ;
freshness. That happens to coffee,
too, when the bean is broken by |
grinding, so take a tip from me
and buy your coffee in the whole
bean and have it Custom Ground
to fit your coffeepot! That’s how
A&amp;P COFFEE is sold, and believe
me,

it’s

grand!

Get

mild,

which is a direct no-toll line to our
if
Highland
Park
Catalog
Office.
you live in Highwood,
Ft. Sheridan,
Ravinia or Highland Park, call Highland
Park 4800.

Jf

probably is at yours.
at my A&amp;P, so the
good things to eat.
money goes farther.
and choose from the

CLUE

4700

GIVEN

Phone DEERFIELD 486

Northbrook
Techny
Lake Bluff
Mundelein
Prairie View

Call Enterprise

experienced

Roofing Co.

LIVE IN

Deerfield
Northfield
Lake Forest
Libertyville
Rondout

work.

ESTIMATES

Deerfield

COURSE

water. Add to
* sugar syrup, stir
till dissolved; add
e
3 tbsps. of lemon
juice, 4 cup of orange juice, 1 pt.
of A&amp;P GRAPE JUICE and %
tsp. of salt. Freeze. For the rich
flavor of fresh
grapes, be sure to
use A&amp;P GRAPE JUICE!
ME,

art

@ EXPERT ROOFING
@ BRICK VENEER

Snite,

sherbet: Boil %4 cup of sugar and
1% cups of hot water 10 minutes.

Putas che,

Apitz,

OFFICE

NOW...

IF YOU

Stackler,

The last word in first courses...

@QFEATURES

direction of Mrs. Alfred
director of the schools.

Easter is a big day at my house, just as it
A few days beforehand, I start shopping
family can enjoy all Easter’s special
Because A&amp;P’s prices are modest, my food
And A&amp;P’s big variety means I can pick
best of everything available.

'¢
'

man, James Goldsmith, James Grace,
Maxine
Joseph,
Etienne
Ledbetter,

Boy!
Right in front of
DeLuxe Cleaners”
' Pick Up and Delivery Service
Phone Highland Park 455

Hadley,

e222
4 LS

Zeitlin.

“Oh

Jessie

MARKETING

Mrs.

A violin solo was played by Joan
Graham.
The
following
Braeside
children
participated: seventh grade, Charles
Elbert, Ann Ferguson, Mary Fried-

Eisen-

McDonnell,

Latininterof

John

Rich, Judith Schrim, Bettina SchwimMichael

Floyd,

Elsie Hocking, Mary Jardine, Catherine Lencioni, Elizabeth Lewis, Anne
Morrissey, Frederica Skidmore, Janis
Wesling,
Rita Witte, Ellen Chaplin.
The
art work
for both programs
was handled by art students in Braeside and Lincoln schools, under the

Philip

fith,
Judy
Heimerdinger,
Hoffman,
Nancy
Holland,
McDonnell, Susan Rich, Judith
erdinger,
Robert
Hoffman,

mer,

Joan
Bevins,
Marjorie Ekel-

Coralee

drath, Robert Fathauer, Margo
del, Marcia Goodman, Virginia

Holland,

Patricia

Tomblin,
Anderson,

CATALOG

Tuerk,

Hadlock,

children,

instruction
and

so-

Goodhart,

Willard

Aronson,

Ryan. Fred

Anthony,
DellaValle,

Epil |

Grant Clark,
Philip
Douglis, Sondra Far-

Lorraine

Griffith,

seventh
grades
of Braeside
school,
the other, a presentation of the sixth-

coln

Ross, Vaughn

Diane
Brown,
Denton, Philip

Della-

Joanne Holden, Susan Lencioni,
Lou
Owen,
Deborah
Ross,

Gomer

Mei

Donaldson,

Nancy. Lewis, Barbara Norden, Mary
Jo Perreault, Meta Schwartz, Diane
Singer,
Suzanne
Stunkel,
Judith

Valle,
Mary

th

at our Highland Park Catalog Office for a library copy
of our General Catalog...
for you to enjoy for two
weeks without charge or obligation.

Get

your

you, too, can

copy

today

shop

the mod-

so

ern way.

mellow

EIGHT O’CLOCK; rich, fullbodied RED CIRCLE, or vigorous,
winey BOKAR at the A&amp;P,
EASTER

EATING

To please every Easter feaster,
do your holiday marketing at the
A&amp;P. I'll eat my new Easter bonnet if you don’t agree that it’s a
swell spot toshop!
For everything in S
A&amp;P’s big stock
has been carefully
selected and attractively
priced.
A poe
aster
and the
best dishes of the season
to you!

Telephone

No. H. P. 4800

28 N. First Street

—

�Sy

tere

Deerfield Activities

Mrs. Herbert Brinckman and three
year old daughter, Karen Lee, of Mil-.
waukee ‘are staying at the Herbert
_Kloepfer home on Waukegan
road,
while Mrs. Brinckman’s sister, Mrs.
a Kioepfer, is in the Highland Park hos- law, Harold Huhn. Mr. Jenkins
‘his daughter, Mrs. Harold Huhn,
pital:
Tucson yesterday, en route home.

asrestestestesteatestectestestestestestestestecteatectaste
Metastases
Pa VaQa star,
MM PU EMV
HOY
AVN
NNN
NTA
AN AN ANNALS

A
dinner at the C. F. Meintzer home
on Walnut street Monday evening was
in celebration of the 21st birthday an__niversary of their son, Gail F. Meintzer.
_ His fiancee, Miss Neva E. Jewell of
_ Spanish Town, Elgin, was an out of
_ town guest.
John. Huhn of West Deerfield road,
and
his son, Andrew, of Racine, returned
last
Monday
from
Tucson,
. Ariz., where they had been called because
of the serious illness of his
younger
son, Harold.
Returning
to
Deerfield with them were the three
grandchildren. Priscilla is staying at
the home of her uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Huhn and the two
boys, Dickie and Donnie, are with
their grandfather and Aunt Lotise
at 1111 Deerfield road. All three children

have

enrolled

- Grammar

in

the

Deerfield

school.

Edgar Jenkins of Highland Park
went out to Tucson two weeks ago but
arrived after the death of his son-in-

Phone
Res.

Phone,

Deerfield

RELIABLE
708

Waukegan

|

Park

Ariz.

Mrs.

Hoffmann)
now

are

Grimes

704

816

Ill.

two

little

new

their

sons
in

home

Rd.—Deerfield

Deerfield

Open
Saturdays

The 500-luncheon club met yesterday
in Libertyville at the home of Mrs.
Albert Hagi.

BEAUTY

SALON

Mr.

Mr.

Dorothy,

Gillen,

Weve

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling
and
Shaping
Free Consultation

90

Bowling
and Sundays

762

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

GOODS

Waukegan

623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Julia
and daughter,
Frank
Mr.
Wavers
Expert Permanent
—
Wave
Circlette
our
Try
that is sprayed into your hair.

MAGAZINES
Service

NEWSPAPERS
‘Home Delivery

BOOKS
(PENGUIN-DELL)
SOFT DRINKS

CIGARETTES

CIGARS

175

Deerfield

Rd.

Waukegan

&amp;

SELIG

Established 1925
REALTORS
Real Estate—Loans
164 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Ill.
Harold R. Vant
Edward H. Selig
Tel. Deerfield 155

SHOP

LUCIUS ERSKINE
REALTOR

-

|

FROST’S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

95

W. R. MITCHELL

Tel.

ESTATE AND
INSURANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Ill.
Deerfield

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP
808

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We
repair all makes of ‘appliances

Deerfield

Waukegan

3,

Deerfield

Road

562—Eric

Deerfield

Banfield,

ERIC'S: DX

SERVICE
29

- Tel.

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DIRECTORY

BUSINESS

GIFTS

Available

AGENCY

NEWS

DEERFIELD

&amp; Company

Road,

won

road,

BEAUTY

BOX
SHOP

POWDER

758

Accounts

and

Brierhill

of

Petersons

first division honors with her: flute, at
the district contest held Saturday at
Highland Park High school. She is now
eligible for the state contests to be held
May 9 and 10 in LaSalle. Patty is a
junior.

POCKET
884

their

Miss Patty Peterson, daughter of the
Karl

Mr. and Mrs. William Aitken have
returned from a two months’ stay at

GILLWEVE

to

Easter guests at the Matthias Hoffmann home will be Mr. and Mrs. Rob:
ert Meyer (Elizabeth Hoffmann) and
son, Bobby, and Miss Dorothy Hoffmann, all from’ Chicago. Mr. Hoffmann, who has been in Presbyterian
hospital, Chicago, for several weeks is
expected home soon.

Easter guests at the W. P. Carroll
Jr. home on Spruce street will be his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William P.
Carroll of Chicago.

Miss

Fla.,

The Trevlyn Pottengers are moving
to Northbrook this week. They have
been living with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Pottenger of Elm street
for several years.

VANT

_ 760

Always

while

Road
806

GEORGIAN

Tel.

REAL

their
in

Waukegan

Tel.

MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers
641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.
Telephone Deerfield 33

DRY

and

settled

EH SENSED,zt

Apparel

invite Charge

THE

mother

at home

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Tennis (Frances |

5869

Deerfield,

635
Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield

Franklin

be

ISON

WALLDREN

Women’s

We

Wickenburg,

Schwartz,

will

ONSEN SAI SHISHA

Mrs. John Smith
was hostess to
members of her sewing club at luncheon
on Thursday at her home, 934 Sunset
court. Mrs. George Weil, also of Sunset
court, will entertain the group on April
10.

Mrs. Carl T. Anderson returned to
her Chestnut street home on Sunday
from a week’s trip through Illinois
and Missouri. Bad weather prevented
a lengthier trip. She was accompanied
by Mrs. Howard Bell of Chicago.

J. G W. POKORNY
MILDRED

near

Charles

of Mrs. Brown,
they are away.

GARAGE

Road,

ranch

ONAN

ee

Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Brown of
Brierhill road are leaving today by
train for a month’s vacation at the
Vista

SAISON

Honored
at dinner
on Saturday
evening at the John Derby home
were
Dr.
Dorothy
Sugden
Davis,
Kenneth Hunter, and his-sister, Miss
Doris Hunter.’ -

Who
will
be
chosen
Deerfield’s
“King and Queen for a Day” and
where will the event take place?

Monte

HAHA

Magnolia Inn, Ozona,
home in Bannockburn.

Murray, Ky. Acquired with the household furnishings, etc. were 17 hens
and the young lads have been having
great fun bringing in an average of
12 eggs a day, from their new pets.

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Varner, former
Deerfield and Highland Park residents,
are now living in Tucson, Ariz. Mr.
Varner is building houses in that city.

Deerfield Bowling Academy

250

Highland

and
left

Thursday, April 3, 1947 —

CAKES
122

Prop.

Mercer
Lumber

STATION

Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

Waukegan
Deerfield

DR. G. C. PARKNEN,

- PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Lumber

KNAAK’S

Companies

- Building Materials
612 Railroad Ave.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

-

O.D.

OPTOMETRIST
&amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary, Terrace
Phone
674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Road

Coal

THEO

PHARMACY

J. KNAAK,
Est.

Phone

R. Ph.

1884

:

1

i.

Deerfield,

quien

DR. R. D. MOORE

M. A. FRANTZ
Sanitary and
Heating
Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR
BETTER
HOMES
758

Deerfield

Road

Tel.

WISCONSIN
SAUSAGE

OPTOMETRIST

419

813

Eyes Examined —
Waukegan Rd.

Glasses Fitted
Deerfield

Telephone
880

Deerfield

and

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.

CHEESE AND
MARKET
Deertield

Glass
- Varnish
- Glassware
~Houseware
- Cutlery - Sporting

577

Waukegan

756

Roads

Waukegan

Road

Deerfield,

Telephorte

VANT &amp; SELIG
EST. 1925
INSURANCE
764

in
all its branches
Waukegan
Road - Deerfield

Tel.

Deerfield

155

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

DEERFIELD
Inc.

1885

Office and
Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

TAXI

SERVICE

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD
Day and Night Service
Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers

Drfld.

&amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield
af.

\

81

ROYAL
722

BLUE

Deerfield
“Best

Tl.

295

STORE

Road—Tel.

Quality

f

Tools
Goods

Always”

767
~

GROCERIES — MEATS |
FRESH FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES

�|

Our Weekly Story of
HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL

Operations
X-ray

ea

performed

eee

eA

Ee

ones

examinations

Laboratory

cee

ee

we

eer
Ee

eas
wes

e er wereee

eee

ee

te woes

examinations

Miss Mona Johnson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Johnson,
Highland Park, and Jack Marquette,
son

of

Mrs.

Martha

Marquette,

Hol-

lywood, Cal., were united in marriage
on Saturday, March 29, at the Little
Church of the West, Las Vegas, Nevada.

For her
wedding,
Miss
Johnson
wore a pink wool suit with black accessories and a corsage of gardenias
and rose buds.
- Mrs. Warren Fairbanks, sister of
the groom,

Warren
The

was

matron

Fairbanks
Rev.

A.

E.

was

of

honor

best

Melton,

and

man.
pastor

of

the Congregational
church in Las
Vegas performed the ceremony.
Forest.
_
The bride attended
Lake
college and the University of New
Mexico. The groom is affiliated with
Technicolor Motion Picture corporation, and served in the army air corps
- during the recent war. The couple
will be at home at 6853 Alta Loma
terrace,

Hollywood.

Marconi MAS

A meeting of all managers and captains of independent 12” indoor ball
teams which expect to participate in
“indoor” this year at Sunset park

April

center.

10,

of

the

scheduled

at 8 p.m.

at

night

for
the

‘

Mrs.

Vir-

son

of

Mr.

and

of 104 High

Or

557
540
531
528
519
514

lighting

FOR

F..H.

i

369 Central Ave.
Next
Salome

Robert

to Alcyon

Brand

J.

Theatre

Roeber

PHONE

Roeber

256

4

~*~

w

Mrs.

- We
To

Have All New
Equipment

Do

Back

Your

Hoe

Work

for Trenching

Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel
for
ments

Trucks

for

Maxim

Right

Top

Base-

Soil

or

,

Fill

We

Build

Lawns

Driveways
TRY US OUT

and

All Phones

3785

present
wire.

Current Report.

H. P. 5102
Deerfield 416
Then too, Natural Gas will
be cheaper
for
Automatic
Water heating customers . .
and NATURAL
GAS WILL
SOON BE HERE . . Better
order your new water heater
now ... at your plumber’s,
dealer’s, or from our store.

IT’S SPRING
SPRAY TIME
for

TREES &amp; SHRUBS

Better
Your
Natural Gas!

require,

Highland

Park

535

Newcastle

Living

With

North Shore Gad Co.

HOYT TREE EXPERT CO.

community

ye

ee

May we figure with you on Spraying, Feeding,
Trimming, Removing or other tree services you.
may

§
§

_

Modern
Gas
Automatic
Water heaters are two to Mf
three times as fast as competing
heaters.
In
other ©
words, a 40-gallon Gas water
heater will do the work of
some
other heaters which
are more than twice as large. ©

Terms

S. First St.

Business as a career is the
top choice of more than 5600
former GI’s now enrolled at
North
western University.
Thirty per cent chose business as a life work. The university’s survey also showed
the following choices: engineering and physical science,
22 per cent; law, 11 per cent;
medicine, 11 per cent; teaching, 10 per cent; journalism,
5 per cent; dentistry, 5 per.
cent;
miscellaneous,
6 per
cent.—Illinois
Chamber
of

Commerce

ESTIMATE

A.

_ Never question your wife’s
judgement.
Look whom she
married.

Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood

H. N. GAMLIN
150

Frames

Photo-Copies

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE

if you prefer we will rewire your
screens with bronze or galvanized
CALL

Portraits
Picture

street.

If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combination screen and storm sash.

Al Danakas and Mel Mullins
season.

and

Thursday,

will be in charge of the meeting and
will lead discussion of plans for the

coming
Hades
ES

Walecka

137 N. Second,

«Indoor Ball Team Officials to
Meet at Community Center

use

Mr.

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI

All ORT members and guests are
invited to attend this very interesting
afternoon.

is

Walecka,

Victor

z::
80
38
40
42
42
43
44
51

Ns DE DOID Se Wg sidsashivdindilp
2 2 ote
P. Palmet
To CBSE Fie
ee cS
re CN SL Fh Ik
SU 6 UE
a
cate Ss
ee
IN
Wires ROARED Ds
At
Ma PONG
ices;
J. Laudurini .
A. Giambi

adoptee.

make

Ww.
54

of

HOW ARE YOUR SCREENS?

On Wednesday, April 9, the North
Shore chapter of the Women’s American ORT will give a Passover tea
at North Shore Congregation Israel,
Glencoe, at 1:30 p.m.
The guest speaker will be Dr. Irene
M. Josselyn, noted psychiatrist. Dr.
Josselyn, a member of the Chicago
Psychiatric Psychoanalytical society,
has her M.A. degree in psychiatric
social work.
She gives private conferences to children and adults and
does consultation work
for several
social agencies, including the Jewish
Children’s
Bureau
and the United
Charities. Dr. Josselyn is also a member of the
Highland
Park
school
board.
She will discuss “The Child Today
—the Adult Tomorrow.”
As a guardian, members will be
anxious to see the latest Guardianship film, “Saving
a Generation,”
which depicts the life of the Euro-

and

Jerry

Bowling Scores

Morrell: Trucking 250 cic
xn ck:.
Pasquesi
Bros.
Silver Dollar ......
Highwood Radio .
Somenzi &amp; Son ..
Club
Lorraine
M &amp; C Motors
Highwood
Grocery

Planned by ORT

. facilities,

daughter

gil Lenzini of 313 Oak Terrace avenue; Miss Bernardine Booth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Booth of
104 High street; Aldo Crovetti, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Aldo Crovetti; Jerry
Darby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
V. Darby, 1223 Llewellyn avenue; and

The Highland Park Lions club will
meet at Sunset Valley club this noon
at 12:15 for a regular busimess session. New members also are to be
initiated today. The board of directors met Monday
evening at the
home of James Duncan in Northbrook.

Passover Tea ls

pean

zini,

Lions Meet Today

Johnson-Marquette
Vows Exchanged in
Las Vegas Church

STUDIO

Five Highwood students at Highland Park High school have been
awarded National Honor society pins
for excellent grades.
The students are Miss Norma Len-

This Yea
219
«.124
232
1,060
3,489

Pon PE

Emergencies attended
Babies delivered eye

Week
16
16
20
86
308

B RAND’S

Receive National
Honor Society Pins

Report for Week March 22 to March 28 Inclusive
Last
MSPS
Fe cs
fas Rok Ghee.
epee tes areas
weheg iiasuhe Ee ae
spite HERE a slg

Highwood Students

“The Friendly People”

4140

T. P. “Tom” CLARK
Div. Mgr.

�Page 40
_ Miss

_ Thursday,

Emma

Listed

Burris to Be

First

WSCS Speaker April 11
Miss Emma
Burris, director of a
children’s institution in Chicago, will
be guest speaker at a meeting of the
Woman’s Society of Christian Service

be

of

Wesley

held

ning,

at

April

Methodist

the
11,

church
at

church,

Friday

to

eve-

Honor

Roll

Ernest Bischoff, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest F. Bischoff of 519 Midlothian
avenue,
and
Adolph
Baracani, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Adolph
Baracani, 238 High street, Highwood,
appear on the lower honor roll for

the first semester of the 1946-47 academic year at Lake Forest college.
Both

8 o’clock.

on L.F. College
Term

are

sophomores.

Post Office Will

Extend City Delivery

Ray Suzzi, service officer of Highwood American Legion Post 501, will
again be on hand at the Highwood
city hall Thursday and Friday evenings from 8:30 until 9 o’clock to as-

of the Northwest section of Highland
Park,
the post office is starting a
new
truck
route this week,
which
will go out Berkeley road, take in

sist

some

veterans

with

their

In anticipation

applications

for the Illinois bonus. Inquiries
be made by calling H.P. 4279.

There

Is No

Committee

Write

may

and

At

Selected

Senior Day
a meeting

Loan Commission

HIGHLAND PARK BUILDING LOAN
AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION

voted

upon

BROS.

CLEANERS
CARPETING CLEANED
@

Rugs

@ Carpets
@

Furniture

“The

H.P.

Time to Buy
Is Before They Fly”

676

APRIL

With Scotts Lawn Care
Products
SCOTTS LAWN SEED
1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. - $6.25

» $12.35

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER
25 Ibs. - 2.25 50 Ibs. - $3.75 100 Ibs. - $6.50
SCOTTS WEED CONTROL
$1.25 and $3.85

Colonial Garden Shop
EXTERIOR

DECORATORS

60 Green Bay Road
Winnetka 132

in

will

undoubtedly

next

few

the

R.

land

CLAIM

made

this week

WIBLE,

CLAIM

Park,

and

Norm

Durment,

son

DAY

Miss Zagnoli Will
Of

Harlow

Russ

Be Bride

This

Month

Mr.
and
Mrs. Cesare
Zagnoli
of
Highwood
recently
announced
thé
engagement and coming marriage of

their daughter, Miss Nida Zagnoli,
to Harlow W. Russ.
Mr. Russ is a native of New York

President.

state

and

years
bomb
in Los
The
time
home

been connected with the atomic
project as scientific engineer
Alamos, N.M.
couple plan to marry someduring April and make
their
in Albuquerque, N.M.
2

has

for

the

past

several

Fruit Filling in

This Sandwich
Thin slices of brown bread with a
generous
spreading of “Apricot
Cheese Sandwich Filling” make tasty
fare to tuck in a school lunch box.
The

dried

apricots

keep

them

deli-

ciously moist until lunchtime.
Apricot Cheese Sandwich Filling
¥% cup dried apricots
1 cup

water

2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 (3-ounce) package cream cheese
Salt

DAY

NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
to
all
persons
that the first Monday
of. May,
1947, is the claim date in the estate of
JAMES
VITI
(also
known
as
Vincenzo
Viti),
Deceased,
pending
in the
Probate
Court of Lake County, Illinois, and that
claims
may
be
filed
against
the
said
estate on or before said date without issuance of summons.
All claims filed against
said estate on or before said date and not
contested, will be adjudicated on the first
Tuesday
after the
first Monday
of the
next succeeding month at 10 a.m.
GAETANO
VITI, Executor.
Paul C. Behanna, Attorney.
First National Bank Building,
Highland Park, Illinois,
Highland Park 4804.
(Mar. 20-27-Apr 3

AIR

was

of the late Mr. and Mrs. Otto Durment of Highland Park. The couple
will be united in marriage before the
altar
of
Immaculate
Conception
church on Saturday, May 17.

BALL, Secretary.
(Mar. 27-Apr. 8)

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

be

years.

of the coming marriage of Miss Mary
Helen Schwalbach, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George Schwalbach, High-

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that on
Saturday, the Twelfth day of April, 1947,
an election will be held at the Lincoln and
Ravinia schools in School District No. 108,
County of Lake and State of Illinois, for
the purpose of electing
ONE PRESIDENT and
Two Members
of the Board of Education
For the Full Term—President—One
Year
Member—tThree Years
Member—tThree Years
The
Polls
will
be
opened
at Twelve
o’clock Noon, and close at Seven o’clock
p.m., of the same day.
By order of the Board of Education of
said
District.
Dated
this
llth
day
of

B.

North

Mary Schwalbach to
Be Married May 17

NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
to
all
persons
that the first Monday
of May,
1947, is the claim date in the estate of
JOHN A. BLOMDAHL,
Deceased, pending
in the
Probate
Court
of Lake County,
Illinois,
and
that
claims
may
be
filed
against the said estate on or before said
date without
issuance
of summons.
All
claims filed against said estate on or before
said date and not contested, will be adjudicated on the first Tuesday after the first
monday of the next succeeding month at
0 a.m.
ANNIE S. BLOMDAHL,
Executor,
(Mar. 27-Apr. 3-10)
Marvin Wallach, Attorney,
Highland
Park. Til.

LESTER

on

board.

15

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

Berkeley

north

Residents along this line of travel
may
secure
more
information
by
phoning or calling at the post office.

was
and

In City Election

R.

WEED

homes

erected

VOTE

(Signed)

SEED,

then

covers
a large undeveloped
of
Highland
Park
where

many

ELECTION NOTICE
For Board of Education

MOTHPROOFING

FEED,

the

Park;

Announcement

NO DANGER
OF SHRINKAGE.
BANISH THE
|
INCONVENIENCE

Phone

by

of the streets between
West

This
section

execu-

enberg.

TEL, H. P..361

ROAD

RETTIG

senior

The students selected were: Laurel
Rosenthal, Phyllis Weed, Jim Friedman, Gail Whitehead, and Hank Ar-

Charge

21 N. SHERIDAN

To

Script

of the

of rapid building up

Ridge to its intersection with Prairie
avenue, State Route 22, and back on
Prairie to include most of the Bartlett and Krenn &amp; Dato subdivisions
now served northwest of Highwood.

tive board a committee of five students was picked to write the script
for the senior day assembly at High-

then

low-cost financing plan!

|

Offers Bonus Aid

land Park High school.
A list
of
recommendations
made by the English teachers

Let us help you with our

3, 1947

Highwood Post 501

%

OANS
HOME
COSI) AMR UR LMA AAs

April

Tabasco sauce
Rinse apricots, drain,

and

slice. Add

water and boil about 10 minutes or
until water is absorbed; add sugar
and

beat

apricots

to

a

pulp.

FILTERS

ELVIRA
HEALTH
SALON

1” and 2” — All Sizes
Murphy and Miller, Inc.

304 Railway Ave., Highwood
Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

Phone Winnetka 4166
932 Linden Ave., Winnetka
i
patie
Ce

Cool.

Cream the cheese with apricot sauce,
add a few grains of salt and 4 or 5
drops Tabasco
sauce.
Blend
thoroughly.
Spread
between
buttered
slices of bread.
Approximately 1% cups fillings.

MANS

Skee

rh

Rte

yt

�Page 41°

VOTE

Long IIness Ends
Gleanings

From

Life of Harold Huhn

the Press of

Nearby Country Towns
“Hook and Ladder Wagon is Tired Old Lady, at 34,” reads a headline
from a Highland Park contemporary, and then disposes of the ancient vehicle with news of its proposed successor. But what we started out to say
is, why are old fire trucks, ships at sea and even countries of the world
when referred to in everyday parlance “her”, “she” or “lady”,—why even
a great percentage of bombers, fighters and pursuit planes during the war
were named for the gals. Did you ever hear of any worthwhile project, activity,

service

or

community

which

is alluded

times “it” sneaks in but rarely does home
cept when “he” is overdrawn at the bank.

to

sapiens

as

“he”

or

masculus

“him”?

Some-

get mention

ex-

Comes Hinsdale with this commentary, “Some people admit frankly that
they made their friends, but they can’t understand where their enemies
came from.” The man who has an answer to that will do much better than
the person who builds a better mouse-trap, assuming the latter has been
accomplished. The above observations included in a report of “Twenty-five
Years Ago” also stated that approximately one-third of the local high school
students then had either savings accounts or Christmas savings funds in
banks. A fine sense of saving, those two means of so doing are still functioning with kids in school.

school

he

was

matic,

chronic

and

contagious

diseases

are

in the

ambitious

plans

drawn

prominent

Memorial

in

services

Highland

Park

Pictures

to

be

a later

Pick

in

Your

Up and

Delivery

Husenetter &amp; Cronkhite
365

Roger

Ravinia,

Williams

II.

Ave.

H.

P. 609

FOR

LOCAL
DELIVERIES

held

date.

PROMPT
SERVICE
Phone
Highland

Home

Park

570

-

National Delivery
Service

H. P. 4470

Deerfield

15

RADIO SERVICE

Photographer

Taken
TEL.

are

at

APRIL

in

athletics.
Before going to Tucson,
Huhn was employed by HawthorneMellody dairy and Bowman dairy.
Surviving are his widow, Frances,
the former Frances Jenkins; three
children, Priscilla 10, Donald 8, and
Richard 7; his father, John P. Huhn
of Deerfield, and a brother, Andrew
of Racine, Wis.

KILCOYNE,
The proposed $5,000,000 expansion of Evanston hospital should prove a
boon to the whole north suburban area the institution now serves. Modern,
fireproof structures to replace some of the present older buildings, additional beds for general cases and the addition of facilities to care for tuberculosis, arthritis, poliomyelitis, eye, ear, nose, throat, psychiatric, psychoso-

In City Election

Private funeral services were held
Saturday, March 29, at Tucson, Ariz.,
for Harold Edward Hthn, formerly
of Highland Park and Deerfield.
Mr. Huhn died Thursday, March
27, in Tucson following a long illness.
He was born in Deerfield and graduated from Deerfield grammar school
and Highland Park High school.
In

high

:

678

212 Railway Ave.

Highwood

§

for

which more than half a million dollars has already been raised.
We have not only approached but passed the yawning stage on the
topic but add the following as a sort of postscript in the hope that it will
end possible future blurbs on the subject: “Western Electric sleuths recently solved the post-war mystery of how this Kilroy person was able to
be almost omnipresent in inscription of his moniker on walls, doors, statues, fences and whatnot throughout the world.
It’s simple say the detectives, they all work

in the Hawthorne

more, 15 other Kilroys have been
addition to the present four.”

plant of the company

employeg@

there over

in Cicero.

Paving
DRIVEWAYS
Now

is the time

What’s

the past 30 years

—

PARKING AREAS

to get an estimate.
Don’t
the rush season is here.

Asphalt

and

Macadam

Paving —

woodpeckers,

with

starlings,

blue

jays,

juncos,

chickadees,

HERE

Ave.,

Des

Plaines

COMES

A

and

One injured wood thrush which had fallen behind its flock
given a warm winter home at Trailside museum in River

modulation

police departments
range of the radio

transmitter

for squad
spectrum.

is similar

to that

used

The memorial poppy of the American
Legion Auxiliary is a crepe paper replica of the wild poppy which grew on
the World War I and II battlefields in
France and Belgium. All American Legion Auxiliary poppies are made by
disabled war veterans.

RUGS

MORAN

-

FURNITURE
- CARPETING
CLEANED
LIFE-TIME MOTHPROOFING

TA? Glansee “Ave:

many

Treatment

Phone

Des

Plaines

1165

Scott Lawn!

suburban

car contact but operates on a much higher
In one instance a customer called for a cab

which arrived before he could get his overcoat on.

JOHN

by

Surface

You
can own
a beautiful
Scott lawn this easy way:
Banish dandelions, buckhorn
and
the like with
Scotts
Weed control. Restore grass
sparkle
and
health
with
Turf Builder.
Fill, in bare
spots
with
vigorous
new
grass from Scotts Lawn Seed.

There has been something new added to the La Grange taxicab scene
the installation in several cabs of a two-way radio system. The new

frequency

|

nuthatches

23

SKOKIE VALLEY ASPHALT CO., Inc.
1228 Harding

Could be that Elmhurst is changing the habits of some birds which in
years gone by took off in a flurry for the South at the first touch of autumn in the air. Garden club members in the suburb have developed a number of feeding stations for the feathery friends and the latter like the idea
so well apparently they tore up their round-trip transportation South. Regular boarders through the winter have been cardinals, downy woodpeckers,
brown creepers.
was caught and
Forest.

until

in

First inspired and now led by suburban talent, the Youth Orchestra of
Greater Chicago is gradually shaping up and making selection
of the 100
instrumentalists who will comprise its membership.
They will be drawn
from the most competent players in public, parochial and private high schools
in the Chicago area. A group of public spirited citizens is sponsoring the
venture that the best among young musicians
may meet and play together
in concert the finest symphonic scores. Four concerts yearly will be given
in downtown Chicago with the first to be announced soon.

hairy

wait

Tel. H. ®.. 1187

That’s service, brother.

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED
No Experience
To

fabricate

equipment
required
construction.
@

electrical

in

home

Drilling
e
Tapping
@
Assembly Operations
Phone Northbrook 715

THE

M.

Shermer Rd.

B. AUSTIN

for

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—Complete food for hungry grass.
25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft.
50 Ibs.
$3.75 feeds
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds 10,000 sq. ft.
5,000 sq. ft.

Necessary

essential

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For full sun or light shade.
25 Ibs. - $29.85.
Scotts
1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. - $6.25
Dense Shade, same prices.

CO.

Northbrook

SCOTT SPREADERS—Handy precision machines for quick
seeding and feeding. 25 Ib. capacity - $7.85.
50 Ib., rubber
tires, $14.85.
SCOTTS

to grass.

WEED

CONTROL—Quick

$1.25 and $3.85.

~ HUSENETTER
365 ee

Williams

and permanent.

No harm

HARDWARE
Tel. H. P. 4387

�LEGAL NOTICES —
~ Going aAWwoy ‘ne
Summer?

the

CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION
On
THURSDAY,
April
17th,
at -8:00
psm. in the Council Chamber,
City Hall,
the Civil Service Commission of the City
of Highland Park will hold an ora] examination to establish an eligible labor service
list for the City of Highland Park...
Thj
eligible list will last two years and assign
~ments
will
be
made
from
this
list
as
occasion
permits.
No
person.
shall
be
admitted to the examination who is not a
citizen of the. United States and who has
not been an actual resident of the City of
Highland
Fark
for at least. six months
preceding the date of examination.
Salary
depends on experience, type and quality of
work.
Application blanks may: be obtained
from Mr.’ V, C. Musser, City Clerk at the
City
Hall.
The
state
civil
service
law
requires a fee of one dollar to be paid at
the time of filing application.
All applications must be filed with the secretary
by 6 :00 p.m. Wednesday, April 16th.
H. G. PERTZ,
Secretary
Civil Service Commission
of Highland Park
704 Ridgewood Drive.
Apr. 8-10)-

Rent your: home to: responsible young couple. We will keep
your house in immaculate condition. Will take excellent. care
of lawn and grounds.
Only interested in summer
| rental.
Can furnish ) excellent.
_| references.
Contact Mr. Shorr,
| Moraine Hotel.
Highland Park
4444, Fri. thru Sun.

DOWNING’ § FLOOR
SHOP
373

Roger

Williams

Ave.

CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK
CIVIL. SERVICE EXAMINATION
On.
THURSDAY,
April
17th,
at
8:00
p.m. in the Council Chamber, ‘City Hall,
the: Civil Service Commission of the City
of Highland Park will hold an examination
to establish an eligible list for janitor in
the City Hall.
No person shall be admitted
to the examination
who is not a citizen
of the
United
States
and
who
has
not
been
an actual
resident
of the City
of
Highland
Park
for at least
six months
preceding the date of examination.
Physical ability and a general knowledge
of
janitor work will be considered.
Starting
salary’ $2,310.00 per year.
All applicants
must
pass
a medical
examination
by
a
medical examiner appointed by the Commission . after
taking
the
Civil
Service
Test before they are placed onthe eligible
list.
Application blanks may be obtained
from Mr. -V. C. Musser. City Clerk at the
City Hall
The State Cilvil Service law

Floors and
Floor Coverings
Linoleums, Asphalt and

Rubber Tile
Floor Sanding

and

Finishing

Tel. H, P. 566

ANOTHER NORTH SHORE OFFICE
To Serve You Better With
Roof Repairs — New Roofs
Siding and Home Insulation
Free

Inspection

QUICKLY

and

Estimates

FURNISHED

BECKER ROOFING CO.
2
J:

Noble,

Ph.,

Mgr.

WINNETKA 742; Night Ph., GREENLEAF 4585
‘SERVING THE NORTH SHORE FOR 40 YEARS
sicigeaenangetiaiipielocteeentnenibipbagartnntestigain

ns biphettipeibartianinmeereme™

LAKE GENEVA NAVAL CAMP sat
CONDUCTED
NORTHWESTERN

MILITARY

BY

AND

NAVAL

ACADEMY

e Boys 14 to 17 learn seamanship, boating. 75 miles from
Chicago. Cutters, sailboats, motorboats. Junior
‘(boys 11 to 13) — sailing, swimming, sports.

WRITE
104 SOUTH

SHORE

FOR

CATALOG
LAKE

DRIVE

Camp

GENEVA,

WISCONSIN

OTTO E. ZSCHAU
Now Ready to Serve You
.

I

offer

you

the advantages
experience on

of ‘thirty- five years
the North Shore.

of

on gardening ‘for clubs,

etc.

Call Me At Glencoe 346

Tempting Recipe

In Their Menus
If you.want plenty of variety in
your meat dishes from day to day,
then don’t forget the variety meats!
They..came to the rescue when. the
selection of meats was limited, and
many families discovered for the first
time how delicious they are.
The variety meats are “tops” in nutritional value. Most of them are very
economical. If you crave new ways
to serve them, here is one recipe
you'll want to try.
Heart Chop Suey
1 beef heart
% cup enriched flour
Salt and pepper to season
4 tablespoons lard or drippings
2 cups meat stock or water
1 cup diced celery
¥% cup sliced onion
¥% cup sliced mushrooms, if desired
2 tablespoons lard or drippings
2 tablespoons chop suey sauce
2 teaspoons bead molasses, if
desired
Clean arid trim heart; wash thor-

oughly in warm

water.

Cut in small

pieces and dredge in seasoned flour.
Brown in lard or drippings in heavy
frying-pan. Cover meat with’ stock
or water and simmer until tender,
about 1 hour. Add celery when meat
is nearly done; continue cooking until
celery is tender but not mushy. In the
meantime,

brown

mushrooms

ions in lard or drippings.
ingredients,

season,

with flour. Serve
Serves 4 to 6.

and

with

by

must

6:00

p.m.

be

filed

with

on-

steamed

the

rice.

be paid at
All appli-

secretary

Wednesday, April 16th.
H. G. PERTZ,
Secretary
Civil Service Commission
of Highland Park
704 Ridgewood Drive.

Apr. 8-10)

CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION
On
THURSDAY,
April
17th,
at
8:00
p.m. in the Council Chamber,
City Hall,
the Civil Service Commission of the City
of Highland Park will hold an examination
to
establish
an
eligible
list
for
Semiskilled employees in the Sewer and Water
Department.
No person shall be admitted
to the examination
who
is not a citizen
of the United States and who has not been
an actual resident of the City: of Highland
Park
for at least six months
preceding
the date of examination.
Physical ability,
a knowledge
of local government
and a
general
knowledge
of water
installations
and sewage disposal methods will be considered.
Salary
$2,400.00 per year.
All
applicants must pass a medical examination
by a medical examiner appointed by the
Commission after taking the Civil Service
Test before they are placed on the eligible
list.
Pn
blanks may be obtained
from
Mr.
C.
Musser,
City
Clerk
at
the
City Hell.
The
state Civil
Service
law requires a fee of two dollars to be paid
at the time of filing application.
All applications must be filed with the secretary:
by 6:00 p.m. Wednesday, April .16th.
H. G. PERTZ,
Secretary
Ciyil Service Commission
of Highland Park
704 Ridgewood. Drive.
Apr. 8-10)
,
»

Superfluous Hair Positively
Destroyed by Electrolysis
Multiple Needle Method which
is highly recommended by Physicians for safe and permanent
removal of unwanted hair. on
any part of the body, Can now

be done at any time convenient
to you

in your home.

For Free Consultation
call Waukegan, Ont.

or appointment
8829 after 5.

RUTH EVANS

to

The family will all hustle to ‘get
the table on time for the: first

course when this good-tasting “White
Bean Soup” is the starter, Ripé olives
make it big news, It-is particularly
appropriateto serve for luncheons and
suppers when you want pomething hot
and filling.
White Hoan Soup
Y% cup ripe olives
1 cup cooked white beans
1 cup tomato juice
3 cups

hot

water

2 bouillon

cubes

:

2 tablespoons chopped
2 tablespoons
-2 tablespoons

tomato

chopped onion
chopped green sweet

a

‘ef

pepper

1 tablespoon margarine
1 teaspoon salt
Pepper

to

taste

1 cup buttered, toasted bread

cubes

Slice olives from pits. Put beans
through food chopper using fine knife
or mash to pulp; add to combined
tomato juice and hot water. Add bouillon cubes and bring to a boil. Fry
tomatoe, Onion and green pepper in
margarine for about 2-minutes; add
with salt and pepper to bean mixture.
Add bread cubes and. cook 5 minutes
longer. Add ripe olives just before
serving.
Serves 6.

Wa

A

all

thicken liquid

requires a fee of two dollars to
the time of filing application.

cations

and

Combine

garden

‘Ts can. solve your garden problems:
Complete soil analysis to fit any plant or location. °
Advice: on fertilizers for best growing conditions.
‘Special counsel for lawn conditioning, growing grass
in shaded areas.
Proper maintenance of. treés, plants, bushes, etc.
Best results from grconneu® Cc Itures.
eed control
_Best methods of
sect and
Winter protection for garden flowers and bulbs.
Lectures

Don’t Skip This —

Use Variety Meats

970 LINDEN AVE.
HUBBARD WOODS
H.

|S oup ai Favorite? pia

\Nutrition-Wise Cooks

Meat Loaf Can Be
Varied With Special
Olive-Corn Stuffing
Here is a must for every menu
_
maker. A brand new version of the
ever popular meat loaf. “Olive Stuffed
Meat Loaf” has chewy ripe olives
and whole kernel corn in its layer
of savory dressing. Its good looks —
match. its exceptionally fine flavor. —
Olive Stuffed Meat Loaf
Stuffing:
1 cup coarsely chopped ripe olives &gt;ae
1 cup dry bread crumbs
34 cup drained whole kernel corn
1% teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
¥% teaspoon thyme
% teaspoon chili powder
2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine
Meat Loaf:
slices stale bread
cup

warm

pound
pound

water

ground beef
bulk pork sausage.

teaspoon

celery

teaspoon
teaspoon

Onion
salt

teaspoon
raw egg

pepper

salt

salt

Stuffing: Combine olives, crumbs,
corn
and
seasonings. Pour. butter
over mixture
and toss until well”
mixed.
Meat

Loaf:

Soak

bread

in Watek

and break with a fork. Combine with —
remaining ingredients ‘and ‘blend to-

gether thoroughly. Press» % of mixture.-on bottom and sides of lightly
greased loaf pan (about 6%4x914x2%
inches). Pile stuffing in center. Top
with remaining meat mixture. Bake &gt;

in a moderate
45 minutes.
Serves 6 to 8.

oven (350 degrees F)

ME
%

�Page43 — =

Girl Scout News
By Mrs. Lewis C. Stryker
Scouts!
Here’s
good
news
for
you girls who like
camping. Hickory
Hill will be open
this
year
for
Deerfield Girl
Scouts.
Camp
Hickory Hill is a
grand camp
and
is located near Edgerton, Wis. We
who have been there love it and know
that you girls will have a wonderful
time. It is again under the direction
of Miss Marion Hodgins. Camp periods will begin June 23 and there will
be either three or four two week
periods. The fee is $16.00 per week.
If you are interested in going to
camp please call Mrs. F. W. Nolde
for registration blanks. Let’s have a
good

representation

from

Kieser, Connie Miller, Jean Pantle,
Joan
Thomson, Lucinda
Thomson,
Lois Vines, Cynthia Hale, and Judy
Huber.
Troop 5—These girls make up troop

troop

assistant moved to LaGrange, it was
not possible to obtain troop news.
The names of the girls in troop II
will appear in a later issue of the
Review.
Troop 3—The girls of troop III will
soon be dramatizing a fairy tale for
the brownies of troop 9. The following girls comprise troop III: Maurita
Morgan, Patricia Murrie, Diana Jordan, Sally McChesney, Janet O’Connor, Ann O’Connor, Lucile Baxman,
Barbara
Morrison,
Betty
Heupel,
Jacqueline Russell, Virginia Ander-

Nancy Antes, Darlene Black, Marlene Easton, Beverly Johnson, Dona
Ludlow, Mary Ann Meyer, and Barbara Scott. The girls are working on
their Foot Traveler’s badge. Dona
Ludlow is in the lead, with Beverly
Johnson and Marlene Easton close
behind. Also, the. girls are learning
the Morse code, and learning to judge
weights by the feel of things.
Troop 6—At their next meeting,
the brownies of troop VI are going
to make brown felt head bands, with
their
initials sewed
on the band.
These girls are. troop VI brownies:

son,

Karen

Deerfield.

NY

was

Joyce

out

of

Cynthia

bert,

Laura

and

Marita

Harris,

her

Frank,

Virginia

Kiapschull,

py
END

town,

Johnson,

lows:

NORTH
WEEK

II

Anna Wynn Gannon, Eleanor Pope,
and Rosemary Black. Monday, March
3lst, Eleanor Pope. and Rosemary
Black will be invested into the troop.
Troop 4—The girls in troop IV have
just
about
finished
their
World
Knowledge badge. They are as fol-

Troop News
Troop 1—Girl Scout Troop I is a
senior
troop.
The
following
girls
make up the troop: Pat Cole, Loretta
Cole, Margaret Cole, “Bubbles” Page,

22-24

Katherine
Marshall,
Alice Arantz,
Helen Haut, Caroline Soefker, Jeanne
Diebert, Elaine Miller, Marcella Clingenteel, Sally Peet, Julia Evers, and
Carolyn Kerrihardt.
Troop 2—Because
the leader of

Hurl-

Virginia

V:

Eliza

Anderson,

Alexander,

Janet

Penny.

Antes,

Cannon,

Carolyn
Leverick,
Susan _ Silence,
Marilyn Visoky, Vicky Lee Waite,
Joanne
Willman,
Susan _ Baarsch,
Sandra
Baarsch,
Emilie
Wolter,
Carol Williams, June Swift, Linda
Nelson, Gail Haugland, Martha Belle
Oestreich.
Troop 8—The girls of troop 8 are
almost finished with
their
Dancer.

om
POS.
Ss PHONE H.B1676
57

FiRS7

PRICES—THURSDAY,

HAMBURGER

FRIDAY,

SATURDAY

ALL BEEF
FRESH GROUND

badge, and they have been turning
in many nice knitted -and crocheted
articles
in
connection
with
their
Needlecraft
badge.
The
following
girls are members: Sue Lane, Phyllis
George,
Marjorie
George, Dorothy
Nichols, Alice Du
Varney,
Sylvia
Ori,
Sally
Spriggs, Velma
Pagel,
Marilyn Hagie, Elizabeth Street, and
Mary Lloyd. Patty Mitchell had to
leave Troop 8 as her family moved
to LaGrange.
‘Troop 9—The following girls are
members of Brownie Troop 9: Laura
Banfield, Catherine O’Connor, Gladys
Dardenne,
Caryl . Segert,
Darlene
Lange, Joyce Ward, Patsy Rollman,
Burian McLaughlin, Suzanne Heupel,
Alvina Sticken, Sharon Spriggs, Barbara Allen, Marilyn Clifford, JacquelRoberta
ine Clifford,
Dolores
Ubl,
Nolde, Janet Vieregg, Kathryn Kies,
Ruth Sack, and Mary Gannon.

Deerfield Is Represented
At School Board Meeting

The Tris@eintry School Board acsooe
ciation held its spring meeting at the
Morrison hotel, Chicago, on March 27.
Round table discussions at 4:30 p.m.
covered
four
interesting
subjects—_
legislation, tax objections, teacher recruitment
and salaries, and “Work
Shop” for board members.
The dinner meeting, presided over by
president Leon Kringle, covered interpretation of the Butler bills to date;
what help schools can expect from the
state legislature; what salaries to pay
teachers

Fancy

Frying

Stewing

| Roasting

39%

CHICKEN

Lb.

Dressed

Chickens | Turkeys

Chickens | Chickens
Ib.

Fresh

Ib. 43 Yc | Ib. 39%

49%

BREASTS

CHICKEN

LEGS AND

The pound

THIGHS

SHOULDER

EVISCERATED

89c

Ib. 202...

LAMB CHOPS "». 29c DUCKLINGS '. 59¢

of varying

Rib

Rib Roast

Pork

BEEF

Roast

6th&amp; 7th

3-Ib. cuts

Ribi

Ib. 3 9 Ye

Ib. 3 9 Ye

CHICKEN WINGS &amp;
BCG UD opine:

| Frankfurters

19¢

|

|

O”

LAMB

Ist

Ib. 49%

Delicious

BEEF

waa

,

Wheat

Tenderloins

to 5th
Ribs

A7c

Whole

Cereal

19¢

MALT-O-MEAL
24-oz. pkg.

Harold

Norman.

3

Large size pkg. ................

NEW

|

Those attending from Deerfield were 7
Superintendent W. E. Sheehan, L. E. —
Seavers and L. Paul Brown of the
teaching staff; Mrs. Lewis Hayner,
vice president of the PTA; Vernon J.
Giss, Mrs. James Tibbetts, William
Jacob, and Mrs. R. G. Heupel all of
the Deerfield Grammar school board of
education.
;

Closed

Every

to

5:45

Wednesday

P.M.
at

12:00

Noon

Protestant
Arthur
Res.

401

Non-denominationai
.C.

Kuehn,

McDaniels

Tel.

Ave.

H.P.

pastor
Highland

weecescenees

Park

2391

ANNOUNCES
The
re-dedication
and
opening
of its
recently acquired church building in Lake
Forest, Illinois, at the Corner of Deerpath
and McKinley avenues.
EASTER
SUNDAY, April 6—
10 a.m. Bible school for the

Educator

SUDS

CRAX.12-0z.

and

STORE HOURS

OF THE COVENANTS
Lake Forest

children.

11

Large Pkg. ................ 31c
Pint botile 5s

9 A.M.

Gal. 62¢

PICKLES at. jar

29¢ | COOKING OIL

:

Grade A

Ige. pkgs. $] 00

SALAD

2 %%-Ib. pkgs. ......-.........

Whole
Ib. 59 ae:

Bannockburn,

education.

MILK

Lang’s Dill Chipped

FLAKES

DREFT

Savoy Baking

CHOCOLATE

59%

|

SOAP

MARVELOUS

36¢

FLOUR

Ib.

HAMS

of

'b. 49c

CHIFFON
WHITE

Softasilk

CAKE

eee
BACON

and

who is president of the DeerfieldShields Township High school board of

CHURCH

LEG

qualifications;

how to meet the always present tax
objections.
The latter_subject was well presented

by

Fresh

|

49¢

pkg.

........

17e

1-Ib.

Premier

COFFEE. ».......-- vac. tin

49c

2%

Oe

Scott

HOMINY

No.

©? tas

BISQUICK
Large PRS 62,

45 c

a.m. Combined
re-dedication, Easter
and Communion service.
Easter sermon by:
the pastor.
Solo, “Hail Your Risen Lord,”
Florence Turner-Maley, by the guest soloist, Mrs. Jeanette Ray of Highland Park.
8 p.m. Second Easter service, and the
first of regular Sunday evening services,
with sermon. by the pastor.
Guest organist
at
the
repaired
and
tuned
two-manua
“Hinners” pipe-organ, will be Mrs. Gladys
Hawley,
organist for the Bethany
Bean:
gelical church in Highland Park.
Soloist,
John
Mannings,
of Highland
Park.
The
public is cordially invited to re
po
us.
Our thought for the week is found in
Hebrews
13:20,
21:
‘Now
the
God
of
peace, that brought again from the dead
our Lord
Jesus, that
great
shepherd
of
the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting
covenant,
Make
you
perfect
in
every good work to do his will, working
in you that which is well pleasing in his
sight, through Jesus Christ; to whom. bbe
glory for ever and ever:
Ame.”

°

�CLIP THIS VALUABLE COUPON
FREE!

yalgreen’s
YOU'RE ALWAYS mae

Ci

Generous

HAIR

“DRUGS wir a REPUTATION”
THURSDAY.

repay and 6 QT

SATURDAY

EASTER EGG’
COLORS

DR.

—

EDWARDS’

30° OLIVE |
TABLETS

MAGNESIA

ee

ei

Checks dandruff

Jorn

MILK OF

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&amp;

50 BOOK |
MATCHES
—

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WIN A CHEVROLET!
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15e

* TINCTSUizRe .
IODI E ®

NE

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HANDY CARTON

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of

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nT
LARGE BOX

TONE

This dressing will keep your hair attractive.

QUANTITIES

PINT BOTTLE

Bottle

PETROLATUM DRESSING
With This Coupon

pene an

Central. Ave.

Trial

»
&amp; oe
ay

o*

as

e LISTERINE ®

DOBELL’S
SOLUTION

¢ Stop in for
Rules and Tips!

i

Big. 50c Tube

O

HAL

REGULAR 50¢

JOHNSON’S

MENNEN
Shave Cream

ge»

Size

.
Med

....

%

35¢ BOTTLE

50° PEPSODENT
TOOTH PASTE

Lather type
or Brushless

§©

a
~

Baby Powder

39°

Borated.

39°

10-0z. Size

.....-

Campana

ITALIAN
BALM
50c

Size,

6-Ounce

BALM
BARR

4-ox.

59"

Creme-whipt Lotion

The New VALET

Pkg. of

VEGETABLE

RAZOR SET

SEED SALE

:

%

SINGLE-EDGE

ahr

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BLADES

ADDRESS

23°

Colors, Designs,
Crayon, Dipper .

25¢

Nylon

RUBBER,
FV
atau rLs

&amp;

@

Pack of {5_
Envelopes

oe

2° 6°

©

30c Sie

MENTHOLATUM

TUBE OR JAR

size

The Sweetest Gift of All

GIVE A BOX of
CHOCOLATES
Fine selection
65¢
at Walgreen’s!.

Boh

a

:

i

©

A

BOOK —
fo

Ass

bristles

2 packs ¢°

e

10c value

EASTER EGG
COLORING SET

ALL-AROUND

oe
SL

Get the “Chick-Chick”

HUGHES New

too!

AUTOSTROP

5 GEM

%

FLOWERS,

up

“To the prices of all Merchandise selling it Illinois for 15c
and over, thére will be added
an amount approximately equivalent to 2% because of the Illinois
Retailers
Occupation
Expense.”’

It’s Time to Remember

EASTER

CARDS

A complete

here at

|

©

selection | .

Walgreen’s. |

Be 10° 15° 25°

�Thursday, April 2 1947

R
E
T
S
A
E
JENWAELLE z =

KNOW YOUR SCHOOL
A
the

series
of informative
talks by
teachers of the Deerfield Gram-

mar
ly

school,

District

summarized,

the

109,

will

Deerfield

very

be

brief-

presented

Review

for

the

in

next

several months. These articles have
been condensed from their talks before the Deerfield board of education

given

earlier

This
series.

is

in

the

the

school

second

year.

article

in

the

of

the

First Grade
By

Miss

Betty

Webb

The

CHICK

aims
moral,

matter
is an extension of the kindergarten experience
with new introductions.
The “reading
readiness” of each
child is ascertained

by

means

of

spe-

cial

tests

and

ob-

servation by the teacher, and is important

because

it

varies

with

each

child|

and must be developed accordingly.
Reading is developed through conversation, the use of picture charts in connection with the printed word, and
leads to recognition
of groups
of
printed

words .in

simple

books.

Some

of these books introduce characters
which continue to appear in more advanced

readers

used

in second

grade.

In small groups the children read as
many books as they can absorb at their

I—CHICK

Sree
STOKELY'S

FINEST

, MONEY POD
NO.2
‘
. 1 GAS e@ e @ CAN 19
WHOLE KERNEL WHITENO. 2 35°

here, but

is not

peaches“= 27°} &amp;= 59°D2
HALLMARK

PRE-COOKED

the language

vee

‘

Almonds
HUNT'S

OR

ne=
DEL

interests,

orally

and

by

planned

class

MONTE

EDWARD'S

experiences
“telling”.

through

the

much

of

enjoyed

Arithmetic: is concerned
with
the
meaning of numbers, counting, writing
numbers and their names, and is facilitated by the use of a work book.
Music study begins with the weekly
‘lesson under the music supervisor and
croup singing with the room teacher.

Mr. and Mrs. William Hinchsliff
and son, Robert, of Stratford road,
are driving East for a vacation trip
to Washington, D.C., and will stop at
the Waldorf during their stay in New

Minute

Ser ncaa

three

on

a vacation

Mrs.

John

children,

Timothy,

Susan, of Oakwood
country

at

their

trip, by

trailer,

Silence and
Peter,

their
and

road, will see the

leisure.

B

eV Tae

c

NO. 2!/2

sx 29°

Rice

ee

D

ccs. 25°

ALL PURE PORK

Armour

Treet..

Cheezit°

stecee
FRESH

SUNSHINE

DESSERTS...

DICED

4

ee

IN RASPBERRY

YOUR
CHOICE

|

Baby

Foods

12-OZ.

cn 39°

6-02.
ie . 5

a

“TOPS"

a

12-OZ.
2

CTNS.

SWANSDOWN.

95

c

FINE
= FOR‘eives

3 a
FOR

95°

FLAVOR

» Royal Jewel
COFFEE

GELATIN

Fruit Cocktail
a

:

ry

CUSTOM

ECONOMICAL, 100 _|

2-LB.

BAG

STARCH

LIPTON'S

83

GROUND
Cc

TASTY

Zippy Liquid Starch. . .“Sa

Noodle Soup. . "si, 32°

FINE SOAP

NU-TRISHUS

Automatic Flakes . 2. . oxo. Ol
Kitchen Klenzer ... 2caxslo’

A BARGAIN IN CLEANLINESS

2c

Meat Balls

| Tomato

civ

Juice

ARGO

cw 39°
225. 25°

Puro Cleaner,..... 2xcs20° | Gloss Starch... Qocs-LB. 17°

FOR FINER FABRICS
Chiffon
LGE.

c

kc. of

Bs
ahs

OTe

FROZEN
itt el

SELECTED FOR TASTE
MIXED VEGETABLES

me
-

TENDER

ALL WHITE

= CAULIFLOWER
YOUR

CHOICE

EACH

1602

JEWEL

RED

FOOD

DISINFECTS—DEODORIZES
Clorox Bleach

Se

Oz.
PKG.

QUARTA
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10-OZ.

.

ene:

}

93°
B

RHUBARB... xe 19
BUSCIOUS

and

TAG

PreparedPrunes

33°

WUSCIOUSRED

South

|

Pineapple-Perfection

York.

Mr.

18 to 22 LBS. 3
AVERAGE LB.

LIBBY'S ALL VARIETIES

Flakes...

DEERFIELD ACTIVITIES

RED

CR eine GR. _ SPECIALS! INORANGEGELATIN

THE MODERN

arts

TOMS

FLUFFY RICE IN A JIFFY

JAR

AND

also tied in with reading. Language

the sharing

BLACKBERRY

Preserves
a

Gake Flour

is largely

PPro

AVERAGE LB.

25°

projects,—such as the study of other
nations and peoples. These projects are
at this stage

PAPI

10 TO 14 LBS, 55:

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CANS

Manuscript writing is used because
of its legibility and similarity to printSocial studies are developed by sharing personal and group experiences and

ww

99

8-OZ.
4

= PUL SHANK IIALE

~Tender Young TURKEYS

HENS

Tomato Sauce

arts program.

ing.

HAMS » 57°
SMOKED

Beans... me. 19° 0 “sz
JORDAN

Cc

ae

Peaches ‘cw 20°)

over-

stressed. At the end of the first grade
the children have often acquired a minimum reading vocabulary of 300 to 400
words.
Spelling is introduced in. the latter
part of the second semester as a part of

?

ARMOUR STAR OR OSCAR MAYER
JEWEL EXTRA-VALUE TRIM— SHORT SHANK

Corn. . 2 cans

The use of phonetics, or sounding of
begins

CHICK, SOLID COLORS

JEWEL “MEATS |

’

own level of readiness.
syllables,

PRESTO

i—MODERNISTIC DESIGNS
I~MAGIC WAND
I~EGG DIPPER
PKG.

emo-

tional, and academic growth of the
student.
Subject

AND

EGG COLORING KIT

first grade are the
social,

CHICK

és

Central

Tr

Ave.

445 Roger Williams

Mme

Ave.

c

STORES

�=

ee
ey ‘Hig
¢© Find
Buy itt
It! e Deerfield aa peg og "Lake Co. ewe
It!

REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(Highland

Park)

Fevacae

REAL

ESTATE

On

YOUR.

2 acres of beautiful landscaped

‘property, complete. with. swimming
pool and: tennis. court, this attractive
‘Colonial home overlooks the lake and
its private beach.
» A large living room with fireplace,
large library with fireplace, spacious

dining

room,

breakfast

porch

and

- gcreened porch all overlooking the
- lake. ‘Powder room, butlery, kitchen
and sérveants’ dining room, complete
Ist floor arrangements.
-On 2nd floor
ais a large master suite with dressing
_ room and bath, 3 other family bedrooms, with..2 baths and.2 very nice
servants rooms and ‘bath, all appointments .of the. finest...
Attractively
une
for immediate, sale.

~~

PAUL PHELPS, Inc.

387 Ceritral Ave.

Highland Park 4580

Built
5 years
ago.
Cape
Cod.
West
‘Highland Park.
Living room, 2 bedrooms,
modern
bath, cabinet kitchen and
dining
nook,
Storm windows and screens all the
way
around.
Insulated.
Thermostat controlled.
Forced air ¢oal heat.
Oak floors.
Built in stairs to attic.
Space for two
Ca arlene:
rooms.
0.
August
1 occupancy.
purchase
this
modern
6
one-half acre situated two :

06
will
ein: heuse on

BA

Central

Avenue

EAST HIGHLAND

Park

FOR
JOHN

15.

_ sleeping porch, 3 baths, space for recreation
rm

on

Excel

8rd

floor.

Oil

construction

Chalmers

ht.

2

&amp; beaut

car

garage.

located.

Mrs.

576 Lincoln Ave. Winn.

GOOD

Win. 2700

Bri. 9001

ALMOST NEW RAMBLING LANNON
. STONE
&amp; BRICK
HOME
Offers the freedom
and seclusion of a
_ country estate coupled with low taxes and
_

of

every

city

convenience;

ae to excellent school and express transportation; random width hand pegged, oak
plank flooring thruout; attached 2 car brick

garage;

large

sereened

in

dining

porch;

forced circulating H.W. heat; copper pipes;
charming,
well-planned
kitchen.
Cannot
: _ be duplicated
at today’s price of $40,000.

-R. S. HAMBLY
Clavey
&amp;
Highland Park

_ SEVERAL

&amp; COMPANY

Ridge
Roads,
1491, 4866 or

SKIDMORE

income properties in Highland

Park &amp; Highwood with net income
ing from 7% to 15% of purchase

GUY
S86

Railway

Ave.,

Hwd.

Tel.

oe

aed et

4

what

you

bedroom,

are

looking

4 bath

‘house

H.P.

Quick

into.

just

the

place to

with

entertain

lake in very desirable

COLONIAL
poss.

3

Trim,

bedrms,

A

and

location,

-- $17,500

clean,

sun

rm,

mod-

beau-

live

EARHART, |LLOYD &amp; RINGER

to

move

rm

with

sta-

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

SEVEN

room

garage.

frame

Price

Win. 2700

house.

Bri. 9001

Oil
Tel.

$11,000.

heat and
Deerfield

359-R.

RED

BRICK

COLONIAL

This
pressed.
brick
home,
owner
built
and occupied, is undoubtedly
one of the
best
constructed
residence
in the entire
Woodridge District.
Here’s why:
8” Steel
“T’’ Beams ahd Lally columns; copper gutters,
down
spouts
and
flashings ; solid
birch millwork and trim.
House is thoroughly insulated.
Living Room
is large
with
fireplace,
off which
is a _ Library;
large dining room, kitchen with breakfast
nook and Powder Rm. on first floor.
4
bedrooms, 2 tiled baths on 2nd.
Room on
8rd floor finished-in rustic birch and cedar
bark, especially suitable for a girl or boy’s
den.
The 7 ft. 7 in. basement is plastered,

which

there

is a recreation

room

with

fireplace.
Heat
is Air Conditioned
Gas.
The 2 car garage is also of brick.
Two
Blocks to Woodridge (H. P.) Express sta4
blocks
to
famous
a
Ridge
Shown by appointmen

$ HAMBLY

Clavey
&amp;
Highland Park

&amp; COMPANY

Ridge
Roads,
1491, 4866 or

1845

PARK .

Now’s the time to move and enjoy the
summer in quiet exclusion.
Planned by an
efficient homemaker, practically no woodwork to clean, tile baths, streamlined kitchen.
Special floors for happy
children.
. Mueller

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

576 Lincoln Av. Winn.

Winn. 2700 Bri. 9001

COMPACT. well built English brick. 6
rms; 2 tile baths @ powder rm.
An inviting pine panelled recreation room in basement.
Tiled
kitchen,
automatic
heat, a
really charming yard.
One of Deerfield’s
best locations and sg prive for immediate
delivery is onky $24,7

McGUIRE

First

floor: living room, dining room,
kitchen,
-butler’s
ptry,
breakfast
room,
morning
room, bedroom and bath.
Second floor: 5
bedrooms, 3 tile baths.
Two car attached
garage.
Full basement.
Automatic
HW
oil heat.
$65,000.
For
further
details
call

ready

living

garage.
‘Nr Ravinia
Mr. Rumsfeld

HIGHLAND

gn a gracious manner.
$68,500.
If you really
love country
living
you
will be enchanted by this charming Colonia]
room
1 bath house.
Partially
furnished. $23,500.
you want a country
home
in town
here
is an unusually
charming
informal,
English cowntry home on 2 acres of nicely
landscaped
lands
with
ravine,
%
block

‘ ere

B-45.

fireplace.
2 car
tion and school.

3983

ee titel details.
No remodeling,
no decorating necessary, excellent condition.
Available for immediate possession.
$48,000.
On acres of ground is a regal Colonial

home

Box

WHITE

FOR
for.

Tel, H.P, 577

SUNSET
TERRACE
SUB
6 rm.
brick,
full
basement,
reception
room, fireplace, auto. hot water oil burning system.
1st floor, living room, fireplace,
dining
rm,
kitchen,
breakfast
nook, entrance hall, guest closet, powder
rm.
2nd floor, 2 large bedrooms, bath,
1 large bedroom &amp; bath (unfurnished),
attached
garage,
house
completely
insulated.
Lot 50x232.
For sale by owner
by appointment only.
Write c/o H. P.

VITI

_ SOMETHI NG NEW
EASTER
a

rangprice.

&amp; SON

332 N. St. Johns Ave.

in

1845

2290

HOMES

576 Lincoln Ave. Winn.

“‘Nestling amia towering Oak, Hickory and
Elms on 4 acres
CHARMING 8 BEDROOM,
2 Bath

advantages

Broker
Tel. H.F.

6 rm. with possibilities, ex. loc
Good older 8 rm home, nr trans
Red brk country home, W. H. Pk.... 20, '000
6 rm frame home, W side loc. Now 14,000
New all brick 6 rm home, ex loc
APARTMENT
BLDGS.
Several good apt. bldgs . soe sabes $22,500
OUNTRY
ESTA
See this 15 acre &amp; fine tides

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY &gt;

zthe

A. HOFFMAN

LOOKING
for
a
really
good
six
room
house? . Will sell or will trade for your
smaller house.
Attractive white brick &amp;
clapboard.
Spacious
rooms.
1%
tile
baths; game room with fireplace; dressing room; cabinet kitchen; gas air conditioned heat.
Well located for schools,
shopping &amp; transportation.
$22,500
or
anxious
to work out trade on smaller
house.
Tel. H.P. 6068.

—

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

SALE

Real
Estate
Sheridan Rd.

N.

News,

- Charming white clapboard colonial of 8
- spacious rms including
lge living rm with
fireplace.
Htd glazed sun rm, 4 nice bdrms,

Bri: 9001

If in the market for a home, home site,
or investment,
have
some
good. listings.
Come in and talk it over with

2360

PARK

Win. 2700

567

Lincoln

and ‘ORR,

Av.,

Inc.

Tel.

REAL

BUYS

SOME

Winnetka

Winn.

708

Lot 100x277, S. Linden, Real Buy $6,500
Lot 75x192, S. Linden nr Beech St., $5,625
Choice properties for a Country home.
Also Business Vacant &amp; property.

E. T. SKIDMORE
882
eit

3

N. St. Johns
&gt;

:

Ave.
Fix

t

&amp; SON
Tel,

Soa

H.P.
ate
Fh

ee

are

3 bedrooms

bath.

each

with

&amp; Si

viackeotd

WANTED

RESPONSIBLE
Montgomery
Ward executive.
Resident
of H. P. for 7 years
wants to rent a 8 or 4 bedroom house.
Will
take
excellent
personal
care
of
property &amp; will furnish the best of ref.
Willing to make
improvements
&amp; long
lease.
Please
Tel.
H.P.
1061.
WANTED:
To rent furnished
home
for
summer
months
by ‘responsible family.
Will
furnish’
finest
references.
Tel.
Central 5309.
—,
CHICAGO
broker, wife &amp; ‘ath: desire to
rent
furnished
house
on North
Shore:
June to Sept. or longer. Top rent.
Payable in advance,
Best references.
Tel.
H.P. 390.
COLONEL,
regular army, and wife desire
2
or
8 bedroom
furnished
house
or |
apartment
by
April
80.No
children. |

References

BANNOCKBURN
Located on over two thirds acre of
well landscaped ground, this attractive brick home has just been reduced
for quick sale and immediate occupancy.
On- the first floor there is a large
living room, music room, dining toom,
butlery and kitchen, large bedroom
and bath. On,the second floor there

Ravinia,

furnished.

Illinois

or

Write

Tel.

Box

H.P.

74,

38957.

VET., Northwestern student, wife urgently need furnished, unfurnished
apt. or
house.
Will exchange
ground
caretaking duties if necessary.
Ref.
W. Aiston.
Tel. H.P. 1886.
A

its own

SUMMER
home along the North Shore
for the months of July &amp; Aug. or part
of that time.
4 or 5 bedrooms, family
of 4 and 2 servants.
Tel. Mrs. Wilbur
at Randolph 0220 between 9:80 and 5:80.

BRIDE and veteran with 55 years of North
Shore residence, need small house, apt.
or garage apt. at once.
Please Tel. H.
P. 959 (collect).
.

Price

ENGLISH BRICK

Located in a heavily wooded section with a generous lot, this 6-year
old home is offered for the first time.
The Ist floor contains an entrance
hall, good-sized living room, attractive dining room with southeast exposure,
library, powder
room
and

WELL
estab. ‘grad.
engineer
with
wife
and 4 year old daughter, desire rooms
or apartment. Veteran with best ref. Tel.
Lytle, State 1846 (collect).
FAMILY
wishes to rent house near lake
for summer or part of summer.
Excellent
ref.
Tel.
Mr.
Parsons, ‘Randolph
6300.

utility room containing heating plant

and laundry.
The second floor has
three bedrooms and bath.
As the owner is leaving town permanently, this property can be delivered for early, occupancy.

FAMILY
of four desire 2-3 bedroom’ furnished house or apartment for May ist
Referoccupancy.
Near transportation.
ences furnished...
Lake Forest 2785.

PAUL. PHELPS, Inc.
387 Central Ave. Highland Park 4580

SALES

REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(Vacant)

95-R-30-tf

ONE of the most beautiful homesites in H.
Pk., 2%
acres on private road.
Water
&amp; sewer in.
Within city limits for fire
&amp; police protection but far enough for
country
atmosphere.
Gorgeous
sunsets
over gently rolling distance.
Nr. school
&amp; trans.
$7,000 or 1 anf acre $3,500.
Owner.
Tel. H.P. 1880
FOR
SALE
—
VACANT
The
following
parcels
are
offered
for
immediate sale
by
The
First
National
Bank, Highland Park, Illinois, to close an
estate.
Please submit bids in writing.
Parcel
1.
Wooded
lot South
St. Johns
Avenue, East side of street in 900 Block..Frontage 66 feet, depth about 100 feet
on North Line.
Appraised at $1,500.
Parcel 2. Lot 86 in Hovlands Second Addition
to
Highland
Park.
Located
on
South Side of Taylor Avenue,
about 1
block
west
of Beverly.
Size
60x140.
Appraised at $1,500.
Parcel 8.
East half lot 48 in J. S. Hovlands
Highland
Park
Acre
Subdivision
located on South Side of Midway Ave-

nue about
Size

500 feet East

128x281.

of Ridge

Appraised

at

FORMER
naval
officer
and
bride in dire need of small
Winnetka 3049.
room

Road.

$1,200.

executive
house.

erences.
|

SEVERAL
LOTS
IN
RAVINIA,
BRAEside and Sunset
Subdivisions
in Highland Park at reasonable prices.
ANCHOR
REAL
ESTATE
AGENCY
16 N. Sheridan Rd.—H.
Pk.
Tel. H.P. 98—Res.
37

YOUNG

desires

Family

Lafayette

couple

of

6000

urgently

Australian
apartment.

rental
four.

need

garage

ment or similar rental for June

ROOMS
for

TO

transients

&amp; Green Bay

apart-

1gt occu- +.

Write

Tel.

for

rent

Deerfield

room

E. PARK AVE.

with

Box

Central

Ave.

couple.

Tel.

Tel. H.P. 3990.

for:

PRIVATE
room
&amp; bath
to working
er student in exchange for sitting
child evenings and light services.
H.P. 5357.

ROOM

ce

RENT.
near

Rd., H. P.

DOUBLE furnished
H.P. 2680.

of

Boe yef-

(collect).

pancy.
No children or pets.
L-7, c/o Lake Forester.

ROOMS

kitchen

priviewes,

822.

FURN. ROOM

FOR 1 —M- "I

PLOYED
woman;
no transient;
single
bed, innerspring matt.; kit. priv, brkfst
&amp; lunch only; ref. Tel. HP.
41s

ATTRACTIVE

double

bedroom,

private

entrance &amp; private bathroom; néar transportation.
Tel. H.P. 559 after 5 p.m.
NICELY furnished room.
portation,’ theatre, etc.
mornings or evenings.

Close
Tel.

to transH.P.
149

Rooms for Transients
HIGHLAND HOTEL
548 Central Ave.
Highland
Mrs. W: O. Cromwell, Mer., H.P.

Park
3025

ROOM
&amp; breakfast in exchange for work
for woman from 7 p.m, to 8 p.m.
Write
c/o H. P. News, Box B-35.

WILL exchange beautiful 6 room,
apt.
in Evanston
for 4 room
Sits
or along North Shore.
- 4134,

WANTED:
Room
with
by business woman.

ESTATE

2 bath
apt.
i
Tel. H.

Meds ats

years

2 adults
service,

rental.

Ae

with
desire

housekeeper

Tel. State 0600

home

“ROOMS

WANTED

HELP WANTED

WANTED

PRIVATE
party
will
give
cash.
Small
house wanted on one or more acres or:
vacant property,
East of Waukegan Rd.
Write c/o H. F. News, Box B-25.
LL
———————————
EEE
HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)

FAMILYof

of

for sum-

(collect).

—

girl
with
Tel.

WILL
exchange
rental
of 5 room,
one
story house for 6 or 7 room house in H.
P. or nearby suburbs.
Write
Box B-55,
c/o H. P. News.

REAL

_

DOUBLE
room
for two
employed
girls;
near transportation.
With privileges, if —
desired.
Tel, H.P. 2041.
Ask for Mary.

~ REAL ESTATE TO. EXCHANGE —

mer
te

COLONIAL

Charming red brick with beautifully landscaped grounds, including
fruit orchard, strawberry beds, perrenials, and large greenhouse.
Spacious living room. with woodburning fireplace; large ‘sun. room,
attractive dining room, wood-burning
fireplace and kitchen on the Ist floor.
2nd floor there are 3 lovely bedrooms
and tile bath.
New oil burner. This unusual property is in central Highland Park near
schools and transportation.
Immediate Occupancy ...

25

577
sig

HOUSES

Park—Improved)

WILLIAMSBURG

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

SERVICE

Highland

(Highland

oe

piodey Highland Park 4500-01-02.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

tageoved

OPPORTUNITY

576 Lincoln Ave. Winn.

miles west of town.

ESTATE

Park) «

Highwood News

A lot of “home”
in this 7 rm owner
occupied hse.
Loc on a quiet street nr
school &amp; station.
Inside &amp; out in best
cond.
Floors like new.
Owner moving out
of town.
Will sell furniture, drapes, equipment.
Priced low at $17,500.
Miss Cronk

Two car brick
~ &amp; room brick bungalow.
Walking
disgarage.
Hot water
heat.
tance
to
shopping
and
transportation.
$15,000. .
é
Early
occupancy.
Well
located
three
bedroém brick house.
Hot water oil heat.
‘Metal radiator covers and venetian blinds
‘ineluded,
Large
well
landscaped © lot.
$20,000.

REAL

SALE

(Highland

~ON THE LAKE
=

FOR

@

oS

To Ficce* ‘our Ads

or without board
Tel. H.P. 219.

(Clerical)

STENOGRAPHER
OR
BOOKKEEPER,
permanent position with a future proportionate
to your
ability.
Growing: Be
national concern.
State age, eap.,
;
desired.
Write Duraclean Co., Bure

with

ability

and

WANTED:
Secretary
intelligence for ea established business —
concern.
Please state two last me
rite 2
employment
&amp; salary expected,
:
c/o H. P. aye. Box =
2

�BEL. WANTED

HELP feasts (Homes

(Clerical).

EXPERIENCED

TELEPHONE
-OPERATORS

Cook, housework.
Beautiful private

&amp;

per 5-day week

by

to start.

7
.

IHlinois

quired.

Bell

Felephone Company

GIRL WANTED for part. time bookkeeping.
Kither
mornings
or
afternoons.
Ex-

perience
Bros.,

not

522

Central

HELP
ah

necessary.

Ave.,

WANTED

DEERFIELD

:

Call

woman

H.

at

Brand

Pk.

as_

house-

keeper; 6 hrs per day, 6 days per week.
No heavy
laundry,
no children.
Good
wages, permanent job. Tel. Deerfield 465

x

SECOND MAID:
Experienced, white.
.-6 weeks or permanent, starting April

References
Brids,

required.

Lake

Forest

Mrs.

W.

For
1st.

P.

Me-

36.

&amp; care of first floor.
Adult
COOKING
Living
quarters
for employed
family.
White; ref.
Tel. H.P.
1862
- husband.
(collect).
COUPLE

ily.

exp.,

Highest

white;

salary.

ref.

req.;

4

Tel.

adults.

Small

apt.

Tel.

CLEANING
woman, one
req.
Tel. H.P. 451.

H.P,

in

fam-

H.P.

ester.

GENERAL:
No heavy work
or laundry.
Own room, bath and radio.
Happy home
with two children, ages 8 and 1.
Near
transportation.
Good
wages.
Special
privileges to the right girl.
Character
references necessary.
Lake Forest 649.
HOUSEMAN:
Experienced, white, single.
Year
around
position
in
Lake.
Bluff.
Mrs.
McCormick
Blair,
Superior
1416
(collect).

SECOND

day

a

week;

ref.

ig

CLEANING woman, one day per week.
In
modern house 8 blks from Highwood station.
$6 &amp; train fare.
Tel. H.P. 8833
(collect).
DRIVER—must

know

Highland

Write Box B-65, c/o H. P. News.

GENERAL
housework.
~No
objection
to
employed husband.
New home.
Beautidl quarters over garage.
.Tel. Glencoe

_ MAID for general housework.
Ref.
Launa
_
dress
employed.
Must
like.
children.
Saar
Room,
bath
&amp;
radio.
Modern
house

oe

;

HELP

near

transportation.

Tel, H.P.

1856.

COUPLE,
white, experienced
cook, clean,
gardener, chauffeur, butler, etc. in one
of Winnetka’s finest homes.
Ideal working cond.
Friendly
treatment.
Perm.
position.
Life time
opporunity.
Own
apt.
No objection to child of school age.
$250 to $300 depending on experience.
Paid vacation.
Tel.
Miss
Von,
Hollycourt 4405 days, Ambassador 1181 evs.

s
%
pat

WANTED:
Experienced
cleaning.
1 day a week.
Tel. H.P. 1024.

Laundress
one
WANTED:
Experienced, $8 per day.

or

mother’s.

time.
ah
_

Stay

or

day

a_

Ful

or

Tel. H.P.

helper.

go.

$1

FIVE
men
wanted
for
landscaping
and
gardening.
Good pay.
All work on the
North Shore.
Must be steady and reliable.
R. Kohlmaier, Dundee Rd., Northbrook.
Tel. Northbrook 422.
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
Young woman, between the age of 21 and
85 years to train for Soda Fountain and
lunch counter management.
WE TEACH
YOU
fundamentals
of cooking,
baking,
buying and menu planning.
Learn a staple, growing business... Previous experience preferred, but not a requirement.
Uniforms
and
meals
furnished.
Good salary while learning.
No
Sunday or holiday work.’ Write; c/o H.
P. News, Box A-55.

Tel.

H.P.

ATTEN DANT

week.

Experienced,

2681.

191° Ei’

work.

Full

or part

time.

Tel. H.P.

3402

(collect),
~ GIRL or woman
?

raid

.

noons

a week.

MAID

* ieapeeoncede,

+2 SE
white.

cleaning.

‘el, “BP

230

from

ty

ave. cook,

(collect).

Four.

woman.

station,
ONS

hin mae

ae

ae

Tel.

OND

women.»

Gleaning
nee,

apes

:

launadults.

y.a week.

“els

aE.
%

sae

2208
}

good

wages.

Deerpath

‘Lake

Forest

80

LAKE FOREST YELLOW CAB
710 N. Western Ave..

years

.old.

to, do

General Cleaning, ; arn old. te i

Paes
é

have

PART

TIME waitress &amp; 26 girl;

Transpor-

tation furnished.
Tel. Libertyville
The Bob-Mari, Half Day, Illinois.
GARDENER.
References.

Experienced,
Tel. H.P.

one day
3765.

a week.

OPPORTUNITY
for right young
man
to
learn the lumber business.
Office duties.
Edward Hines
Lumber
Co.
Tel. H.P
8721,
MAN
wanted
to help gardener
maintain,
lawns, shrubbery and gardens on private
estate in Highland Park.
$1.00 per hour,
44 hours per week.
Work starts April
1st to late November.
See Gardener, 725
Waverly
Rd. or Tel. H.P. 1512 before
5:30 p.m.
SALESMAN
FOR
PLASTICS
- Splendid opportunity for good future in
a fascinating business.
Apply: Livingston Plastics Corp., 1448 Shermer Avenue, Northbrook.
ARE
YOU a housewife looking for ways
and means of bringing extra money into
your home?
Avon Products Co.:can offer
you
a solution
to
your
problem.
Easy
to start.
M. Gease,
Dist. Mer.
Box 527, Elgin, Ill.

-HELP WANTED
Duffy
&amp;
St. Johns

S.

Duffy
Ave.

Park

Two

truck

Tel.

H.P.

drivers.

DeLuxe

455.

298

woman

cleaning.

day,

Prefer

$1

per

HIGH

School

WILL

o

would

like

three

Tel.

H.P.

3568.

Wed.

days

&amp;

Fri-

girl will sit with children

afternoons &amp; evenings.
Excellent
ences.
Tel. H.P.
1920.

eee

refer-

laundry at my home.

Tel.

1

SITUATIONS

GARAGE

jumper,

girl's

12:

Tel.

ae

12;

40 04.

|

ae

BLACK. persian Iamb. coat, size dA eae
condition, $125.
.Tel. ALP, 576.
‘

SIZE

14

lady’s

clothes:

brown

gabar

suit, $5; black.bolero jaeket wee pick
&amp; white checked skirt, $5;
er
skirt, $2; yellow wool Sri hie
8
black fingertip spring coat, $3.
condition. . Tel, Deerfield 746.

EXCEFTIONALLY

finé girl’s clothing. All

_ Size 10, Best. &amp; Co. beige
worn only a few times; 2
dressés; one ‘pink: &amp; white

spring -coat,
pretty cotton
rayon’ dress;

one brownie Scout dress. &amp; herreetes Tel.
Northbrook 441.
;aes

FUR
COAT:
Full, full- scaaets mink, i
16-18,
$1,500,
Transaction _ priva’
Write Box L-17, ¢/o Lake Forester for
appointment next week,
‘
WOMEN’S

COATS:

navy

reefer,

tion,

Lake

YOUR

Trading

brac
‘H.P.

Rd,,,

:

tan asel and. one. e

14,

Excellent

2854.

condi-

ee

GOODS..FOR

Si

OWN HIGHLAND PARK

Post.

‘ gothing.
2

We

sell furniture, bah

47

§.. St..Johns. '
84- B120-Inst

vacuum

powerful,

sories.

One

size

Bluff

HOUSEHOLD

VISIT

Mr.

cleaner

like new.

silent;, variety of acces-

Stevenson,

Deerfield...

839

Meuberen

Tel., Deerfield

445. |

AVAILABLE FOR IM MEDIATE
DELIVERY.
Kenmore electric ironers cath tee caas $119.95

517

Central

Avé.,

H.P.

Tel. HP.

4600
—

THREE
painted
book
shelves:
Simmo
twin beds, with springs
&amp; mattresses;
mag. drum table, 28” high, 24” in diam-

eter; mag.
set, table,

rocker; table lamps; child’s
rocker &amp; 2. straight chairs ;

—
—

co

hacatnl

82-34

p.m.

Ht
—

North

First

St.,

Pk,

DELUXE © Genéral
Electric © Stratoliner
Electric Range with all latest features.

Less than year old. Lightly used.
na
perfect condition—$210.:
§ ao ae
or see at 248 Bronson

Ave? A.

rg

UNIVERSAL: ‘mottled “eréam' colored
stove, excellent condition; ant
wicker type sun parlor set. Tel. ae
USED
Kenmore eleetete waste
machine.
Good condition;
Tel. H.P. eee
ie,

6 to

CATERING
Weddings, teas, dinner parties, large or
et
Tel. Glencoe 1594,
.P: C. McCul-

DEALERS
a.m. to 4:30

Come early or come late—but don’t. miss it, -

phonograph;

nation

(Miscel.)

INVITE
from 10

—

in.

7 p.m. to Midnight.
FOR TWO DAYS
Thursday and Friday, April 10th and 11th —
The Dealers of Highland Park, Auct oneers

RADIO.

WANTED

size

WE
Continuous

(Domestic)

Monday,

hour.

38;

Every article offered will be a

MEN:
Part or full time for landscape and
garden work.
Practical experience helpful, but not necessary.
Good wages. For
appointment.
Tel.
Clauson
Landscape
Service, Lake Forest 2258.

RELIABLE

size

PUBLIC’ AUCTION

STORE

WANTED

SALE

$5,000
Worth
of Household Goods
Art Goods, and. General
Merchandise

E. Illinois Road
Lake Forfest

SITUATION

coat,

FOR

child’s
black board;
typewriter
stand;
painted
night stand; shoe shelve, , ate”
Tel. H.P. 3026,
tae

Permanent position.
Excellent working conditions.
Good yeas
in Person

FOOD

CLOTHING.

Kenmore vacuum . sweeper ..sdeii...$ 54.95
Kenmore electric range
....,. Bicscche $244.50
Silvertone wire recorders ana
Sears Roebuck.&amp; C

gardener,
in
exchange
for
exp.
ROOM
service one day.
Tel. H.P. 38 67.

JANOWITZ

hour. Tel. H.P.

WILL a
othe of children by the aye
my
home
from nie
rs.
school. Tel, H.P.
x
:ee

‘Extra

MAN WANTED FOR SERVICE STATION
WORK.
O’NEILL SERVICE STATION,
SKOKIE &amp; DUNDEE
RD., NORTHBROOK.
TEL. NORTHBROOK 352.
Cleaners.

Boa, of rchildven:

60c per

FILTER-TYPE

Oleaners
Penne

MAKE $75 per week. Man or “woman take
orders.
Exclusive line wearing apparel.
Tel. Mr. Coates, Independence 7288, 7 p.
m. to 9 p.m.

WANTED:

night,

dress, size 12; girl’s: gray: suite, size
girl’s white figure dress, size 12; Mu

TWO experienced waitresses.
For appointment.
Tel. H.P.
4283 between
3 &amp; 4
p.m. © Ask for Miss Carr.

41

a

irls will, take

ay

LADY’S” ‘black

1098,

automatic

8 records;

beautiful G.E.

combi-

record’ changer,takes

G:E;

super

Beam-a-scope

radio, no aerial, no. ground.’ » Will oe
at a fraction. of what. a prachinw: like
|
this costs. today.
Tel. H.P..3026.,
MOVING!

ENTERTAIN
at home—for
six or more
persons; all food provided, served, and
dishes washed,
Flaming. sword dinners,
flaming desserts, luncheons, .buffet,:
teas
wend
weddings.
Franzen and. Co.,. per
dor 0491, Chicago and. suburbs. .

WANTED:
Spare time work in. Shands
for living quarters, furnished or unfur‘Tel.

Liberty-

MOTHERS’
HELP SERVICE
Children over 2 years of age cared
by. the.hour at my home,

,

rs.

Hagen...

for

‘

.

726. Deerfield Rd., Deerfield
‘Telephone Deerfield 48
TWO
experienced, gardeners
desires
outside ,;work: by hour or monthly ‘contract,
Tel. H.P. 6528.

PORTER
FOR GARAGE
Man. about. 45-50

5973.

nished;
‘Two in family.
ville 894-M ‘mornings. :

Apply

as mother’s helper, 2 after-}° °°
' Near

and

CAB DRIVERS

LAUNDRESS,
experienced.
Stade. poate
tion one day a week.
Tel..H.P.

WANTED : Older woman for general house-.

job

-DEERPATH..GARAGE..

—
general houseworker, exp. for tea
ily of -2 adults; 2 school children,.
No
aera
Own room. &amp; sone ref, req.,
29 $35.
Tel. H.P. 1283.

f m4

steady

for “chil-

Must

tough,

| SERVICE STATION

922..

week.

EXPERIENCED
GROCERY CLERK

WANTED:
Lathe operators
&amp; other machine
shop.
employees.
Modern
ag
neering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H.
Tel. iP.
1057.

per

part

(Miscellaneous)

MAN
with car for service or production
work.
Must have good personality and
be capable
of selling or making
estimates.
Good future.
State age, experience, references, salary desired.
Address
Mr. Kehle,
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield. |

woman,

CLEANING woman one day a week,
hour.
Tel. Deerfield. 634.

WANTED

2 evenings
a
ref.
Tel. H.P.

WOMAN
WANTED:
To make telephone
survey
from
her
home.
No
‘selling.
Must have ene party an
50¢ an hour.
Write. Box B-75, c/o H. P. News,

WANTED
Men, part or full time at
Highland.
Ten Pins
189 N. Second St., H. P.

EXP. LAUNDRESS wanted for Tuesdays or
Wednesday.
Ref. req.
Tel. H.P. 1564.

MAID

Experienced, white—some

ADV.
MANAGER
AND
SALES
CORREspondent for growing national firm. Unusual future for right man.
State age,
education, experience, references, salary
expected.
Duraclean
Co., Deerfield,
Il.

Ceptiect).

.

MAID:

serving small family.
Near transportation.
References required.
Lake Forest

5665.

pre
f

3

(collect).

GENERAL:
Housework and care of child,
age
8.
No.
cooking.
References
required.
Write Box L-27, c/o Lake For+

2687

EXPERIENCED
couple
for
small
home.
‘Phree school age
children,
2
adults,
- Own room, bath &amp; radio. Current wages
Must
have references.
Tel. H.P. 2718

. Park.

869

COUPLE:
Experienced, white—cook, butler, houseman.
Attractive living quarters.
Excellent salary.
Family of three
adults.
‘Near Lake Forest.
Libertyville
21
(collect)
after 6 p.m,

Maid, hours 8 to 5. Family of

TRUCK

H.P.

659.

"WANTED:

ES”

_ Tel.

COOK:
General housekeeping, smal] family.
Near village.
References’ required.
Lake. Forest 135.

(collect).
2

stay.

GARDENER: Experienced—for six months.
No living quarters.
Lake Forest 259.

(Domestic)
wanted

ota
8

dren,
good

WANT ED cnlicai. Ma

‘Older woman to care

ideal

GENERAL
housework,
Hours &amp; duty adjusted to suit.
Current wages &amp; transci
pag Tel. H.P, 4433 (collect) after
p.m.

WANTED:
Assistant
bookkeeper
with
ability &amp; intelligence for old established
business ‘concern.
Please state two last
places of employment &amp; golare expected.
Write c/o H. P. News, Box
-.

&amp;

COOKING
&amp; GENERAL HOUSEWORK
Good position in.modern
home
for reliable and experienced person.
No laundry.
Own room
&amp; bath.
Good salary,
permanent
position.
References
~re-

Chief. Operator
S. St. Johns Ave.

21

|

To

surroundings

GENERAL
girl for care of “chat
home.
No heavy cleaning.
Own room and bath.
Tel. H.P. 4782,

Frequent increases.
Apply

Pleasant

WOMAN

HELP

: Wikia:

3 blks from station.
bedroom, sitting room

position.» Employed
husband
Highest wages.
Tel. H.-P.

HIGH’ SALARIES

$29

bath.

5

EPs

_

-|:China
cabinet,
antique. .&amp; ..other) oie
dishes, linens, tables, lamps, davenport,

chairs,

beds,

desk,

dressing

tures,’ green rug 12x32,
comports
Chelsea, tea

mise.

articles;

Detamble

‘Tels

Ave., A.

table, pic-

pr thumb print
set, clothing

H.P.

1880

or

563

Py, mear Green’ Bay Rd

OAK» dining © foom .:set;» also sails box
ae
&amp; mattress. » Tel. H.P. ‘1586.
RUGS:
.-9x12
American
Oriental
Mion.
and pad, $25; Gullistan. 4x6; price: $14;
these ‘¢cushion’ davenport, $15. eel 3
FRIGIDAIRE

Preuss

box,

8- hones

‘fe

condition, $200.
Westinghouse’ sae:
roaster; slightly-used, perfect: condition
$20,

WILL

dining

Tels

Deerfield

SACRIFICE:

“room “set;

799.

“it

Richt ‘piece

yee
clean

Boot condition 5 ; $200

‘Pel. H.P&gt;; 2534,
s
COLLEGE
student, expert. swimmer would r
like North Shore swimming pool
position SHERATON
walnut tue room
set;) 6for summer.
Well qualified. as, instrue&lt;
chairs, buffet, full size table swith’ 3 ‘extor.
Tel. H.P, 1024,
;
’ tension leaves, $95;-oak knee-hole desk
5 drawers, $35.
Tele Dertticlt: way

®XPERIENCED gardener &amp; sloahtis Gésives
job 8 days a week.
Tel. ane
4305.
li. Lloyd.

—

fi

�HOUSEHOLD
ALNUT
good

GOODS

FOR

bed with springs

condition.

SOLID
mahogany
a
few months
Tel. H.P. 4258.

Tel.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE

SALE

&amp; mattress,

H.P.

in

4728.

bookcases, a pair.
old.
Selling at a

Only
loss.

‘SET
of 6 Antique
Sheraton
side chairs,
$100
each;
8 pedestal
Duncan
Pyffe
table
with
4 leafs, will seat 20 when
extended,
$350. Tel. H.P. 4750.
BEDS:
beds;
: head
spring
seen
- Lake

Pair of new
French
style
twin
7-ft. twins with blue upholstery on
boards.
Complete with new innermattresses, $130 each.
May be
at Davis Storage, 579 N. Oakwood,
Forest.

“MISSION
chairs,

' Forest

oak
dining
room
table and
8
practically new, only $75.
Lake

797-Y-2.

ELECTRIC

FOR

equipment,
2%4x2%4-in.
PHOTOGRAPHIC
developing
tank,
enlarger,
extra
lense,
extras,
etc,
12x15-in.
trays, chemicals,
Tel. Deerfield 772.
CHILD’S

Pp,

3941.

crib.

Reasonably

priced.

Tel.

H.

mower
lawn
inch ball bearing
SIXTEEN
$19.75; 5/8x50 garden hose $4.98; five
Ibs. Shady Grass $4.50; Garden Master
New
shipment
garden
$4.05.
cultivator
Sears
Roebuck
&amp;
just arrived.
tools
.'
TR
Po
oPeL
Ae.
517 Central Ave.,
0
a

Hi

t oe

built arched bookcase ceweinuel:
CUSTOM
‘vanity table with
glass top
&amp; bench;
beautiful
sofa,
open
into
comfortable
twin bed, slip covered, perfect condition;
custom built mag. radio console, suitable
‘for Scott speaker; Graflex camera Tessar
-F-4.5 lens, takes excellent postcard size
as:
Ferfect, also 25 rolls film. Tel.
HP.

GOOD
for

portable radio, short wave, equipped
plane.

Tel.

H.P.

4712,

IRON baby crib, baby buggy, gas hot water
heater,
gas laundry
stove,
ping
pong
‘table, two
lawn
mowers,
four
16x600
tires and tubes.
Make offer.
Tel. H.P.
4

WANTED

°

Stroock topcoat, one year old; navy
RED
sheer
suit;
tweed
suit;
black
‘dinner
dress, all size 14.
Black summer suede
shoes, size 714A, almost new.
2 Men’s
suits,
size
38.
Boy’s
bicycle;
record
player attachment; 3 original Luigi Kasimir etchings, $10 apiece; few summer
dresses; also single bed.
Tel. Deerfield
$12.

silver
LAMPS,
antique wire fernery,
jacket,
suits &amp; dresses, size 14.
ar. 8171.

AR

10%-in.
by
5-ft.
WINDOW
SASH:
8-ft.
of 20-in.
6%-in.
by 1%-in.,
15 panes
glass; storm windows to fit. ‘Tel. Deerfield 342.
THOR
ironer,
excellent
condition;
girl’s
balloon tire bike; kitchen cabinet; golf
clubs;
tweed
coats,
women’s
sizé
18,
each $8.
Tel. H.P. 3518
TWO BY TWO inches SVE Koda-slide projector 300 watt., less than year old, posi_ “tively like new, $48 with case &amp; patented
slide .changer.
Tel. H.P. 4427.
KENMORE
tion, $4;
Ean Sept.,
;

electric iron, in perfect condigirl’s Elgin bike, 26- ne papent
1946, $28.
Tel. H.P.
50.

DAVENPORT;
9x15 rugs;
to 8.
All in excellent
Wilmette

FOR SALE
Double barrel Springfield 12 gauge shotgun,
boxes of shells and hunting coat.
LIKE NEW
PHOTO
EQUIPMENT
:
85 m.m.
Kodak
‘Retina,’ F-3.5 lens
85.m.m.
Perfex “55,” F-28 lens, coupled
Range
finder.
Federal
23%,x3%
enlarger,
F-6.3 lens, built-in easel.
8 chrome ferro
plates, film, paper,
tongs, tank, etc.
189
Wildwood
_—
Lake
Forest
Lake

Forest

MUSICAL

3019

after

6

INST.

FOR

SALE

CONN cornet &amp; case.
dition, $40.
Tel.
COMPLETE

set

of

Reasonably
H.P. 834.

tt EEE

LODE NECN

Ludwig

trap

drums,

excellent condition, $300. Tel. H.P. 834.

ESE

OO IONE EES LRA: TE NEALE

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
Be Particular — It Costs No More
|
ry
Vine Ave., Highland
Park
M. Pre
E. O. Inman
Tel. Hi "P. 5676
Tel. H. P. 89
186-J-19-tf

DODGE
ea
718.

club
Will

coupe 1942.
accept best

Excellent condioffer.
Tel.

coupe. Abundant
Motor Inc., 22 S.

PAINTING
Kitchens — Bathrooms
Woodwork .
Washed
and
Painted
Best Prices
Tel. H.P. 2884

4-door
car at

FORD
1937 tudor sedan, good condition,
excellent tires, new
seat covers.
Tel.
H.P. 1688 after 6:30 p.m.
BUICK
1929 four-door sedan, good
&amp; good tires.
Tel. H.F. 2812.

AUTO
ONE
will
try
able,
Co.;

PARTS

&amp;

wheel
utility
trailer
light
weight;
carry 500 lIbs., $64.95.
Cross Counautomobile batteries are now availfits most cars.
Sears Roebuck &amp;
517 Central Ave., H. P.
Tel. H.P.

4600.

AUTOS

WANTED

WANTED

FOR

$17.50.

BIRDS,

CATS,

H.P.

NURSE sone
et
Beautiful
Fawn
Black. Mask
GREAT DANE
Take care of your
children.
Seven week pups.
Blood
line including:.
1 Triple International Champion
2 International Champions
Libertyville 435-J

ANTIQUES
LARGE
QUANTITY
OF
AMERICAN
AND
ENGLISH
ANTIQUES
Lamps,
Silver, ete.
Wish to clear all merchandise before
going to England for the summer.
No
reasonable offer refused.
COURT
ANTIQUE
SHOP
Linden
Ave.,
Hubbard
Woods
Winnetka 4085

SERVICE

Specializing in
pictures of
T.P. 3199

Tel.

most

modern

cars.
ness.

Stop in today.
Now
C. T. Bartlett.

TREE

equipment

to

serve

open

your

for busi-

SPRAYING &amp; SURGERY
Landscaping
HANS BAHR
5338
urel Ave.
Tel.-ELP.. 119

PREPARE
FOR
SPRING!
Storms
removed,
Screen
cleaned, painted
&amp;
hung.
Gutters
cleaned
&amp;
painted.
Vet’s
Maintenance.
Tel.
Skokie
5071.

PARKWAY CURTAIN
LAUNDRY
Ruffled
curtains,
panels,
drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 5804
BUILDING AND REPAIR
Cement work, basement &amp; garage floor,
walks, tuck pointing, repairing fireplace
&amp; porches.
D. Chiesa.
Tel. Wilmette
5647.
'

LAKE FOREST’ FLOWER

29-S-3-In-t |

Skokie Highway

FARM

Lake Forest 2764

OPERATE
your home
with
the help
of
experts.
Tel. H.P. 4766 for general repairs, gardening, screen fitting, or painting.
WALL
WASHING
Window Washing
Storms and Screens
MARTIN VEHLOW
Grayslake 5414

MISCELLANEOUS
YOUNG
steers, 900 to 1050
Ibs..
Grain
fed since August.
Ideal for lockers. Tel.
Libertyville 630-J-2.
TRADE GUNS, or we'll pay cash.
We pay
MORE, sell for LESS because we handle
thousands of new and used guns from
$5
to
$1,000!
All
models,
calibers,
gauges, makes.
Write today, fully describing your gun.
New Spring-Summer
1947 Catalog features thousands of new
and
used
guns
and
nationally
famous
fishing
tackle,
golf
and
other
sports
equipment; send 25c (refunded with first
order).
Stop in or phone Central 1071
for your copy.
Klein’s Sporting Goods,
Dept. NS, 227 W. Washington St., Chicago
6 (2 blocks east of Northwestern
Station).

PAINTING

Jr.

Posed and Candid
your wedding.
Highland
Park, IN.

LAKEWOOD
DAY
SCHOOL
Boarding school &amp; Day school, children
4 to 12.
Tel. Deerfield
810.

POULTRY

:1770

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel. L.F.
606.
Our service department,
has the

North

DOGS

PERCY H. PRIOR,
Photographer

Interior.
Tel. HP.

GARDENS — LAWNS
Hauling Dirt and Manure
Annual and Perennial Plants
Pansies

DALMATIAN
PUPPIES:
Pure bred, good
marking, six weeks old.
B. Berg, Skokie Highway,
1/4 mile south of Buckley Road.

918

INSTRUCTION

LANDSCAPING

3026.

SKOKIE
VALLEY
TREE
SERVICE
Treating,
Fruning,
Spraying
Dangerous Trees Removed
Also cabling and surgery.
All property
. and men fully insured.
Earl Reynolds.
Tel. H.P.
2653.

&amp;

EGGS

FURNISHED ROOM
550
Laurel
Ave.
ELPA

CASH

Tel.

SURGERY

CRAFTSMAN
FURNITURE
REPAIR
“For Work
of Quality”
Refinishing.
Slipcovering,
Upholstering,.
Zion, Ill.
33rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Tel. Zion 3496

BICYCLES
bicycle,

TREE

LAYING
HENS:
Forty Hy-line and Leghorn breed have been laying 5-6 months,
$1.50 each.
Libertyville 1485.

Good
’37 to °’47 Used
Cars.
A. G. McPHERSON,
Inc.
3887 E. Park
Ave., H. P.

BOY’S

and

&amp; ee

Fully Insured ~
Interior and
Exterior
Residential
and Commercial
Immediate Service
Phone Highland Park 6012

TREE TRIMMING
&amp; LANDSCAPING
Ramoving Dead Trees, Hauling Away
Cement
Work
Light Hauling —
Wood
ROBERT L. WHITE
1002 N. Elmwood,
Waukegan.
Telephone
Ont.
7530

motor

ACCESSORIES

Exterior
Johnson

Hubert

OLDSMOBILE
1985, 4-door sedon, family
use, good condition, 4 new tires, 1 good
spare; new battery, generator, distributor &amp; carburator.
Ready
to go, $450.
Tel. Deerfield 858.
LIKE new 1946 Deluxe Plymouth,
sedan.
Tel. H.P.
5524 -or see
Highwood Pure Oil Station.

DAN’S
PAINTING

SERVICE

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING

FORD 1941 four door sedan.
Seat covers,
good tires; excellent transportation.
Ravinia Motors Ine.; 22 S. First St., H.. P:
PACKARD
1940 business
luggage space. Ravinia
First St.,. H.: P.

MACHINE

Singer &amp; other makes repaired, bought &amp;
sold; also vacuum cleaners. Will call for
and
deliver.
Phone
Robt.
W.
Arends,
Northbrook 624-W.

'

AUTOMOBILES

Inside
and
Outside.
Tel. H.P. 8452 or 8058
E. R. Conger

FLAGSTONE,
TOP
SOIL,
HUMUS,
CINders,.
screcnings,
firewood.
Trees
cut
down, power saw for hire; general hauling
and
welding.
Tel.
H.P.
8981.
or
8785.
John Tazioli.

SEWING

AARNE

LOST AND FOUND

BUSINESS

con*

AWAY

$100. or best offer takes ’29 Model A, four
door Ford sedan now driving.
Look bad,
runs good; 2 like new tires.
See at 625
Laurel Ave,
H. F.
Tel. H.P.
1686.

p.m.

sees

GIVEN

BARTLETT
MOTOR
SALES
966 Northwestern
Ave.
Lake Forest, III.
Tel, L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars,

girl’s clothes, 6
condition.
Tel.

6347.

BE

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING
PAINTING and DECORATING

sihvice:

MODERNE
DECORATING
SERVICE

LOST:
Gold thimble on west platform of
Northwestern
station
or
thereabouts.
Reward.
Mrs. Laurence B. Robbins. Lake
Forest 623.

fox
Tel.

FOUR tires &amp; tubes Sieberlings, size 600x
16. Used approximately 2,000 miles. Tel.
H.P. 6570.

BUY

HAVE
some 8 weeks old small dog type
puppies to give to responsible persons,
who
will appreciate .them.
Tel. Deerfield 564 after 7 p.m.

typewriters,
washing
ADDING
machines,
machines, refrigerators and bicycles can
be
ordered
from
Montgomery
Ward
| Catalog Office.
Tel. H.P. 4800.

lle:

TO

USED

LAWN &amp; garden supplies.
Rotary tiller, &amp;
lawn roller for hire.
Borchardt Fuel Co.,
Tel,’ H.-P. 67.

TO

WHY
NOT
SELL THAT
[DLE
PIANO?
A man for many years in the piano business ‘will buy or appraise without obligation
on
your
part,
Tel.
University
1561 (collect} after 7 p.m.
180-G-31-In-tf

SALE

500 chick brooder; chicken
&amp;
odds
&amp;
ends
for
8x10-ft.;
Tel.
Deerfield
279business.

house,
‘chicken
R-2.

‘WANTED

LENA

MICELLANEOUS

sone

BRAND
new
Spinet piano, just received
from factory, exceptional values.
Also
upright pianos for rent $4, $5 &amp; $6 per
month.
Credit
allowed
if
purchased.
Shop in Evanston and save.
R. J. Cook,
Tel. University 1561.

&amp;

DECORATING

HENNING. 0. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship
&amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North
Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr. Ave., Chicago 26, Ill.

a;

=

2404.

Fully

insured

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
VACUUM cleaner, like new, $25, attachments,
$5; child’s steel wagon,
$8;
extension
ladders
and
9-ft. step ladder;
Zenith
cabinet
radio;
doll house
with
lights, $20; child’s play: table 82x72-in,
$4. - Tel. H.P.. 2817.
WANTED:
Four or five room
foriiahed:
apt.
or
house
by
officer permanently
ssigned.
to Fort
Sheridan.
Tel.
aaa
5000, Ext. 3121, between 9 a.m. &amp; 4 p.m.

Adjustments, or corrections of error,
on Advertiser’s written copy, not the
fault of the advertiser will be made by
correct publication without charge, only
if we are notified immediately following
publication.
Cancellations
must
be made before
p.m.
Tuesday
for. Highland
Park
News
to be effective the same
week.
On
Telephone
ads
adjustment
is
made
only
on
errors
in
address
or
phone number reported immediately.
Copy is accepted only with the understanding that this paper assumes no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical or mechanical
error.
Reply to Real Estate and Situations
Wanted may be made by phone as well
as by letter.
To reply to such advertisements
phone
H.P.
4500,
4501
or
“A502
Ad
Dept.
Your
name,
address
and
phone
number
will be placed at
once in the box of the advertiser.
The
Wanted
Ads
with
BOX
NUMBERS
identity of any Box Number advertiser
or any
information, not
contained
in
want ads will not be disclosed.
For the protection of our advertisers
replies
to blind ads
will not be delivered unless the release card is presented.
Replies
will be mailed
upon
request.

Right is reserved to revise or accept
copy
subject
to publication
er
To place your ad, phone H. P.
4500,
4501, or 4502.
The office is open Tuesday until 5:30

p.m,

Ads

forwarded

by mail should

be

addressed
to
59
S. St. Johns
Ave.,
Highland Park.
Tuesday,
5:00
p.m.
Deadline on all Classified Ads
RATES:
Minimum
Charge $1.10 for
20 words or less.
Additional wordsu
to 55 words will be 5 cents each, . All
words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All
classified
display
ads
1 inch
or
more are charged at the agate line rate.

Dunbar Club to Have Special
Program at YWCA Apri
Paul

Lawrence

will present

The

a program

readings at the YWCA

Dunbar club
of music

and

on Tuesday,

April 1, at 8 p.m.
A Mt. Zion trio from Evanston,
talented and versatile group, will sing —
several selections and Mrs. Naomi

Marshall will read the “Crucifixion.”
The Dunbar
club is a group of
young colored women sponsored by
the YWCA.
The public is ee
invited to this special program.

�Thursday, April 3, 1947

Page 49

EASTER

River Woods Tract

Is Being Subdivided
miles

west

of

Deerfield,

crab

and

hawthorne,

AT

auxiliary

ing

in the

Plagge

held

home

of

last

CHERRY PRESERVES :.. 39°

STOKELY'S

APPLE SAUCE

LIPTON’S TEA... . sc. 45°
BRISK—NEVER

FANCY QUALITY

of

Elm

Miss

PY-0-MY .

“SS

DEL MONTE

COFFEE

a

project

auxiliaries.
On Monday,
Jacobs,

Mrs.
19th

Mrs.

with

A
the

radio

March 24, Mrs. George
Pottenger,

Romance of Uncle
Jordan, president;

and

movie

travelogue
for

on

Colombia,

Pan-American

study

by the unit, concluded the morning
session. Speakers in the afternoon
included William P. Kleuskens, department

can

commander

Legion,

chapeau

Mrs.

of

the

Florence

departmental,

40

Ameri-

Stauffer,
&amp;

8,

Mrs.

A.

G. Strum and Mrs. Clifton Utley.
The next meeting of the Deerfield
unit will be on Monday, April 21, at

8

p.m.

in

the

home

of

Mrs.

Charles

C. Kapschull Sr., of Spruce street.
Mrs. Behrens, president, announces
that awards for the essay contest will
be made at this time and she hopes
for a 100 per cent attendance.

Fresh Cucumber
Slices, Kosher
26-OZ.

Lillian and Margaret Lang, are taking a ten-day vacation trip to Hot
Springs, Ark., and through
the
Ozarks.

5
c

JAR

SUNSWEET

Large Prunes

3 25¢

Arvo Gloss 2 pxes. 19°
LABEL

VEGETABLE

OIL

FURNITURE

POLISH

Mazola Oi]. 16-02. AGC

Wilbert
SUNSHINE

|

KrispyCrackers »x¢: 23¢

fey ASPARAGUS. . . . » 15°
FRESH

FANCYTENDER

YOUNG

ICEBERG

LETTUCE... « Qresss19°

|
GREEN PEAS... 2.:: 25° ||
FANCY YAMS ..4.: 29° |

FRESH

PORTO

DAWN

FULL POD

RICAN

VARIETY

FRESH

CRISP

PASCAL

CELERY

Linit Starch... ee 10°

PARKAY,

ALLSWEET,

BLUE Se

.......... STALK 206

SPINACH... 2 us. 15¢
FLORIDA JUICE

ORANGES...

10 ss. 69¢

APPLES _. 2 ws 290

iS

Margarine... rie; 48°
SWIFT'S

Riand Lard...
REGULAR

ae: 9133

SIZE

Palmolive Soap... sar 10°
Palmolive Soap... sar 15°
BATH

SIZE

NEW—MORE

SUDS

Suner Suds... eee. ae
NOW AVAILABLE

Vel Soap Powder ‘scc° 32°

CLEANSER

MUSHROOMS . . i 29°
FRESH CARROTS wi: 5°

SWEET

No-Rub _ ae51. 09°

STARCH

FRESH

Mrs.
Leonard
Zangs
of
Beverly
place, and her two nieces, the Misses

“trz 33¢

Cake Flour

STARCH

BLUE

Sam”
Lynn

star.

country

TOOTSIE

“cr 24¢

Catsup

SOFTASILK

507; 35c

Cc

CAN

| Karo Svrup..... 24-OZ.
can’ 15¢

other

sponsored by the American
Legion
auxiliary, at the Palmer House, Chi-

and

EXTRACT

Cheese

DAILEY'S

Miss

Leslie
Behrens
attended
the
Annual
Patriotic
conference

cago. “The
are Diane

VANILLA

46-OZ.
e

HEINZ

‘2 11¢

even-

with

shared

Marshall

PUDDINGS

Margareth

street,.

being

ASSORTED

KRAFT SPREADS

C

JAR

c

~ PKGS.

V-8 COCKTAIL. . .
Dr. Price 2707 27c¢

R9

2-LB.

8-OZ.
eeee

VEGETABLE JUICES

Kremel

OR CHASE &amp; SANBORN

'[

Beth Andrew as assisting hostess.
Games and supper table were in
keeping with St. Patrick’s day colors.
The unit has sent packages of food
and clothing for a French girl, which
is

FLAT

PIE CRUST

|

Monday

16-OZ.

NATCO

meeting of the Deerthe American Legion

was

A REAL LOW PRICE!

PKG,

Auxiliary Activities
The March
field Unit of

SAUCE

THE FINEST, INSURES
BETTER BAKING

|

Legion

STOKELY'S
CRANBERRY

CAKE FLOUR
D2.

thews

American

NATIONAL!

HAZEL

Mat-

said.
Owned by Syndicate
The property is owned bya syndicate for which Baird &amp; Warner is agent.
Among members of the group are:
Edward L. Ryerson, Ralph A. Bard,
Philip Moore, Fred Preston, L. H. C.
Bouscaren, C. Donald Dallas, and Malcolm S. Millard. The syndicate acquired the land to protect their holdings
to the north and west and are developing it as a community of fine residences.

E

to visit National!

southeast

of the intersection of Deerfield road
and the Des Plaines river. It extends
south along the river for half a mile
and the same distance east to Portwine
road.
Divide Property Into Tracts
The property has been divided into
tracts of one and a half to six acres.
All plots have been ‘protected by restrictions emphasizing architectural attractiveness, conformity, and the pastoral beauty of the tract, said Stewart
B. Matthews, vice president of Baird
&amp; Warner.
A 15 acre riverside park has been
set aside as a recreation area for the
exclusive use of residents. It has giant
elm and maple trees interspersed with
flowering

PARAL

Here's a host of outstanding values on famous well-known food
to make your Easter feast a happy one. Before you buy be sure

A 305-acre residential subdivision is
being opened in the River Woods about
two

FOOD

Old Dutch

14.02.

Cane 19¢

DISINFECTANT—DEODORANT

| Linco

Bleach____

REGULAR BAR

2 ae

25°

; Sweetheart Soap... ,,, [0¢

�SORES

he

Th

ee

eer

Hospital

3-4-5

April

SAT.

FRI.,

FL THURS.,

“Undercurrent”
Robert

6-7-8-9

April

Medway.

District 7—Alan R. Kidd, C. Longford Felske.
District 8~A. Burnham Converse,
Mrs. Roland Maus, Harold F. Pfister,
Jr., and Charles Skidmore.
District 9—W.
J. Curotto,
Cyrus
Avery.
District 10—Mrs. Charles B. Pues-

Taylor

WED.

thru

HISUN.

ard

Hepburn,

Katharine

from page 31)

District’ 2—George
Strecker, Milton J. Hardacre, Jr.
Sidney
District 3—Harry
Temple,
Morris.
a.
District 4—Ernest G. Loeb, Alfred
T. Sihler.
District 5—Irving
E.
Meyerhoft,
Charles F. Grimes.
District 6—Kenneth H. Kraft, Wil-

Highland Park
TELEPHONE H. P. 2400

Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson,
Janis Paige, Martha Vickers

"The Time, Place and
the Girl”
In Technicolor

THU.,

BARTLETT

April 10-11-12 |

FRI., SAT.

Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur

THEATRE

“The Plainsman’-

HIGHWOOD,

Deerpath

FRI..&amp;

Lucille

Ball,

SUN.

.

SUN.

Cartoon,

“LL

Flynn,

“NEVER
Cartoon

(Private
Buildings

&amp;

Your

Drake

April

Sat.

10:
9
12
2
3
2

6&amp;7

Bari

for

mee

ee

OHHH

HE HHH

Total Building Department Fees
Sasittary’ Sewers ps
6.6. ce.) cas
Storm Sewer taps ..
Water taps
Electrical registrations
Driveway permits --Septic tank permits
fees

Fees

$

474.37

collected

4

ewe

He

eer

ooEseBEHe

eecee

as Faas
ar eiees

Building Department
Comparative Data
buildings March, 1946

f
No. and total value

by

March,

1947

Respectfully submitted,
&amp; Acting

Bldg. Inspector.

tow, Mrs.
- District
Capps. :
District
District
Edw. L.

E. W. Walters.
11—Carl F. Cassidy,
12—Sydney
13—Robert
Keogh.

District 14—-Wm. B. Cunningham,
R. S. Hambly, &amp; Wm. Stanley Jacob.
District 15—Henry L. Stein, Mrs.
John Robinson.
ead
District 16—Dorsey D. Husenetter,
Leonard Nieter.

A. T.|

P. Graham,|
B.
Mahan,

April 8-9-10

SAY
&amp;

Parker

GOODBYE”
Sports

KIWANIS CLUB OF HIGHLAND PARK INC.

Reel

PRESENTS

—

The Great Tarbell

Best Entertainment

3-4-5

Mentalist

the

Loretta Young, David Niven

“Perfect Marriage’

AT 8:15 O'CLOCK

plus this thrill feature
Preston Foster, Gail Patrick

Coupons, Exchangeable for Reserved Seats on sale at:
Gsell’s (Ravinia &amp; Highland Park) and Garnett’s,
or by mail.
Address Highland Park Kiwanis Club,

Horses”

P. O. Box “A”,

Highland

Park,

Ill.

OFF”

Starts SUNDAY for 4 Days

April 8 &amp; 9
Eleanor

Parker

THE PLACE
GIRL”

In Technicolor
Morgan, Jack Carson,
Janice Paige

ADMISSION $1.00 — Tax 20c, Total $1.20
ALL SEATS RESERVED

BOB HOPE
at his funniest with
DOROTHY LAMOUR

THU., FRL., SAT. April 10-11-12
TIME,
&amp; THE

and

1:30

"King of the

“NEVER SAY GOODBYE”
Flynn,

Magician

Highland Park High School Auditorium
Friday Evening, April 11, 1947

Wild

‘Red Skelton
TUES., WED.

from

NOW THRU SATURDAY

April 6-7

“SHOW

Dennis

Valuations

at

Crosby, Fred Astaire,
Joan Caulfield

SUN., MON.

“THE

report

Musical

Eleanor

Continuous

SKIES”

“BLUE

_ Errol

following

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

Highland Park 605
Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun., 1:30

Bing
,

the

BE YOURS”

GLENCOE
Fri.,

presented

|

$377,163.00

27 Total Building Permits
OOO
23 Electrical Permits e
5 Tank and Burner Permits

Master

Thu.,

194.

garage)

—

10-11-12

Durbin, Tom

Deanna

Errol

1 Alterations
| 4 Apartment

Keyes

Evelyn

SAT., Apr.

FRI.,

THU.,

News

TUE., WED., THURS

O’CLOCK”

Powell,

|" pick

April

“NOCTURNE”

Hodiak

has

P. E. COLE
City Engineer

Events

Lynn

3,

on

Gilbert

MON.

Raft,

ril

ener

Permits For:
10 Dwellings
(S.F.)
2 Business (1 store apt.) (1 store)
3 Private Garages
5 Alterations
(S.F. dwellings)
2 Alterations (Business buildings)

4-5

VALLEY”.

In Color
Latest
News

George

thru WED., April 6-7-8-9
Sun. Cont. 2 to 11:30

“JOHNNY

&amp;

department

JAMBOREE”

“DEATH
Also

building

Donnell

PLUS
Lowery, Helen

Robert

PEOPLE”

John

Jeff

local

No. and total value buildings

April

Curtis,

“TEXAS

April 3-4-5
THU., ERL, SAT.
Saturday Matinee 2 to 4

SMART

Henreid

SAT.

Ken

L. F. 2106

“TWO

Paul

3

“DECEPTION”

LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS
TEL.

Davis,

The

Total

April

Bette

Ths

ne

March to Mayor Joseph B. Garnett and the city- council:

ILLINOIS

THURS.

a2

einai

March Building Report

Drive

(Continued

ee

-

Exchange Coupons

“MY FAVORITE
BRUNETTE”

Box

plus the Academy

April 5,9 a.m. to5 p.m.

Winner

Award

Short Subject

“A BOY AND

HIS DOG”

Coupons
News

exchangeable

A, Highland

office, corner

11, from

now

Park,

3:00 to 5:00

by mail.

Address

Ill., or in person

St. Johns

and

Laurel

Kiwanis

Club,

at Highland

Park

Avenues,

Saturday,

Thursday, April 10 and Firday, April

p.m.

~

|

�HS
ER

tg

DNS

CRS ALT TNR APCS TH

ee

;

or FINEST QUALITY

ee
NYAY

:

&amp;
RY

Busch’s

lasting

diamond

and

and

excellent

watch

gifts

sale

at

the

features

price

exceptional

you

want

values,especially

priced

for

YOU.

In

cash

10

DIAMOND

large

stocks

bridal

three

you

pair

diamond

will

find

PERFECT

BRIDAL PAIR
50
$6
$1.50, Weekly

This

our

store prices on easiest kredit,

Lowest

pay.

to

For Both

with

exquisite

engagement

and

seven diamond wedding ring is
an unusual value. Beautifully engraved 14-k natural gold. No. 96.

~ GLASSES

Choice

75¢ Weekly
Popular

priced

ladies’

17-jewel

Bulova

watch.

or

gents’

10-k

na-

tural rolled gold plate cases—
ladies’ complete
with
band
to
match.
No. 73.

on

.

KREDIT
Free

Eye

7 DIAMOND

Test

by Registered
Optometrists

Matched Rings
iti

$1.00 Weekly
Perfect center diamond with two
genuine side diamonds in neatly
engraved mounting of 18-k white
or 14-k natural gold. No, 94.

Wedding

aly, pba vy

Ring

‘ Oe

| | Mi,

Far
or
Near
Vision

eG
Wy
eM

ean
gg
i
Lenses
In

Charge

Glasses,

personal

of

correctly

50c Down
50c Weekly

Dr.

M.

styled,

appearance.

E.

or.14-k

beautiful,

new, clear vision, rimless glasses give
a clear and unobstructed side view.

ring.

you

diamond

with

matching

engagement

f

five

ote

ring

natural

Ask

Ufgy
ui

Three

Weekly

Seven
genuine diamonds are in
this neatly engraved
18-k white

to.

asset

an

are

These

75¢

Bush

Natural

for

No.

gold

-wedding

41.

BENRUS
mt
ex

diamond

wedding ring in 18-k white or
14-k natural gold. Ask for No. 921.
DIAMONDS
AND
MOUNTING
SHOWN
ARE
ENLARGED
TO BRING
OUT
DETAIL
OF DESIGN

PERFECT

SEE SPECIALS

IN OUR

WINDOWS

PERFECT
DIAMOND

RING

Ean

FOR

MEN

$250
$5.00 Weekly
Large sparkling perfect diamond
in this heavy massive gents’ 14k natural gold ring. A ring every
man will be proud to wear. Ask
for gents’ Perfect “250.”

BUSCHS

PRICES

ALWAYS

Open Monday

$6.00

Weekly

Beautiful large perfect fiery center diamond with four sparkling
side diamonds in this latest style
mounting of 18-k white or 14-k
-natural gold.
Ask for Perfect
**300-”?

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
NO CARRYING CHARGE

B

75¢ Weekly
INCLUDE

FEDERAL

TAX

Ladies’

USCH

KREDIT JEWELERS — OPTICIANS
1624 Sherman Avenue, Evanston
Chicago
4

Loop
Other

Store,

37

Conveniently

E. Madison
Located

gents’

17

jewel

proof Benrus watch.
ural rolled gold plate
for No. 33.

and Thursday Evenings

Also

or

St.

Stores

S

shock-

10-k- natcases. Ask

�in your home

ber of the family of adequate light. Make sure

today! You'll find many

little unthought-of

today that every socket in your home is filled

tired

eyes . . . junior’s

with the proper-sized bulb. A home filled with

distaste for homework ... and sister’s reluc-

warm, cheerful light makes the evening hours

tance to sew on that new dress she’s making.

—when the family is free to relax and enjoy

Empty sockets, wrong-sized and burned-out

leisure hours together—the most pleasant

bulbs play no favorites+they rob every mem-

part of the day.

CHECK

reasons

for

the

dad’s

lighting

K

TAKE ADVANTAGE

OF OUR

LIBERAL RENEWAL POLICY

To all customers on light bulb exchange service there is no charge for
replacing most sizes of standard, burned-out bulbs marked “PS of
NI” or “Renewal Service.”

PUBLIC

SERVICE

COMPANY

OF

NORTHERN

ILLINOIS

�</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="22394">
                    <text>Deerfield
Grammar
School
PTA
Officers

PTA
Members
at the
Recent

Hobby
Show

Photo by James Kilcoyne

PTA officers in the upper picture, left to right, are: Seated. Mrs. W. F. Steed, Mrs. Arthur Pagel, Mrs. Robert O. Clark, Mrs. Winston

Porter and Mrs. Cyril Duffy. Standing: Mrs. Kar! Peterson, Mrs. Arthur Kaatz, Mrs. John Vieregg, Mrs. C. E. Morgan, Mrs. Christ Siffert,
and Mrs. George Ward.

Lower picture, at Hobby show, left to right, standing: Mrs. A. F. Sturm, Mrs. Lewis Hayner, Miss Beth Andrew, Mrs. John Vieregg, Mrs.
James Collins, Mrs. Herbert Winters, Mrs. E. E. Cazel, Mrs. Henning Hermanson, Mrs. Robert Heupel, Mrs. Robert O. Clark and W. E. Sheehan.

Thursday, March 27, 1947

5c per Copy

�What kind of a man

do you want as yourMayor ?
hee City of Highland Park is like a corporation in which every citizen is a stockholder.
You, as one of those_16,000 odd stockholders,
have a very personal interest in the manner in
which your city’s affairs are managed.

The Mayor’s job is a job for a business man.
That’s clear. It’s a job for a man with broad
experience in the administration of large business affairs, with proved executive ability, with
good judgment and a knowledge of financial
management.

Through bond issues and taxes your city collects money. These public funds are spent to
provide various services for the benefit of you
and the other residents of Highland Park. Such
services as police protection, fire protection,
zoning and building regulation, maintenance of

Robert F. Walker is a man eminently well
qualified for the job. The citizens of Highland
Park are fortunate indeed to have available a
man of Walker’s calibre who is willing to serve
as Mayor if elected.
.

streets, etc.

During the year just past, the city was responsible for the collection and administration
of $550,000. That’s a lot of money. It’s the
equivalent of a substantial business.
The money is used to pay salaries of city employees, to buy materials, supplies and equipment, to maintain streets, city buildings, etc.

Robert F. Walker just recently retired as vice

president and director of one of the country’s
largest advertising companies. In this capacity,
he planned and directed for some of the nation’s
largest and best-known corporations advertising
programs which involved the expenditure of
many millions of dollars.
Previous to that, he was vice-president, gen-

eral sales manager and a director of the Jewel
‘Now where does the Mayor fit into this picture? What’s the Mayor’s job?
The Mayor is the president of this corporation
in which you have a vital interest. He’s the
executive head of the business. He coordinates
and directs the various city departments which
serve you. He oversees the spending of public
funds. It’s his responsibility to see that the
city’s business affairs are managed with efficiency, and that the city’s funds are spent with
the greatest care to insure that maximum value
is received for every dollar spent.

Tea Company. His business experience covers
48 years. He has lived in Highland Park for
25 years with his wife and two children, and is
a member of the Presbyterian church.
Doesn’t it make sense to you to have as the
directing head of the city’s business affairs a
seasoned and experienced business man? If so,
you'll want to cast your vote for Robert F. Walker.

The WALKER for MAYOR Committee
F. J. NOSEK, Chairman

Your right to vote is your most priceless possession.

�Deerfield Review
Thursday, March 27, 1947

Polunce 21 Number 52

Tuesday Is
Township
Election Day

Board of Appeals Sets
April 7 For Hearing For
2 Re-Zoning Applications

There will be a public hearing beWest Deerfield township will hold fore the Board of Appeals on Monan election on Tuesday, April 1, to day, April 7, at 8 p.m. in the Village
vote for one road commissioner and Hall in the basement of the Deertwo library directors, and a special
| field Masonic Temple. Two petitions
proposition.
will be presented requesting. re-zonJames Mailfald is a candidate for
ing, in widely separated areas.
re-election for road commissioner
Chairman of the Board of Appeals
for his third term of four years each. is John A. Benz and his committee
He is unopposed.
members are Henry Clifford Hawes
Candidates for library directors
of Brierhill road, Eugene Engelhard
are Fred J. Labahn, Mrs. Eleanor of Wilmot road, Walter Lige of ForTorbet, and Hubert Kelley,—two to
est avenue, and Hubert Kelley of
be elected.
West Deerfield road.
The special proposition is:
Two Petitioners
“Shall the Town of West DeerJames A. Flynn, owner of 16.4 acres
field be included within the provion County Line road, east of the
sions of an Act, creating the
Milwaukee railroad, has requested that
“Tilinois Municipal Retirement
this tract be changed from “Class A”
Fund,” filed July 29, 1939, as
(residential) to light manufacturing
amended, now in force and efdistrict. With the 9.8 acres already
fect?”
zoned for manufacturing, it would
There are two squares containing
be a site of 26.2 acres.
.
the words “Yes” and “No”. Voters
Mr. Flynn has granted anoption to
are cautioned to mark the ballot with
(Continued on page 50)
a cross, for no other markings will
be counted.

Town Meeting
The annual “Town Hall” meeting
will be held while the election is going on Tuesday, April 1, at 2 p.m.
in the Town Hall on Deerfield road.
A moderator will be appointed and
the annual township business will
be transacted. Arthur Baker is township supervisor, and Miss Irene A.
Rockenbach isi! town clerk.
Polling Places
Polls will be open from 6 a.m. to
5 p.m. There are five polling places
for the township election:

Precinct 1: all township south of
Deerfield road, votes at basement
of Masonic Temple.
=
Precinct 2: township territory north-

west of railroad, and block east of
railroad, bounded by Hazel avenue,
- Waukegan road, and Deerfield
road, votes at Erskine Real Estate
office.
Precinct 3: West Lake Forest

votes at Everett school.

| CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

New Building
Program For
Wilmot School
Plans have been drawn for an addition ‘to the Wilmot Grade school by

the architect, Stanley Anderson of
Lake Forest. The architect, school
board of directors, and the building
committee, have been holding a series
of meetings to study the building plans ©
of the expansion program and all the -

THURSDAY, ‘March 27—
9 am. Rummage sale in Callner technicalities involved, both struc‘tural and financial.
building.
The school board members are Mrs.
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
Fred Marx, Warren C. Darling and
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce.
L. G. Hurlburt. Building committee
members are D. C. Curtis, Kenneth _
FRIDAY, March 28—
é
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rummage sale in Hall, and Sigurd Haugland.
This is the centennial year of the —
Callner building,
Wilmot school, which was established
SATURDAY, March 29—
on the present site in 1847.
8 p.m. April Fool Frolic at DeerPlans Include Gymnasium
|
field school.
Mr. Darling, secretary of the eae
SUNDAY, March 30—
states, “The plans have been drawn
Palm Sunday.
and re-drawn several times in order
that Wilmot school will have an addi-—
TUESDAY, April 1—
6 am. to 5 p.m. Township election. tional classroom,library, and ‘gymnas-—
2 p.m. Annual Town Hall meeting. ium for immediate use.”
These plans contain space for addi- _
2:30 p.m. Wilmot Mothers’ club.
tional classrooms and facilities for
8 p.m. The Stagers,
the near future. Local contractors —
8 p.m. Masonic lodge.
have advised that they are building —
Refuses to OK
| THURSDAY, April 3—
54 new homes in the Wilmot district
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
by the end of 1948. The present
Bus Terminal
3 p.m. Highland school PTA
enrollment is 86 and with the new —
8 p.m. Amvets auxiliary
|homes it is predicted that the num-—
The Highland. Park city council
8 p.m. Eastern Star
ber will be increased at least 25 a
Monday night refused to pass a recent.
solution showing the city was in favor MONDAY, April 7—
The addition will be about the
of the proposed bus service from
8 p.m. Re-zoning hearing in village
same size as the present building.
Highland Park to Deerfield. |
offices.
_ Blue Prints to Be Shown
es
David Axelrod, attorney for the
On Tuesday, April 1, blue prints
Highland Coach Lines Inc., had re- SATURDAY, April 12—
.
12 noon to 7 p.m. High school and discussion of the expansion pro- |
quested the resolution be passed that
—
it might be used in the final hearing elections, and all grade school elec- gram. will be presented at a meeting
before the Illinois Commerce com- tion, with time set by various boards; of the Wilmot Mothers’ club.
These plans will be on exhibition
|
mission on the proposed bus service. also election of township school
again on Wednesday evening, April
—
Council members maintained the trustee.
8 p.m. Amvets Auxiliary Box social. 2, when the primary room gives a
bus service would not be approved
music program.
:
as long as schedules called for trips TUESDAY, April 15—
On Thursday, April 3, open house |
6 a.m, to 5 p.m. Deerfield and Banto the Highland Park High school
will be held at the school for all
—
which would run parallel to the nockburn village elections.
members of the district from 8 p.m,
orth Shore Line service. The North.
to 9:30 p.m. for a complete review
Shore line has opposed the bus sys-

Highland Park

tem.

Deerfield-Northbrook

Rotary Club Collects

The final hearing for the proposed
Precinct 4: township territory northbusline is to be held this morning in
~ east of railroad and north of Deer- Chicago.
Books for Veterans
field road, votes at Town Hall.|.
(section of Highland mane inThe Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary
cluded).
Club held its first collection of books,
Precinct 5: Bannockburn Ha section
magazines and games last week, All
of Highland Park votes at Ban|of this material is being taken to
nockburn school,
veteran’s hospitals in this vicinity for
Eric Siffert, membership chairman, use by patients in the hospitals.
of Deerfield Amvet post 63 has signed
On April third, the club members
up the following new members recent- will hear a talk by HaroldUU. Mcly:
Mullen, science teacher at the HighMarvin P. Patton, Libertyville; Carl land Park High school. Mr. 'McParents ... caution your children L. Howe, Woodstock; James Kilcoyne, Mullen returned recently from Chile
against getting into the automobiles Marshall P. Fredricks, Gordon H. where he was an exchange teacher.
or trucks of strangers. This warning Tranter, Arthur W. Nickelsen, and His teaching experiences in South
America should prove to be extremeis sounded because of an incident in Norbit Devine, all Deerfield.
“The interest of this post in securing ly interesting.
Deerfield last week.
members from surrounding communi-| On April tenth, the Deerfieldties,” explains Dale Berning, publicity Northbrook Rotarians will have a
Illinois Bonus Blanks
chairman, “is the hope-that they will rare experience. They will see some
Available in Deerfield
later be able to establish their own of the Official Netherlands motion
Illinois veterans’ bonus blank applica- local Amvet posts. All they need is a pictures put out by the Government
tions may be obtained from Eric Sif- little support. Anyone wishing to join of the Netherlands. They are re_
fert of the Amvets or from George this active and growing post in Deer- ported to contain some beautiful bic:
field may doso by calling Eric Siffert.” tures of Holland.
- Lutz of the American Legion.

Amvets Increase

Their Membership

A Word of Advice
To Avert Tragedy

il
3

tae
¥
I jetties ee

Pape alg

and discussion of the plans. The
board of directors and the building
committee wish to keep the public
informed of their progress and de-

cisions.
Teachers Sign Caswante
Warren C. Darling states that the
boardis very happy to announce that

new contracts have been offered and
accepted by the present staff oO
teachers.
|: Mrs. Delbert Meyer will continue~
as principal and upper grade teacher.
Miss Hildegarde Zickman will have
the intermediate grades and teach
gymnastics. Miss Marilyn Thompson —
is the primary teacher and will be
music supervisor for the school.

Chamber of Commerce
Meets This Evening
Deerfield Chamber of Commerce
will hold-a meeting in St.’ Paul’s
church parlors tonight at 7 o'clock. —
Women of St. Paul’s Guild will serve.
mi dinner, Milton A. Frantzisoe
ent..

�Page 4

Thursday, March 27, 1947

DEERFIELD |
REVIEW.
_

Thursday, March 27, 1947

INTRODUCING:

DeerfieldForum

REV. FRANCIS BOELTER

OF THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH

To the Editor:
The following was perpetrated in
a domestic emergency of some years
back, suggested by the subject matter. If it will provide some of my
friends with a mild chuckle as a return for the kind expressions of sympathy for my wife in her current ill-

Vol. 21, No. 52

PUBLICATION OFFICE
745 Chestnut St., Deerfield, Illinois
Ruth Pettis,

Editor

Phone Deerfield 485.
Published — Weekly every Thursda
Local Subscription Rates — $2.00 per year
Domestic Rate — $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents.
Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND FARK OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone H.P. 4500

ness, I shall be glad.

Sincerely,
Richard Moore Harvey.
PAPA’S COOKIN’ BREAKFAST

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
4
‘Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at DeerSnag
under the Act of March
8,

My papa’s cooking breakfast
counta mam’s gone away;
And‘I becha we’ll have something
:
that’s pretty nice today.
Cause my pa says that he can cook;
and I betcha he can do it.
Why, pa don’t even need a book!
he says there’s nothing to it.
When papa cooks the breakfast
We’re sure get all the breaks
Cause in the household virtues
;
pop’s got just what it takes.

1879.”

Deerfield PTA Has 158
Families Represented
Fifty years ago, on February 17th
1897, the first organization meeting of
the Parent-Teacher Association was
held in Washington D. C. Alice McLellan Birney, who first conceived the
idea of a national organization of
mothers, was elected president, and a
reception was given at the White House
by Mrs. Grover Cleveland to the 2,000
people who attended.
In 1900 the P.T.A. was organized in
Illinois as part of the National OrganSixty-fifth in the series of introization. Deerfield» Grammar school ductions to business and ‘professional
PTA was founded in January, 1910.
men and women of Deerfield is to
This year, fifty years after its found- the Rev. Francis Boelter, minister‘ing, the National Congress of Parents of Bethlehem church on Rosemary
and Teachers has 4,000,000 members. terrace.
Deerfield plays a small but active part
The Rev. Mr. Boelter accepted a
for it has 158 families who are P.T.A. call to Bethlehem church following
members which is nearly 100 per’ cent the resignation of Rev. Willis E.
of the parents and teachers connected Plapp and came to Deerfield in Sepwith the Deerfield Grammar School. tember of 1946. He and his wife and
First Local PTA 37 Years Ago
three children, Robert, 7, Sharon
The first PTA program 37 years ago Anne, 6, and Arlean Joy, 20 months,
included a talk by Mrs. Irving Rehm live in the church apartment.
who presented a list of books suitable
Born in Spokane, Wash., he grew
for children; Mrs. J. A. Reichelt Jr. up in Los Angeles, Calif., where his
and Dr. C. Johnston Davis talked on father was a merchant. A graduate
proper school lunches; and the Rev. J. of the University of California at
- Bosold of St. Paul’s church “assailed Los Angeles (UCLA), he received
the uncovered drinking water pail and divinity degree at the Evangelical
one drinking cup, standing in a corner Theological seminary at Naperville,
of the Deerfield schoolroom”.
Many of the specific problems which
were of concern to the Founders half
a century ago have been met—or so
changed in form that they require new
approaches. During these fifty years
John Hittle, 51, was taken to the

“Big John” Hittle

Buried on Monday.

‘the world as a whole has learned that Lake County hospital in Waukegan on

children are the greatest resource of
any nation and, that like other national
resources, they must be conserved.
Their needs must be understood and
their growth guided by the best of research.

These’years cover a period in which

‘children have come to be regarded as

something other than small adults; in

avhich organizations have been formed

;
to study child needs and child behavior
and in which parent education has be-

come an accepted term. People have
learned how the influences of childhood set the pattern for adult life
and have united their efforts to give

children the best possible environ-

ment. And of all this the National
ers
Congress of Parents and Teach
have been a part.
The great challange of today, for

parents and teachers, is threefold: to

strive to help make this earth a place
where homes may be established in
peace and where children may grow to
maturity without fear of war; to educate young people for their responsipilities as citizens of a united world;

Thursday, due to pneumonia, and died
the following day of a heart attack. He
was a veteran of World War I. |
Funeral services were held Monday
at the Lauterburg and Oehler funeral
home in Deerfield and burial was in
the Union cemetery on Dundee road.
Mr. Hittle was a member of the local
volunteer fire department. He came to
Deerfield in ‘1932 from Helena, Okla.,
and in 1936 moved to a trailer on County Line road on the brickyard property
where he kept bachelor’s quarters. He
was a machinist by trade.
The whereabouts of his wife is unknown. He has four sisters, Mrs. Pearl
Stephens, 748 Deerfield road, Deer“ald; Mrs. Fay Jones, Muncie, Ind.;
Mrs. Bertha Woods, Nogales, Ariz.,
and Mrs. May Doll, Helena, Okla.;
and two brothers, Matts Hittle in

California and Harley Hittle in Kansas.
A man of huge stature he was known
here as “Big John”.
as on a national scale, to give serious
consideration to those social problems

and in our own communities, as well that tend to disintegrate the home.
eee

:

Bei ee

e

There’s a sound of china crashin
an a clatterin of pans;
Pa says he’s just a thinkin
how to open up the cans.
Cause mama got a gadget
:
for a quarter plus the tax;
But papa says it’s quicker
if ya hit ’em with an axe.
When papa cooks the breakfast _

;

The sun goes in a cloud;

An ’tisn’t safe for little girls,
pa say's, to talk out loud.
—Photo by Ezra Smith

Ill. Rev. Boelter served for eight
years as minister of the Community
Evangelical church and for one year
at First Evangelical church, both in
Sacramento, Calif.
Mrs.

Boelter,

who

was

Arlean

Schmidt, is the daughter of
a minister, and her birthplace was Crofton, Neb. She was a dramatics major
and received her degree at North
Central college in Naperville, Ill., and
taught in the Naperville schools.

The Evangelical denomination
united recently with another denomination and the full name of the
church is now Evangelical United
Brethren. Future plans of the local

church call for the building of a new
church on the corner just south of
their present location.

Deerfield Passengers

Almost Didn’t Get Home
Sunday Evening

There’s a yowlin in the kitchen;

(papa stumbled on the cat)

An a funny smell of scorchin

;

(he musta burnt his hat)

An a sizzin an a snappin
an the smoke of burning grease;
As the landlord phoned an says he’s goin
:
f
to terminate our lease,
When papa cooks the breakfast,
the neighbors go away;
An leave word for the garbage man
to come some other day.
My papa’s cookin breakfast;
an he said he’d made a pie,
But ’tisn’t good for little girls;
he didn’t mention why.
An oatmeal isn’t healthy
we'll have hot dogs on a bun;
And go“an eat them at the store;
;
Pa says it’s lots more fun.
When papa cooks the breakfast
the angels duck their heads
An hang their harps up on a hook
:
an crawl beneath the beds.

Amvets &amp; Fire Dept.
Plan Dance on May 10
Amvet Post 63 and the DeerfieldBannockburn fire department will
hold a dance on Saturday evening;
May 10. In the past it has been the
annual firemen’s dance given as a
k-means of raising funds for fire de-

partment. This year the two organi- —

zations have joined forces and hope
~The 5:17 p.m. train from the Union to make it one of the best affairs of
station to Deerfield on Sunday left its kind.
its passengers waiting at the depot,
The dance will be held at the
and had to make a return trip to ‘Briergate country club with music
pick them up.
by. Al Sheridan’s orchestra. There
Some 50 or 60 persons stood wait-. will be refreshments, door prizes and
ing in the concourse of the Union ‘special prizes.
station, all intent on getting on the
Many of the special prizes are now
5:17 train Sunday evening. Gates being exhibited in the window of
remained closed and no lights were Sifferts’ Barber shop in the Arcade
turned on. A train backed in, then building..
’
started out—and went as far as
Western avenue, it is reported, before
the crew was aware that they had Last Rites Held Mar. 22 for
forgotten to pick up the passengers. Joseph McNeil, Northbrook
The train backed up, and, as the
Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek of the Presstory of the “Old Woman and the
|
Pig” ends, so ended this story—“They byterian church officiated on Saturday
at the funeral of Joseph McNeil, 63, at
all got home that night.”,,
the Lauterburg and Ocehler funeral
home. Cremation was at Acacia Park.
Rummage Sale __ .
Mr. McNeil, who had lived at his
Thursday &amp; Friday
present address on Huehl road, NorthBethlehem Woman’s auxiliary is brook, for the past year, was employed
holding a rummage sale Thursday as a watchman at Culligan’s Zeolite
and Friday of this week in the vacant company. Born September 3, 1883, in
store in the Callner building on ‘obel. ‘Ark., he was the husband of
Deerfield road, formerly occupied by Mrs. Jessie McNeil, and the father of the Tanielian shoe shop.
Irs. Virginia Lesser of Northbrook.

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�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page 5

HPHS Trades Classes Erect Complete Buildings
Eight Structures Are Built
By Local Students Since 1925
By T. Louise Anneaux

Part III of a Series

related to the auto mechanics field
after they leave the high school. One

The trades courses, or vocational half of each day is spent in the shop
at Highland Park High (which is located in Sandwick hall
school are open to students interested on the school grounds) and is dein preparing themselves for techni- voted largely to the servicing and recal, trade or industrial occupations Pairing of cars as it is done in any
and are also recommended to engi- typical garage. The well equipped
neering students interested in ob- auto and machine shop enables the
taining practical job experience while students to get all types of experience in the repairing of the auto,
in high school.
The Building Trades or Auto including various types of welding.
Trades courses include one half day Eighteen students are taking Auto
of practical shop or trade experience Trades at Highland Park High school.
where individual instruction is carRelated Math Course
training,

ried on and each student progresses

at his own rate of speed. The rest of
the day is spent in the required related academic courses which include
blue printing, reading, architectural
or machine drawing, related mathematics and science. This requirement, however, is waived for engineering students by special permission so that they may complete their

A course in mathematics relative to
the Building Trades and Auto Trades
has a direct practical application to
the problems involved in the fields
of both trades. The major part of the
mathematics course deals with problems involving arithmetical functions.
Some advanced mathematics is also
used.

Algebra in the course is limi-

ted to an amount necessary to enable
college requirements in mathematics the student to handle formulas and
and science.
other equations. Geometry problems
The Auto Trades course is plan- are of the type found in shop pracned primarily for students who are tice.
gOing to work at auto mechanics and
Both Building Trades and Auto
general trades or occupations directly Trades students are given a course in
mechanical drawing to enable them
to use the blueprints from which they
work and to develop the ability to
make

detail

and working drawings.

The advanced Building Trades students. specialize
in Architectural
Drawing while the advanced Auto
Trades students specialize in Ma-

chine Drawing. A practical coordination between the shops and class
rooms is maintained by the student,
drawing the plans for work to be
constructed in the shops.

All trades students study a course
At left, Steve Sturba and Carl
Adamson, building trades students, install insulation in the recently damaged field house. Below,
freshman students in the Exploratory Industrial Arts course are
working at woodturning lathes
with lamps - and floor model
smoke stands. In a nine week
course, students learn machine
processes and how to use machines.
Photos by Percy H. Prior. Jr.

Photos by Percy H. Prior, Jr.

Above Stagecraft students Barbara Lashier, Joane Wieder, Gordon Garrett, Nancy Howe, John
Marchi and Bill Winters prepare
furnishings and materials used in
the school’s recent production,
“Disraeli.” The class, under direction of Paul McLaughlin, is a part
of the Industrial Arts department
at Highland Park high school.
Students prepare all sets for
school plays, make flats, work out
color schemes, paint the canvas
and wash them. Equipment for
this department is known to be
better than at most colleges.
At right, Lawrence Peddle and
Bruce Dennett check amount of
current used by various household appliances so that fuses will
be used for proper protection and
line will not be overloaded. They
are students in the electrical exploratory course which is open to

freshmen or beginning students

in Industrial Arts.

in applied science so that there is a

direct explanation of the theories in-

volved in their shop work.
strations,

experiments

and_

Demonvisual

aids are used to help accomplish this.
Stress is laid on the practical application of scientific laws.
The vocational department at the
high school is under the capable direction of Walter E. Durbahn. Mr.
Durbahn came to Highland Park
High school in 1925. At this time the
program of vocational education was
instituted at the local school. With
excellent instruction and a thorough
understanding of building construction acquired through study in the
related sciences, Building Trades
classes have been engaged in erecting
houses that are now private homes,

the second house was completed.
Building Trades students’ next
problem involved the*construction of
the high school auto shop, which is
a brick structure on the school
grounds containing 80,000 bricks.
Records show that the auto shop
building did not require the entire
school year, and in April the foundation for the next year’s project was
laid. This' added time made it possible to erect the most pretentious of
the houses built by the students, a

home having three bathrooms, .a
game room, two. fireplaces, a garage
and a large solarium. Rubber tile
floors in the bathrooms and kitchem
and asbestos-cement shingles brought

new and interesting problems to the
young builders.
car garage on the high school
At that time, the Building Trades
grounds, and last but not least, the enrollment became so large that it
building of Sandwick hall itself,
was deemed advisable to start anFirst Class in 1925
other phase of vocational work and
There were 18 charter members of the course in Auto Mechanics was
the first Building Trades class at originated.
The Building Trades
Highland Park High school in 1925 course was and still is, limited to 30:
and this class engaged in the con- students.
struction of the first student-built
The next’ student project was the
house. The second year, experience construction of a house which proved
‘was put to good use when the next to be a school and community proproject proved to be the planning ject. The Industrial Arts classes
and building of both a garage and a built some of the furniture, the Home
house. The house building venture, Economics girls planned the decostarted as an experiment by instruc- ration and made the curtains and
tors at the school, was considered a drapes, the Art Appreciation classes
feasible -educational undertaking when
(Continued on page 38) —
the high school field house, a four-

{

�:

wage o

Thursday, March 27, 1947

With—

FRED one RED
Rainy Sheahen and Midge Preti

defeated

Herb Engstrom

and John

Picchietti in a kegling match at
John Meyer’s Highland Ten Pin recently whereby all the participants
averaged 200 or better... Rainy,
the City Hall mainstay, topped the
winning combo with’ 208 while the
former Lake County King, Herb,
averaged 210... Midge, the recently crowned Highland Park champion, boasted 205 while John averaged
- 200... Proceeds of the match went
to the American Red Cross.

Report for the Week March 15 to March 21, 1947
Last Week
This Year
Emergencies attended
-+20
203
Babies delivered
22
114
FRCL
aSIONS. POTMII OO oa rat ft echhide 22
212
X-Ray examinations
84
974
PeAWOLatory CxAMINACIONS as kis
Ys
290
3,181

How Christian Science Heals

:

at no cost to yourself. The BIBLE, the

Miltom

and

Sheldon..

‘The recently acquired X-Ray machine has been especially designed to
expertly fit men and women as well
as children ...The x-ray shows

{

Mr. and Mrs. George Smith of 118

of the world are being refreshed and healed

Pleasant avenue, Highwood, are the

parents of a daughter born at Highland Park hospital Sunday, March
23.

through Christian Science. You are in-

Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Labadie, 339
Euclid

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE textbook and.
periodicals containing testimonies of healing may be read, borrowed or purchased at

The CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM

DAILY ++ YOU

ARE

WELCOME

_ We have a complete line of rayon

‘and cotton uniforms which can be
lettered with the Duracraft process

Mr. and

“sponsors or managers are interested

Art Raff of Cedar Ave. is. back

_ home from his trip to South America... He flew down and made
return via boat . .. According to
bowling constituents Art picked
_ several new dancing steps to aid
kegling.

the
his
up
his

Corduroy toddlers are in from size

land up says Children’s Store Edna
“ment of natural colored corduroy
reminds us that we received a shipment of natural colored corduroy

packetsfor men and they are priced

7 right at $14.95.

Tickets

Attractive assortment of Easter Candles
(especially for your Easter Table decoration) tulip, rabbit, duck, chicken and
floating lily designs .........eased from 50c

Lane Tech Gym, Wednesday, April
9 are on sale in our men’s departMent.

_ FLASH! FLASH! We have just
eceived today a marvelous collection
of men’s all wool worsted suits.

Knox
the

Booth

parents

of

of
a

Park.

Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Notagiacomo
of 234 Jeffreys place, Highwood, are
the parents of a son born at Lake
Forest hospitalon Wednesday, March
19. The new arrival has been named
Lee Joseph. The maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Minorini of Highwood and Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Notagiacomo of Venice,
Cal. are paternal grandparents,

High Grade Glassware—Highball, Old
Fashion, Cocktail and Pilsner styles.
(Geese and wheat designs)
An ideal
gift for any home. Sold in sets of 6-8-12.

Each from. . .
50c
(Orders taken for monogram glasses)
Gift Stationery

Eaton’s, Crane’s, Montag’s and White &amp;
Wyckoff.

ae

Attractively boxed from $1.00

Hand Forged Aluminum Ware

Buckets, Trays and Salad Bowls.

Ash Trays, Coasters, Ice
A very popular gift item.

Priced from

$1.00 :

Please drop in and see our beautiful showing of Spring Gifts.
We know you will be delighted.

Select Your Easter Cards Now

for the C.Y.O.-B.B.Y.O.

All Star Basketball Classic at the

Mrs.

daughter, Anne, their second child,
born at Highland Park hospital on
Friday, March 21. The motheris the
|former Barbara oe of Highland

drop in and see us or else give us a
buzz and we can come over and see

Winnetka store.

the

A daughter was born at Highland Park hospital on Tuesday, March 25, to Mr. and Mrs. Leon Gressman, 205
High street, Highwood.

Northbrook are

. So, if any of you softball team

now working for Brother Abe in our

are

Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Ray of 639 Central avenue, are the parents
of a daughter born at Highland Park
hospital on Tuesday, March 25.

Once again we are in position to|~

_Navy Veteran Art Hendrickson is

Highwood,

Mr. and Mrs. Arnie Anderson, 233
Burchell street, Highwood, are the
parents of a daughter born at Highland Park hospital on
Tuesday,
March 25.

43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN

avenue,

parents of a daughter born at the
hospital on Monday, March 24.

take orders on softball uniforms ...

Highland Park High Alumnus and

daughter born at the hospital on Sat-

Countless thousands of peoplein all parts

their new addition.

Peay Olt.

The Robert E. Nereims of 1232
Marion avenue are the parents of a
urday, March 22.

clearly the outline of the feet iathet

_ shoe—pressures at different points—
_ location of arch supports—and, most
- important, whether or not the proper type shoe has been used to conform with foot by showing the fit
at the ball and the spread of the
metatarsal arch . . . Milton and Sheldon invite you to come in and try

son born at Highland Park hospital
on. Monday, March 17.

wentsia avenue.

vited to investigate this healing Science

experts

Mr. and Mrs. James J. Daley, 514
Lincoln place, are the parents of a

A sonewas born at Highland Park
hospital on Wednesday, March 19, to
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Boilini, 626 On-

Famous Names In Baseball, a
booklet edited by John P. Carmi- chael, Sports Editor of the Daily
News, and compiled by Highland
- Park’s own Harold (Bud) Pfister,
advertising director of Hart, Schaffner and Marx, is yours for the asking in our men’s department.
X-Ray shoe fitting is now being
featured by- the Fell Shoe fitting

Holle, World!

Our Weekly Story of
HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL

While Our Assortment Is Complete
(We carry greeting cards for every occasion.)

PARTY FAVORS ESPECIALLY FOR EASTER

NUT CUPS ........ from 8¢
SNAPPERS ........ $1.75 dozen
EASTER BASKETS
;
from 15c¢
COLORFUL CELLOPHANE FOR BASKETS ....................... 10¢

STUFFED BUNNIES, CHICKS &amp; TEDDY BEARS from $1.50

Their first child, a son whom they
have named Luca Joseph, was born
to Mr. and Mrs. Michele Moretti of
Highwood at Highland Park hospital
March 19, Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Angelo Sucato of Chicago and
Mr. and Mrs. Luca Moretti of ~
Prospect, IIl.
i

PHOTOSTATS.
oe Quick Service
THE NEW SECRETARY
397 Central Avenue—Room 12

Tel. 3100

— 525 Central

Highland Park

-—

Highland Park

Telephone H. P. 1553

�Thursday, March 27, 1 947

Page 7

Two and One Half Times Better
Illumination for City Streets
Commissioner Turner Reveals
Street Improvement Programs

“Gslands” owned by the city in various
sections of the community, is exA brace of improvements for the
pected to add much to the attractivecity’s streets was announced this ness and beauty of Highland oS

week by Oliver S. Turner, commis-

streets.

sioner of streets and public improvements. Already in operation is a
comprehensive system of street illumination two and one half times
brighter than heretofore, at no increased cost to the city; and a progtam of street “island” landscaping
developed by Mr..Turner is in the
immediate offing.

Architect’s Plans

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

Bulletin:
Copies of the Highland Park
Zoning Ordinance of 1947, containing insert maps of the city
as zoned and approved by the
city council, may be obtained in
the office of V. C. Musser, city
clerk, at the city hall. A charge
of 25c is asked for each booklet
to partially cover cost of production,

Deerfield and Green Bay Roaas
Highland Park 20z
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P., Morrison,
Pastor
Rev. Edmund J. Skoner, M.A., S.T.L.
Rev. John P. O’Connell, M.A., S.T.D.
*
MASSES:
Sundays—6:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00, 11:60
and 12 noon.
&gt;Weekdays-~6 :30
- 8:16.
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays eves. of First Fridays ané«

Holy Days 4:00 and 7:80 p.m

The plan has been developed over
a period of several months, and detailed sketches have been completed
by Marshall Johnson, prominent
Highland Park landscape architect.

Different treatments for individual
types of “islands,’ with numerous
varieties of trees and planting arrangements, are to be utilized.
The workwill progress as rapidly
as possible through cooperation extended by Edward J. Brown, superin-

-|tendent of parks, and Andrew C. Beck
of the department of streets
public improvements.

and

Legion Auxiliary

Luncheon April 2
The auxiliary of Post 145 of the|
American Legion will hold its next
meeting at the Highland House April
2. Reservations for the 12:30 p.m
luncheon must be made by the pre-

ceding Monday with Mrs. S Juul,
TEP 22502,
Members are asked to notice the
change of meeting date.
Miss Deuchler to Arrive

For Spring Vacation.
OLIVER S. TURNER
Use of new recently developed types
of bulbs, which have been fitted into
present street light outlets,is responsible for the brighter light, the commissioner said. Entire cost of the
change is to be borne by the Public
Service company,

Miss Carolyn Deuchler, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs, Philip. G. Deuchler
of 580 Detamble avenue, is arriving
home this week from Russell Sage
college in Troy, N.Y., for the spring
holidays. Miss Deuchler, a junior, is
studying to be a medical technician.
\

Approved by ICC
“In order to ‘provide the increased
lighting at no increased expense to
the city,” Commissioner Turner said,
“the utility company has obtained approval from the [Illinois Commerce
commission for a new reduced rate

schedule for overhead street lighting.|
“Under this new rate,” he continued,
“the cost to the city remains the
same, although the lumens in each
light have been upped from 1,000 to

2,900.”
Mr. Turner’s program for planting

of trees and lawns in the numerous

Trinity Guild to
Meet At Noon Monday
The regular meeting of Trinity
guild will be in the form of special
Lenten services to be held at 12 noon
on Monday, March 31. Luncheon will
be served the group at 1 pm. The
program will consist of a ‘round table’

Medical Research

And You
Popular articles on medical
research usually affect us in
one of two ways
... either they
make us apprehensive about
our own health—or they deal
with a drug or discovery which
strikes us as being miraculous,
but very remote from our own
needs.
But the physician whose
profession makes it necessary
for him to keep abreast of medical research has the training
and knowledge to evaluate new
methods and medicines properly. He will be glad to relieve
you of any apprehension you
may have regarding your
health. He can be relied upon
to employ any new drug that
will be effective in sickness.
The conscientious pharmacist.
too, keeps abreast of new drug
discoveries.

book review on “India” by Mrs. Harry Van Ornum, Mrs. James Pool,
Mrs. Harold Rutherford and Mrs.
Oliver Weed.
The new evening branch of Trinity
- —Pharmacists—.
guild will meet at 8 p.m. Monday,
March 31, with devotional service in Highland Park
Ravinia
the chapel in charge of the pastor,
Phone
2600
Phone
2300 —
Rev, -C. H.. Harris. A short business
|
meeting will follow the service and

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

will be held in the Guild hall.

A Little Jacket You Must Have
Toppers

you

can

wear

over everything, all spring
and summer.

Come and

choose yours in red, kelly,

181020

10.95

Garnett« Co.

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Seek [horecced Taxing Power

|

As

Lovely

&amp;

For High School District

-

&amp;B

In Face of Butler Bills, This

Can Be Done by Rate Reduction’
What is lovelier than a day
in spring with the leaves
budding and all the bright
colors that come to life then.
You can look as bright and
lovely in your spring dresses
if they are given the care
and attention they need
when they are cleaned.
You'll find no finer cleaning
than Vogue . . . you can be
assured of the best.

re
e.
is
eae

this will take the form of a reduction
in the authorized tax rate.

SPECIAL
ONE DAY SERVICE ON
GARMENTS BROUGHT IN
BEFORE 10 A.M.
Small Extra Charge
-—~e

ORY CLEANERS FOR &lt;S=.

PARTICULAR PEOPLE

OOUE
CLEANER AND DYERS
\
i

327-329 N. Green Bay’Road
391 Roger Williams Ave.
44 Green Bay Road

Highland Park 3900
Highland Park 3903
Winnetka 3360

Glencoe 1900

Brighten up your home for Easter! Have your rugs and furniture
cleaned by our modern equip-@
ment, and give a

lovely,

fresh

pearance

to

Until 1946, property in Lake county
was assessed, as throughout the state,
at varying percentages of its true
value. In Lake county property was
assessed for taxation at about 20 per this result by a reduction in tax
cent of its true value. In 1945, the rate, first, because the legal effect of
General assembly passed a series of such action is clearer under the Butlaws, known generally as the “Butler ler bills and, second, because the rebills.” The Butler bills first provided duced taxing power is more than
that all property should be assessed ample for the needs of the district
for taxationat its full value and that for some time to come.
The educational budget of the disall tax rates should be cut in half.
By this legislation the assessed trict for the school year 1947-48 will
valuation of all property in the high be about $500,000.. The reduced tax
school district was increased five rate would permit the district to levy
times. Since the rate was only cut about $900,000.
in half, this in effect increased the
taxing power of the district two and
one-half times. Other districts, where
property had been assessed at more
than 50 per cent of its true value,
suffered a reduction in taxing power.
Another of the Butler bills, however, set up limitations on this taxing program for the five year period
beginning January 1, 1946. The purpose of these limitations was to prevent districts from having their taxing power unduly curtailed because of
the cutting of the rate or unduly increased because of the greatly increased assessed valuations. This
had to be done by a general law
which did not always work fairly when
applied to particular districts.
In the case of the DeerfieldShields Township High School dis-

trict the effect of all this legislation

is to limit the taxes which the district
can levy to the amount which could
have been levied in 1942 plus 5 per
cent. That is not quite sufficient to
enable the board of education to provide the kind of education which the

apyour

home.

community demands.
The board is therefore forced to
ask the voters for an increase in
taxing power. That could be done
in two ways under the Butler bills,
either by increasing or by decreasing’
the tax rate. Either process could
remove the district from the limitations of the Butler bills and the district would be permitted to levy taxes
at the rate voted.
The board prefers to accomplish

At a regular election on April 12,
the voters will be asked to approve an
increase in the taxing power of the
Deerfield-Shields Township High
School district. For technical reasons

7

In view of these figures, the voters

may well ask, “Why not reduce the
rate still further?” The board would
be glad to do so except for the fact
that the Butler bills prohibit a reduction by more than one-third. The
present educational rate is seventyfive cents. It cannot be reduced below fifty cents. However, the board
does not have to use, and -has no
intention of using, all of its taxing
power.
In next week’s issue of this paper,
there will be a discussion of the increases in costs which make it necessary to appeal to the voters. In. this
issue the board desires only to call
the attention of the' voters to the
legislative restrictions which have reduced the taxing power and to the
procedure to be followed to increase
that power.

While the board is axious to carry
the election, it does not want any one

to vote under the misconception that
the approval of a decrease in tax
rates means a decrease in taxes to be
levied

Machine and

Machineless

Permanents
$6.50 and up
COLD WAVE

yreo.

FITTED CARPETS BEAUTIFULLY CLEANED
AT YOUR HOME
Ccacleues &lt;5: Aseholt Viles

Padding

Parnas

19 N. Sheridan Rd.

@

e

Specials for Easter Roux Tint, expertly applied $3.00 &amp; up

Rubber Tile

We have a special oil wave.. A flattering, easy to care for
oil permanent, complete with shampoo &amp; set at -........... $6.95
Powder Box Special Cold Wave $7.50
Other permanents $10 and up

HIGHLAND PARK 3500
Ozite

- $1000 - $1500
- $2900

Stair
Pads

Highlexd Park

Open Evenings Thursdays and Fridays
Open All Day Wednesdays

The POWDER BOX
365 CENTRAL AVE.
fel H.R 4

HIGHLAND PARK
for Appointment

�Harry Lane Is Initiated
Into Phi Delta Theta

APPENINGS OF
|
IGHLAND PARKERS...
Highland Park News
Douglas Reid Is Pledged to
Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity

Honors at U. of Wisconsin

Thomas FE. Brown of 1003 North
St. Johns avenue, and Joan E. Lillie

of 901 Ridgewood drive were among
195 students recently awarded honors
or high honors in the college of let-

FREE DELIVERY

Among 18 students at Brown university, Providence, R. I., who were

|initiated into. Phi Delta Theta fra-

Telephone H.P. 4500

ternity recently was Harry D. Lane,
son of Joseph Lane of 902 North
Sheridan road. A freshman at Brown,

Welcome Traveler

A group. of friends gathered at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chalmers, 307 Vine avenue, on Sunday
evening to welcome home Mr. Chalmers, who had returned that day
from a three-month business trip to
the British Isles.

Douglas J. Reid, son of Mr. and
Mrs. D. J. Reid of 218 North Sheridan road, has been pledged to. Phi
Kappa Tau, national social fraternity,
at Miami university, Oxford, Ohio.
A graduate of Highland Park High
school, he is a freshman student in
the Miami school of fine arts.
Visit Relatives Here
Two Local Students Receive

Page 9

a

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Captain and Mrs. Joseph L. Zipon
of Fort Sill, Okla., were weekend
guests of Mrs. Zipon’s sister Mrs.
Rosalie Blum, 711 Crofton avenue.
They also visited with Mrs. Zipon’s
sister-in-law, Mrs. Elsie Risdon and
family of Deerfield.

Harry attended Highland Park High
school, where he was captain of the

basketball team and took part in

Adolph’

LIQUORS
Alstom

RAS)

baseball, football, hockey, track and
swimming.

BRAND'S

eel
18
SERVICE

335 Waukegan ve
Highwood
Phone 4579

5th

Photo-Copies

Next to Alcyon Theatre
PHONE
256

LORD CALVERT
5th
$4.52.
Schenley Reserve
5th
$3.90

Wisconsin.

Recently initiated into Sigma Chi
at Brown university, Providence, R.
L, was John B. Leeming, son of Tom
Leeming of 315 North Sheridan road.
At Highland Park High school he
took part in baseball, basketball,
football, track. and dramatics, and
was a member of the staff of Shore-

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE
Highland Park 206 -

6 North Sheridan Road

ee

line.

PRIVILEGE

| Three Highland Parkers at
Roosevelt for Spring Term
Richard L,. Ettlinger of 1278 Broadview avenue, Miss Emily Pilz of 1201
South Sheridan road and Miss Gertrude Sossdorf of 225 North Green
Bay road, are listed among registrants
for the spring semester at Roosevelt
college, Chicago.

FOUR ROSES sth
HUNTER’S 5th
Seagram’s
7 Crown 5th $3.‘94

=
OLDUNDEROOF
5th
$4.09
HILL &amp; HILL
Sth
$4.09
Dh Sunnybrook |

$4.09

BLACK GOLD
5th
$4.09
FINE ART

for only *9% |

OLD GRAND

You get the advantages of a double lens.
You sight through an eye-level, direct view finder. If you
see it in the finder, you'll get it on the film.
You snap 16 wonderful pictures on each roll of 616

317 Grove St., Highwood
Highland Park 1203

Bonded, 5th

FLEISCHMANN’S
re
ida oth

$425

($675
|

ee $635 |

TAYLOR’S
New York State

Comein and see it today!
PETRI

ALSO IN STOCK
een enema mw eneenes

California Wine

sth
$0.68.
CHRISTIAN BROS.

$177.45
$102.50

Revere 8 mm Turret Camera

(repairs-renewals)
Asphalt Shingles—Roll Roofing
Wood Shingles repaired and
preserved with HOT SOPRA or
Stain
Gutters cleaned
Insides painted
Siding — Insulation
Tuck-Pointing

OLD TAYLOR

The Compact ANSCO CLIPPER Camera

‘Bell and Howell 8 mm Filmo

Company

DAD

Bonded, Pint ..................

(PD16) film. Each picture, 214” by 214’.

Revere 8mm F2.5 Lens

|

Blend of Straight
Whiskies
90 proof, 5th $4.46

Think of owning a camera like this

Bell and Howell 8mm Projector

Shoreline

|

Blend of Straight
Whiskies

Richard Peterson Receives Naval
Advancement in Tsingtao, China
According to a navy release this
week, Richard B. Peterson, USN, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Peterson
of Highland Park, has been advanced
to yeoman third class at Naval Port
Facilities, Tsingtao, China.
The young Highland Parker entered naval service January 31, 1946,
and received his recruit training at
Great Lakes.

$3.89

Fleischmann’s
Preferred
$3.78

369 Central Ave.

ters and science at University of

John Leeming Initiated
Into Sigma Chi at Brown

$3.39
$3.39

Calvert Reserve

Picture Frames

Salome Brand Roeber
Robert J. Roeber

$3.39

William Penn 5th
IMPERIAL 5th
50 GRAND 5th

Revere 8 mm Projector
Keystone 16mm Camera
35mm Camera Kodak F3.5 Lens

California Wine

5th

S

me

‘|

$1.75

F. 1. Port, Sherry,

Muscate!
Ve BR cake ak $2.39

— BOCK BEER
MEISTER BRAU
Case of 24

GOLD CROWN

$990 a

. $370 |

Leica Standard F3.5 Elmar Lens

Case of 24

Voightlander 21%4x3% F4.5 lens

a

Uniflash Camera Complete with Flash.

PABST BLUE RIBBON $360

WATCH FOR OUR PHOTO
CONTEST MONTHLY PRIZES

ee LIFE

$350

Case of
Case of 24

Phone 4579 |
FREE DELIVERY

.

�PE,

ae

ar) S : Page 10

Thursday, March 27, 1947

&gt;

JOHN MORAN
RUGS -

Your contribution to improve Mor-

FURNITURE - CARPETING

CLEANED
LIFE-TIME MOTHPROOFING
717 Glencoe Ave.

Tel. H. P. 1137

gan playground is an investment for

Edward Burwell to Be

Rotary Club Speaker

Edward Burwell, who has been an
our children, our community. So give instructor at Highland Park High
school for many years, will discuss
generously,
the European situation in an address

— SHELTON’S RAVINIA GRILL
389 Roger Williams Ave.
Agents for

LADY BORDEN’S ICE CREAM
:

©

DROP IN AND ENJOY OUR FAMOUS
DE LUXE HAMBURGER SPECIAL.

OR IF YOU PREFER, OUR TANTALIZING
STEAK SPECIAL

before members of the Highland
Almost Half of Goal for
Park Rotary club at their regular
luncheon meeting at the Moraine. ho- Morgan Playground Reached
tel Monday, March 31, at 12:15 p.m.
April 15 has been set as the deadMr. Burwell, a graduate of North- line for contributions to the Morgan
western university, served in the navy
during the war with the rank of lieu- Playground Improvement project, it
tenant commander. He will be the Was announced this week. The deguest of E. C. Schweitzer,
cision was reached Sunday at a meeting of the steering committee.

Movies on Post 145

Program Tonight
Tonight at 8 o'clock Highland Park
Post 145 of the American Legion will
gather for a social meeting at the Legion hall. The program is to include
movies of the Illinois 1946 football
game and an official Dutch government film of war destruction and reclamation.

'|Miss Cruickshank to

FILL UP WITH SCOTTS AND
YOU’RE OFF TO NEW LAWN BEAUTY!
Banish Dandelions, plantain and the like with Scotts Weed

Control. Restore grass color and health with a nourishing

meal of Scotts Turf Builder. Thicken the lawn with millions
of new grass plants by sowing Scotts
Seed. It’s done in a breeze with one of
the new Scott Spreaders.

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For full sun,
light shade. 1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. $6.25
25 Ibs. - $29.85. Scotts: for
Dense Shade at same prices.

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER— Complete food for lawns. 25 Ibs. - $2.25
feeds 2,500 sq. ft.; 100 Ibs. - $6.50
feeds 10,000 sq. ft.
SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Quick
feath to weeds without harm to the
grass. $1.25, $3.85.

SHERONY HARDWARE
314 RAILWAY AVE.

Tel. H. P. 2041

HIGHWOOD, ILL.

Speak for Kiwanians
Miss. Irene Cruickshank, exchange
teacher of Edinburgh, Scotland, who
is teaching Miss Laura Deerinck’s
class at Elm Place school this year,
will tell members of the Highland
Park Kiwanis club. of conditions in
Scotland at the regular meeting at
Sunset Valley club, Monday evening,
March 31, dinner to be served at 6:30
o’clock. Miss Cruickshank’s talk will
be illustrated with slides.
i

QUICK SERVICE
On All Watch and Jewelry
:
Repairing

Ray Suzzi, service officer of Highwood American Legion Post 501, will
be on hand at the Highwood city hall
tonight and tomorrow night from
6:30 until 9 o’clock to assist veterans
their applications for the TIlli-

nois bonus. Starting Saturday night,
veterans are asked to consult Mr.
Suzzi during the same hours at his
home, 314 Prairié avenue, Highwood.
Return from Extended
Visit in California

street, returned recently from a two

Complete Line of

HALLMARK

|

Easter Candies
7
ALSO
|
Easter Novelties

WINNETKA

Highwood Post 501
Offers Bonus Aid

Mrs. Helen C. Golden and daughter, Gloria Jeanne, of 122 McGovern

eee

CLEANERS

ground Improvement Trust.

POLK’S JEWELRY
2 N. Sheridan Road
Tel. H. P. 2028

CAR DS

DUFFY &amp; DUFFY

To date $8,100 has been collected,
with only 38 per cent of the parents
in the Elm Place school district having been called upon. Workers have
reported an enthusiastic response,
and it is expected that the remaining
$9,400 of the goal of $17,500 will be
reached. The parents not yet contacted will be called upon between.
now and April 15.
Contributions should be mailed to
Harry S. Temple, Treasurer, 280 Lau-rel avenue, Highland Park, with
checks payable to the Morgan Play-

with

Easter

— Cleaning

Set April 15
Deadline for
|
Playground Drive

Including

_ Stuffed Animals

months’ visit in Los Angeles, Cal.
During their stay there the Highland
Parkers were guests of Mr. and Mrs. |
Don De Fore. Mr. De Fore is under
contract with Paramount Pictures,
Inc. and recently completed “It Happened on Fifth Avenue” and “Ramrod” soon to be released throughout
the Midwest. The visitors were also
entertained by Mrs. Golden’s sisterin-law, Mrs. Frank J. Conrad and
Gloria Jeanne’s grandmother, Mrs.
M. J. Golden of Hollywood.
Entertains Small Friends

Jimmie Carland; six-year-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper F. Carland,
2418 Old Briar, entertained some
friends at his birthday party, Saturday, March 22. A feature of the par-

ty were some magic tricks performed
by Bruce Spencer.
Elect Miss Murfey Oi.
Of Class at MacMurray College

_ LARSON‘S.
Stationery Store |

H. P. 567

Miss Ann

Rose Murfey, daughter

of the Edwin T. R. Murfeys of 645
South St. Johns avenue, recently was
elected vice president of next year’s
senior class at MacMurray college,
Jacksonville, Ill. A public school mu-—
sic major, she is a member of Phi Nu
upperclass society, and this year has
| been copy editor of the yearbook.
_

�Page 112

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Chalk Talk Artist to Appear
At Lincoln Assembly April 2

allied topics. He also will show movies
in connection with his talk.

3jornseth’s background qualifies
him to offer valuable information to
local gardeners. A graduate of Michizan State college, he was agriculture

C. J. Bergstrom, better known as
“Chalk-Talk

Maestro

~Bergstrom,’

instructor in Michigan and also assist-t state supervisor of horticulture and

‘|Du Pont Agriculture
Expert to Address |
Mens Garden Club

will be the guest artist Wednesday
afternoon, April 2, in the Lincoln
school auditorium. During the regular assembly period at 1:30, Mr.
Bergstrom will take the children and
parents on a “travel with his paint
“pox.”
Mr. Bergstrom, a Chicago artist,
has traveled for a number of years
throughout the West selecting advertising material for the railroads. The
scenic beauty spots he has #visited
have been reproduced in oil and water
color paintings, posters and murals.

These are the scenes he produces in
color in his chalk-talks, making running comments as he works. His
permanent murals may be seen in the
Chicago-Northwestern and La Salle

associate county agriculture agent.

Canadian

Club |

Sth $547
(One Limit)

P. M.
.. $3.45

IMPERIAL
Sth: :s Saiae

KING
__
.. $3.88

LIVE RABBITS
For

CORBY’S
5th .... $3.37
'y

-

EASTER

CANA

“&amp;-

ORDER NOW, a cute bunny. Be sure

HUNTER
Sth... Se
CHAPIN &amp;
GORE

ene

conan wa ntnees
Tm e30NS mC isane

expositions in Omaha, Detroit, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and Chicago,
Bureau of Women’s Clubs, Chicago,
and Oak Park Civic club.
Here are a few testimonials as to
the quality of: the man and his work:
“Your program held the attention

PHONE H. P. 1500

His lecture will deal with the subject
of flowers and also will prove of special interest to the members who are
Another interesting meeting is sched- interested in vegetables gardens.
uled for the Men’s Garden Club of
Members are welcome to bring
Highland Park at the community cenguests.
ter Tuesday evening, April 1, starting
at 8:15 o’clock, when Earl H. Bjornseth, agricultural t€¢chnical service repYour contribution to improve Morresentative for D. I. Du Pont De gan playground for Elm Place schoolNemours &amp; Co., will talk on the sub- children will be deductible for income
ject of horticulture, entomology and tax purposes.

Street railroad stations and also in
the Fair store in Chicago.
Mr. Bergstrom has appeared before
many. organizations, such as Municipal Art league of Chicago, Travel

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FOR BEST BUYS

PR oe commeeConese portnanesat LP|
THs ey 1s Ms
WEARS OLD

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OLD SMUGGLER»

$5.85

Imported Scotch, 5th

ANCIENT AGE

you get yours,

$552

Straight Bourbon, 5th

$] 75 up All Colors

of the students as no other program

of this type has ever done.”—G. W.
Willett, superintendent, Lyons Township High school.
“C. J. Bergstrom who has ‘arted’
these many years for the North-

western railroad has been stealing the
show with chalk-talks at Detroit, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Travel
shows.”—Chicago Daily News.
“For two consecutive years Mr.
Bergstrom has given chalk-talks at
our assembly. His talks are interesting, instructive, and worthwhile.

Widmer's

THE WAGTAIL SHOP
6 No. Sheridan Rd.

Highland Park

Tel. H. P. 206

FINEST
NEW YORK
WINES
Port, Sherry,
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Ta abLate

Mr.

Bergstrom has a pleasing manner and
a soul which speaks through his art.
The pupils in grades 7 and 8 have
been inspired by his colorful drawings. We hope to have him again,”—
Belle Prater, principal, Cossitt school,
La Grange, IIl.
Mr. Bergstrom has special appeal
to adults, as well as children. The
Lincoln School PTA extends a cordial invitation to everyone.

Burgundy,

BRANDS

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�ostly

iOr

~ Jack and Jill Review

which

includes.

Jenska

Slebos,

‘cellist

ac-

by Mrs. Wilford Shipnes, will climax

Miss

the year for the Collectors’ Study

Wanda Paul, will entertain members
and guests of the Highland Park
Woman’s club at their spring musicale on April 1 at 2 p.m.

group of Highland Park Woman’s
club April 15 and 16. The exhibit will
be held at the clubhouse, corner of
North Sheridan road and Elm place,
and will be open from 11 a.m. until

companied

at

the

piano

by

Miss Slebos was born in The Neth-

10 p.m. both days.

erlands, and came to the United
States at the age of twelve. She had
already begun her study of music,

Mrs.’

and

it

was

continued

here

According to Mrs. T. L. Osborn,
chairman of the collector’s group,
this will be unlike other shows -held

under

Daniel Saidenberg and Emanuel Fenermann.
For five seasons she held the posi-

ea@h year in this vicinity, in that
it is an exhibit of rare and choice
treasures

‘cellist of NBC for two years. In the
fall of 1944 she became assistant first
‘cellist of the Chicago Symphony
orchestra,

which

position

she.

Miss Paul was the

harried April 26

last

year’s

interesting objects of art, furniture
and decoration of both useful and
ornamental conception, all posses-

solo artist of

a native Chicagoan, and received all

of her musical

Miss Ann Lorusso, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Lorusso of Highwood,
will become the bride of Earl Rich, son’
of Mr. and Mrs. William Rich of West

training here. Her

7 ~ liake Bluff, before the altar of St.
James church, Highwood, on Saturday.

MISS JENSKA SLEBOS
chairman, will hear Sidney Teller
recount “Tales of a Collector in
Search of His Hobby”.
The hobby is collecting ornaments and utensils, full size and
miniature, hand fashioned from brass
and copper.

pepril 20. at. 104.10.

‘Miss Rose Lorusso of Highland Park,
cousin of the bride will be maid of
honor and bridsemaids will be Miss —

Mr. Teller’s interest in such things
dates back over thirty years, when
he saw for sale in the window of
a Yugoslav immigrant’s new home
in America, a small collection of
miniature household utensils. Proceeds from the sale were to provide
this housewife with shiny new American tinware—probably from the

_Lorusso’s sister, Angela, the groom’s

sister, Miss Antoinette Rich, and Miss
ye argaset Drack.
The groom’s brother, James, will be
pest man and ushers will be Floyd
- Swarthout, Mike Capozzi and the

bride’s cousin, Jo Lorusso.

dime store.

Carol Ronchetto, cousin of the bride,
and Beverly Compagni will be flower
girls.
Miss Lorusso is employed in the
office of Highland Park High. school
and Mr. Rich is a tree surgeon em;
- ployed along the North Shore.

Since this small beginning, here
in Chicago, Mr. Teller’s search has
taken him all over the world. Some
of his choicest “finds” have come
from Peru, Brazil, Columbia, Egypt,

Palestine, Syria, and. various other
countries in Asia, India and Europe.
The collection now numbers over

MISS WANDA PAUL
~ Woman’s Club Finance Group

2,000 pieces, and includes such inter-

advanced study was done with Rudolph Ganz, internationally known
conductor, composer and pianist.
She is the winner of numerous

To Hold Rummage Sale April 12
The finance committee of the
Highland Park Woman’s club, under
chairmanship of Mrs. Archibald

esting objects as the following: An
Egyptian water carrier, a huge

sale April 10 in the clubhouse base- ment.
Doors will be open from 9 a.m.
— until 4 pm., and at the present time

members are busily bringing in an
attractive variety of wearables and
household articles for thrift-minded
customers.
s

Miss Melvoin Honored for
Scholarship atWellesley
4 Miss Marilyn Melvoin, datiehter of

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Metvoin of 1424_
“Wellesley College Scholar” for high

scholastic achievement at the Massa- |
t chusetts school. She is a junior and .
a graduate of New ‘Trier Township ©
,

heavily ornamented brass tea kettle
which
once belonged to Marie Anawards, among them the
Steinway Grand Piano prize awarded
| -toinette; and a brass “miracle bowl”,
an ancient receptacle used by Hindu
by Chicago Musical college, Society
priests.
of American Musicians Symphony
An important part of the Teller
award, Frederick Stock Piano award,
collection is a group of over 200
and Adult Education Council Piano
brass and copper minature animals.
award,
In addition to the animal figures
Her concert appearances include
there are about 500 other brass obtwo with the Chicago Symphony
jects, ranging from tiny household
orchestra, Frederick -Stock, conducarticles to Chinese and African dolls.
tor; Ravinia festival—Chicago Symphony orchestra, Artur Rodzinski,
While Mr. Teller’s interest is
conductor; five appearances with the
frankly in the unusuals, he is even
Illinois Symphony orchestra, Izler
more interested in preserving for
Solomon, conductor; two appearposterity as many fine examples as
ances at the Grant Park summer
possible of the ancient and intricate
series with the Women’s Symphony,
art of hand wrought brass and copIsler Solomon, conductor; and with
per.
Rudolph Ganz Symphony orchestra,
_ Mr. Teller has an impressive writeGanz conducting.
up in Who’s Who in America, in
The young artists will be introwhich he has been included since
duced by Mrs. John Mannings, Music
1930. His activities as social engineer
Chairman of the Highland Park club.
cover
a long list of committees and
At 10:30 a.m. the Collector’s Study
group, Mrs. Theodore L. Osborn,
associations both here and in the
o/

\

oe
8

—

a

:

j

eh

tel

arcs

on

Sa

sions in private
- A small fee is
insurance and
and the public

homes.
to be asked to cover
incidental expenses,
is cordially invited

to attend.

“It is hoped,” Mrs. Osborn said,
“that everyone interested in beautiful
things, whether he is an antique
collector or not, will avail himself
of this opportunity to see these un-

usual and lovely
earlier day.”

survivors

of

an

Make Reservations Early for

Woman’s Club Formal, Is Advice
Early reservations for the spring ©
formal dinner dance at the Highland

Park Woman’s club are urged by
Mrs. Roland Maus, Club activities
chairman, and her committee. The
affair will be held at the clubhouse
the evening of April 12, with Fletcher Butler’s popular orchestra providing music for dancing.
Reservations may be made with
Mrs. Maus, H. P. 4575, or her co-

chairman, Mrs. Carl Howard, H. P..
4004.

pitcher, almost as tall as a man; a

musical

_ Abercromby, will sponsor a rummage

through

The show will include beautiful and

still

spring musicale. She is

together

_ will be for sale, she said.

holds. Miss Slebos has also done extensive solo and concert work.

ee Kid, to be

brought

courtesy of discriminating collectors
from the North Shore and western
suburbs. None of the items displayed

tion of first ‘cellist with the Illinois
Symphony orchestra, and was staff

3 Miss Shpn, FT eictia:

=&gt;

Woman’s Club Planning
April Antique Show
An unusual antique show, directed

Miss

Charles E. Brandriff, tickets; Mrs.
Fred Hamm and Mrs. Albert Lauer,
refreshments; Mrs. Elwood Hansmann,
- raffle; Mrs. Frank Hough, table prizes,
and Mrs. eT. Stirling, publicity.

.

ee Views

Collectors Group of

Program at H. P. Woman’s Club

A Jack and Jill review is being
planned by the parent-teacher organization of Ravinia school for April 29 at
1:30 p.m., in the Ravinia Village house.
Dessert will be served those who attend
while a fashion show of children’s
clothes from the Jack and Jill shop
is in progress, and bridge with special
prizes for each table will follow.
Mrs. George Reeves is chairman of
committee,

| Pinte - Weddings

‘Cellist to Sar on Musicale

Is Planned in April
By Ravinia PTA

the

Women

OE ok

5

East. He and his wife now reside
at Hotel Windemere, East, in Chicago. —
s

At 12 noon, Mrs. Garfield

Day

and her committee will serve lunch-

7 Please make reservations—H.
. 2859—not later than Sat. March
ie
At 12:45 Mrs. Frederick O. Toof,
book~ review chairman, will present
Mrs. Milton Youngren of Glencoe,
who will review Louise Field Cooper’s newest book, “Summer Stranger.” Fanny Butcher in the Chicago |
Sunday Tribune, calls this a “deceptively simple tale” and “subtle, keen .
satire.” She tells us that “the book’s
greatest brilliance and charm lie in
its characterizations—”.

Those who have heard Mrs. Youngren give book reviews will know
that this type of fiction best brings”
cut her talent for portrayal.
Mrs. Youngren is very well ”
known to club audiences throughout
the Chicago and North Shore area.

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

ee

,

Girl Scouts and Fathers Get Together

Page 13

Pecriceaale

For Pie a la Mode Parties at Four Schools
“They were a grand _ success!”
Highland Park Girl Scouts are saying about the series of Pie a la Mode
parties held to entertain their fath-

HALOID PRINTING PAPERS

ers during the past several weeks at

25% Off

schools all over the city.

Parties were held March 10, 19, and
20 for Lincoln school Scouts; Elm
Place and Green Bay Scouts, and
West Ridge Scouts, and for their
fathers. Mrs. Leonard Davidow, Girl
Scout commissioner, explained plans

4-HOUR DEVELOEES
a
3
All Photofinishing work done in
our own plant.

of the proposed cabin to be built for

the Girl Scouts on property acquired
for them last year.

Ansco B2 Cadet ........ $3.45

Special feature of the Lincoln
Ansco Clipper ............ $9.95 |
school fete was community singing || Ansco Speedex Jr.,
led by the Anthony twins, Ray and
with Gose=
= $22.70
Jo,

who

are

cheerleaders

at

Lake’

Forest college. A skit was presented

Other Cameras .... $2.00 &amp; up

by the fifth grade Scouts, under di+
All Sizes of Films in Stock
rection of Mrs. KE. P. Barnes and
Mrs. T. P. Jardine. In a scene from
the skit, pictured to the left, are || Serving the North Shore thru
Marianne Kline, Debby Keogh, Sherry Mason, Shirley Bock, Marybelle
Photography.
Biggert, Connie Wales, Jane Freeman, Cynthia Brace and Beatrice
PHOTOSTATS

AT BRAESIDE SCHOOL

Struve.
Members

of the

various

commit-

(Continued on page 42)

Alden

Photography

KILCOYNE, Photographer
Pictures Taken

Hfarti 6

in Your Home

7S. St. Johns Ave.

TEL. H. P. 4470

Deerfield

Phone H.

678

P. 435

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A

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�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Trinity Women to-

Hold Sale April 5

Time Steps on a Banana Peel:

Special Holy Week
Meetings Planned
At Winnetka Church

Presto! 1890 “Ravinia Revue”

The Woman’s auxiliary of Trinity
Episcopal church will hold a bake
Time stepped on a banana peel and
sale on Saturday, April 5, in the parskidded
backward to 1890 on Friday
ish house at 10 am. There will also
night as members of the Ravinia Wobe a sale of aprons and other articles
xan’s club arts committee and their
made by Mrs. Loren Moore and her husbands presented the “Ravinia Re-

Oldsmobile.” There was a Floradora
sextet in white shirtwaists, black skirts
and “skimmers” to do a_ tennis-girl
routine and a fire scene in which the
family, dressed in nightclothes circa
1890, dashed in and out of the house

Dr. Henry Hepburn, pastor emeritus of Buena Memorial Presbyterian
church, Chicago, will be guest speak-

er during a week of special meetings
at Winnetka Bible church’ starting
Sunday evening, March 30, and con-

committee, and infant’s wear made vue.”
tinuing through Sunday, April 6,
by Mrs. Charles Tenison and her
There was a barber shop quartet, saving the canary bird, the sunday hat, according to the Rev. Milford Shocommittee. The bake sale is in charge complete with long dusters, goggles and the doll.
lund, pastor. The meetings are
of .Mrs. Clinton Fritsch.
planned for each week night except
leather gauntlets, to sing “In My Merry
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Kendrick did
Friday and Saturday, and will start
the only serious act of the evening, a
at 7:45 o’clock, with Sunday services
beautiful waltz to contrast with the at
11 a.m., 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
skit which preceded it, a park scene
Dr. Hepburn’s subjects will be as
For Those Who
which was perhaps the high comedy

DISTINCTIVE HATS:
DRESS SMARTLY
Are Made to Order

point of the evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Carlson rode a tandem bicycle
;

the properties committee had found
1890 bathing suits which were worn by
Marg Alois St veCyr Vies, ADP Rs
Schramm, Gordon Parks and George
Hadlock.

Lege
ADA. KIRK’S

ELOISE HAT SHOP
“TENTH YEAR"
548 Central Ave.
Highland Park

Mr. and Mrs. Elzie Partlow dashed

about dressed as children of the period.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Knox wheeled
in an old baby carriage; when A. C.

Tel. H. P. 998

follows:

“Through the Eyes of Jesus”, Sunday, March 30; “Spikenard Very
Precious”, Monday, March Sisto ea ages

Rose Garden of God”,' Tuesday,
April 1; “Remember Calvary’’,
Wednesday, April 2; “The Rent
Mei’,:, thursday, April’ 93+2° “ee
Thought He Was the Gardener”,
Sunday, April 6, 4:30 p.m.; and “My
Lord and My God”, Sunday, April
6, at 7:30 p.m.
Special music has been arranged
for the meetings each evening by
J. Morris Gustafson, choirmaster.
The church choir, men’s chorus,

woman’s chorus, vocal and instrumental soloists will be heard.

you'll be happy too—

The choir will present “The Crucifixion” by Stainer_ with additional

with a Ras sink...

Easter music, Friday evening, April
4, at 8 o'clock.

All meetings are open to the public,

Tah ae
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Heimerdinger as a strolling photogra-

pher appeared, their “baby,’ complete
with: pink ruffled bonnet, was discov-

ered to be Lester Ball!
After the final skit, 2 singing school,
the players strolled into the audience —
for more informal singing and refreshments from a table decorated in 1890
fashion.
‘

Mail your contribution for - the
Morgan Playground Improvement
trust to Harry S. Temple, treasurer,
280 Laurel ave., Highland Park.

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41

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Credit Terms

|

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F bcicad

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HP. 1538

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‘Highland Park 456

�_ ~‘Page 16

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Deerfield Activities

ae

-. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Grabo of 1113
Osterman avenue, accompanied by Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Wischoffer of Chicago, returned Sunday evening from NONI NNNNNN LN NNMNNTIMINO
NNNAOAAIOE
St. Louis, Mo., where they had visited
Edmund Koebelin (Violet Johnson).
Marine
Sgt.
Major Glenn W. Lusk
a sister of Mrs. Grabo and Mrs. Wis\irs. Koebelin is a daughter of the A. and Mrs. Lusk, the former Nora Marchoffer, who is ill near St. Louis.
. Johnsons cf Deerfield road.
garet Russeli, and their young son,
PRA

Attending a luncheon at Deerpath Inn
today are Mrs. Irving Brand, Mrs.
Alex Willman, Mrs. Robert Greenslade,

and Mrs. G. A. Willen.

AA

ZAK

AAA

AY

their little son, Michael, of Peoria, were

Glenn Jr., are leaving today after a
several weeks’ stay with her parents,

Highland Park, Mrs. Robert Greensade ard Mrs. Alex Willman of Deerfreld,
Arthur Kress has-returned from the

Highland Park hospital to his home on

Hazel avenue. He received a broken
R. W. Nessler Jr. of Stratford road
‘turned Monday from a business trip Mr. and Mis. James G. Russell. of vertebra in the neck in an accident at
the brickyards several weeks ago.
; Columbus, Ga.
‘
‘Nosemary terrace and will stop off at
’ Melvin Chase, en route to his home in
hitna, Alaska, after a visit with his

weekend guests at the Peter J. Ander- sster in Miami, Fla., stopped off last
son home on North Chestnut street. Monday to spend the day with his
_ They were here for a celebration of cousins, Mr. and Mrs. George Engstrom
- Central avenue.
the P. J. Anderson’s silver wedding
_ anniversary observed on Sunday. The
Major Hamilton [ong was the dinner
Andersons were married 25 years ago
«st of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hamor. March 18.
ilton of Central avenue last Sunday.
Major Long, a former New York atSunday supper guests at the Peter J.
terney, who has served in both World
Juhrend home, 666 Waukegan road,
\Wars, was the speaker at the Northi-- ere Mrs. Juhrend’s brother and wife, Srook Sunday evering club that eveChiof
Selig
William
Mrs.
and
“Mr.
ning. His topic was “Will America
cago, another brother and wife, Mr. ‘eep the Peace?”
of Highwood,
-&gt;? Mrs. Virgil

Fg Fe Fn 1, 0a FH
WD,
2 "e oe

*&lt;tomac, Ill, to visit his parents. They

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Anderson and
Re

AAAAAAAAAAAA

Calif., after a several weeks’ visit with —
her nieces, Mrs. Elmer L. Clavey of

Prairie, Tex.

Members of the Friday evening
bridge club had luncheon in Chicago

A group of high. school boys were
enterta‘ned at the Harris home in Ban-

Harvey, ending the day by visiting the
National Flower and Garden show.

are en route to their home in Grand

Saturday and saw a performance of

nockburn on Monday evening to celeMrs. Cari T. Anderson of Chestnut
“ote the 17th birthday anniversary of
street, with Mrs. Howard Bell of ChiGlenn Harris.
cago left on Monday for Pittsfield, IIl.,
“od Mrs. D. L. Dewey and chil- where they will visit relatives and
dren returned on Monday from La- friends, then will go on to St. Louis,
fayette, Ind., where they attended the Mo., and Hot Springs, Ark.
“hh wedding anniversary of Mr. Dewey’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. George W.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Allsbrow (Jocwey.
sephine Schessler) have been visiting in
Montana.

Selig

Mrs. George Beckman of Woodward
and the Juhrends’ son and family, Mr.
Robert C. Carlson of Northbrook has avenue spent the week with her son
son,
and_
and Mrs. Hubert Juhrend
bought the former Elmer C. Pettis and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Frost
Gerald, of Oakley avenue.
hovse at 713 Chestnut street from ‘n Cleveland, O.
Robert E. Pettis. Mrs. Harold Sappingrelavisiting
Here from Cuba, Mo.,
fon has been renting the house for the
Mrs. Louis de Malzeville left Sundav
tives in this vicinity are Mr. and Mrs. past year.
to return to her home in-Hollywood,

Phone Deerfield 250
Res. Phone, Highland Park 5869

Deerfield Bowling Academy

RELIABLE GARAGE

Tel. Deerfield 90

708 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Wt.

Open Bowling

J. &amp; W. POKORNY

Saturdays and Sundays

704 Waukegan Rd.—Deerfield

GILLWEVE BEAUTY SALON
Miss Dorothy,

Mr. Gillen,

Mr. Weve

Permanent Waving Our. Specialty
Expert Styling and Shaping
Free Consultation
762 Waukegan Rd.

Deerfield 884

POWDER BOX BEAUTY
SHOP,
623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julia
Expert Permanent Wavers

Try
that is

our Circlette Wave
sprayed into your hair.

DEERFIELD NEWS AGENCY
NEWSPAPERS
MAGAZINES
Home Delivery Service
POCKET (PENGUIN-DELL) BOOKS
CIGARS CIGARETTES SOFT DRINKS

MILDRED WALLDREN

VANT &amp; SELIG

Women’s Apparel

Established 192°
REALTORS

635 Deerfield Road
Tel. Deerfield 806

Real.

Tel.

Franklin Grimes &amp; Company
MILLWORK
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers . 641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Ill.
Telephone Deerfield 33

THE GEORGIAN SHOP
DRY GOODS and GIFTS
816 Waukegan Road, Deerfield

Tel. 95

|

BUSINESS DIRECTORY
» FROST'S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES
Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
_ We repair all makes of appliances

Tel. Deerfield 562—Eric Banfield, Prop.

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
634 Deerfield Road
Deerfield, Ill.
Deerfield 29

M. A, FRANTZ
Sanitary and Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR BETTER HOMES
758 Deerfield Road

Tel. 419

VANT &amp; SELIG
EST. 1925

INSURANCE
Rs

in all its branches
764 Waukegan Road - Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 155

Deerfield

155

;

LUCIUS ERSKINE

760 Waukegan Road - Tel. Deerfield 122

W. R. MITCHELL

Estate—Loans

764 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, II.
Edward H. Seiig
Haroid R. Vant

We invite Charge Accounts

Always Available

' Deerfield 175

758 Waukegan Rd.

ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION
Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accesseries
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

DR. R. D. MOORE
OPTOMETRIST
Eyes Examined — Glasses Fitted
813 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield 880

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP

REALTOR

,

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DR. G. C. PARKNEN, O.D.
OPTOMETRIST

808 Waukegan Road
Deerfield

&amp; OPTICIAN

857 Rosemary Terrace

CAKES - PIES - PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

Phone 674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Mercer Lumber Companies

KNAAK’S PHARMACY

Lumber - Building Materials - Coal
612 Railroad Ave.
Deerfield, Illinois
Tel. Deerfield 2

THEO J. KNAAK, R. Ph.
Est.
Phone

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND
SAUSAGE MARKET
Telephone

Deerfield

Deerfield and Waukegan

1884

1

Deerfield,

Til.

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.
Glass - Varnish - Glassware ~ “Tools
Houseware - Cutlery - Sporting Goods

577

756 Waukegan Road

Roads

Deerfield, Til.

Telephore 295

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES, Inc.

DEERFIELD TAXI SERVICE
TELEPHONE DEERFIELD 81

Established 1885

Day and Night Service

Office and Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36°
West Deerfield Road, Deerfield

Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers
Drfld. &amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield
eee

ROYAL BLUE STORE
722. Deerfield Road—Tel. 707
“Best Quality Always”
GROCERIES — MEATS
FRESH FRUITS

&amp;

VEGETAPLES

�aster Services in the Church es of Deerfield

BETHLEHEM CHURCH

HOLY CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
HOLY CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. J. V. Murphy, Pastor
Rev. C. O. Sullivan, Ass’t.
Sunday Masses: 7, 8:30, 10, 11:30.
Daily Masses: 7:30 a.m.
Saturday, 7:30. p.m. Confessions.

Holy Week
This week is called ‘Holy’ because it
alls to mind the great mystery of man’s
edemption:
The death of the Savior on

sion; Mass of the Presanctified.
3 p.m. Way of the Cross.

8 p.m. Way

Surely,

bach one of us should make it truly a holy
eek in our own life by attending what
services we can and thus drawing closer
o our Divine Lord.
And on Easter morn-

Abstinence

7 a.m. High
Low Masses

makes
world,

the joys and sufjust a prelude to

TUESDAY

9:45
age

March

a.m.

30,

Palm

Church

Classes

for

be

observed

during

of the

THURSDAY

GOOD FRIDAY
8 a.m. Veneration of the Cross; Proces-

Boy

business

session.

3

WEDNESDAY, April 2—
8 p.m. The choir will meet for practice
~under the direction of Mrs. Ambrose Cox.
FRIDAY, April 4—
8 p.m. Good Friday—The Rite of Holy

Communion will be observed.

and

Girl

Scout

meditation:
.

‘“‘What

in

a.m.

west

Sunday

a.m.

SUNDAY, March 30—
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.

Rite of con-

The class: Janet Antes, Nancy

Antes, Arliss

Johnson,

sechull,

Jean

Robert

Daniels,

L.

Ullmann,

Barbara

Robert

Donald

Kap-

Adamson,

Grabo,

Norman

Petersen, James Reagen, Henry Tuttle II,

and Harold Visoky.

Shall

I

Do

7:30

p.m.

Reunion

firmation

classes.

dramatize

the

service

The

new

of

With

Jesus ?”’

EASTER SUNDAY—
6:30 p.m. Tuxis society will go to Highland Park Tuxis for sunrise service.
Two morning services: 9:30 and 11.
Sermon, “I Have Overcome the World.”
Junior and intermediate church school

all

class.

con

will

Easter story.

WEDNESDAY, April 2—
7:30 p.m. Lenten service.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal..
8:30 p.m. Youth council.

THURSDAY, April 3—
7:30 p.m. Maundy Thursday:

meetings.

8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
FRIDAY, April 4—
8 p.m. Good Friday) communion service.
Confirmation class will be received into
the membership of the church.
Communion

this

_

HOLY

7:30 p.m. Final session of Lenten school
Highland Park Presbyterian church

WEDNESDAY, April 3,

service.

department

11

ST. PAUL’S EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH
638 Waukegan Road
Phone Deerfield 858
Rev. Hugo Leinberger, Pastor

firmation.

(tonight)—

MONDAY, March 31—

pastor
will
speak
on
the
theme—‘The
Marching of King Jesus.”
The Bethlehem
choir will sing ‘“‘The Palms.”
The ritual

at

10:45 a.m. Palm Sunday.

775

11 a.m. Sunday kindergarten.
11 a.m.’ Palm Sunday service. New adult
members received into church and baptism
of infants.
In sermon series of Great
Questions: “Who Is Jesus ?”’
7 pm. Tuxis society.

10:55 a.m. Morning worship service. The

will

Deerfield

9:45. a.m. Church school.

groups.

of baptism

Woman’s

SUNDAY, March 30—

TUESDAY, April 1—
2 p.m. Woman’s Society of World Service will meet at the home of Mrs. Robert
Page. Mrs. John Stryker will be in charge

Confessions and Holy Communion 6:30
7.4b am
8 a.m. High Mass; Procession; Adoration all day.
8 p.m. Prayers to the Blessed Sacrament.

THURSDAY

Sunday—

school.

the

SUNDAY, March 30—

8 p.m. Novena devotions to our Mother
bf Perpetual Help.
Sermon.
Benediction.
onfessions.

o.

Phone

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Boelter, Minister
815 Rosemary terrace
SUNDAY,

by

Reservations may be made

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek, Minister
Manse: 1024 Waukegan Road

in

all

sponsored

by calling the pastor, Deerfield 78.

and

Frimary

Breakfast

of the church.

11 330

jur faith based on the crucifixion and resacing even death or the loss of a loved

10:00

9:00,

service.

Kindergarten

noon.

Mass.
at 8:00,

departments: will attend 9:30 a.m. church

6—

room of basement at 9:30

Confessions: 3:30 to 5:30; 7:30 to 9:00.
EASTER SUNDAY

And now with the anxiety and suffering
bi war we can really appreciate this peace.

pne, because it
ferings of this
eternal joy.

until

April

7 a.m. The Easter Sunrise service will
be held. Following the service the Easter
Auxiliary will be held in the Social rooms

HOLY SATURDAY
7 a.m. Blessing of the New Fire, Haster
Water, Paschal Candle.
8 a.m. High Mass (Communion).

ng, please go to Holy Communion.
Leis
he only way a Catholic can enter fully
nto the joy and peace of a Resurrection.

rrection of our Lord can give peace to one

of the Cross.

EASTER SUNDAY,

on

the Passion.

alvary, the institution of the Holy EHEuharist in the upper room in Jerusalem,

he triumph of Christ on Easter.

Sermon

eeresn
to all.

speaking

communion

service.

service

open

FRIDAY, April 4—
7:30 p.m. Good Friday communion serv-

ice.
SATURDAY, April 5—
2 pes Sunday school party and Easter
ege hun
EASTER “SUNDAY—
6 a.m. Sunrise service and communion.
Junior choir and young people.
9:30 a.m. Special Easter program.
10:45 a.m. Easter communion service.

Photos by courtesy of ‘‘Deerfield Book”

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

ST. PAUL’S CHURCH

�‘Page 18

Thursday, March 27, 1947

~ Dictrict 108 Orchestra to Give 1947 Corer

Give Program for

Annual Concert at
Braeside Auditorium
Soloists are being chosen by competition for the 1947 annual concert of

the District 108 orchestra, to. be held
at.

the

Braeside

school

auditorium

Wednesday evening. April 2, starting
at 8 o'clock.

The program will be as follows:
Chorale-Fugue “All Glory Be to God
eG Se ee J. S. Bach
Selections from “Faust”. ......Gounod
‘| Soloist (to be announced later)
sirtng orchestra:

oe

No

“Lover, Come Back to Me”
a eae
ae ee
Youmans

MEMBERS OF THE DISTRICT 108 ORCHESTRA include the following:
“Play Gypsy, Dance Gypsy”
Violins: Carolyn Schwartz, Philip Watrous, Bob Saphir, Jimmy Meierhoff, Joan Grraiian, Oa
raei et
pa iee thn
oh Kalman
Mooney and Robert Leaming. ’Cellos: Sara Hoyer and Barry Sturgis. Bass: Jim
Gordon. Flutes: Judy
ae
Cohen, Dan Seitz and Karen Johnson. Clarinets: Gordon Chalmers,

Charles DeLeuw, Gwen Olson an| Concer! Minuet .......... Gerschefski
Mickey Joseph. Saxophone: David Cox. Trumpets: Bruce Bulmer, Larry Brown,

Douglas Keare and Huldigung’s March ...&lt;
Grieg
John Gould. French horns: Jim Goldsmith, Howard Ellman and Judy MacO0rqu
ota
le... (eROMponee |= nets
ee ee See
Douglas Smith and Tom Harter. Percussion: David Baum and Skippy Wright.
Piano: Jean Herbst,
Each
school
in
District
108
has its
Carol Trangmar and Doris Sherbano.
Earl Stricker conducts the orchestra.

own orchestra, which plays at assem-

S

blies and other school functions, The

ranced

players

of

these

musical

groups are combined to make up the

e Ee

‘

ee

Ik

:

3

district orchestra, which performs a
different type of music than is possible with the individual school units.

I

The selected orchestra is conducted by
Earl Stricker.

ee

HIGHLAND PARK

VOTE
Th Cities

Special Easter de Luxe Dinner
Served from 12:00 Noon to 8:30 p.m. in Our New Amsterdam Room

APRIL 15

|

ee

Sunday, April 6, 1947

APPETIZERS AND SOUPS
Fresh Crabflake Cocktail
Florida Fruit Cup
Apple or Grape Juice

Orange Juice ©
Tomato Juice

Canape Moraine
Grapefruit Juice

Wine Herring Tidbits

_ Half Grapefruit

Cream of Fresh Tomatoes aux Croutons
Iced Celery Hearts

_

tt

ee

:
our

Chicken Broth, Vermicelli

Garden Radishes
-

WISE TO WAIT A LITTLE FOR

Mixed Jumbo Olives
:

e

- Broiled Whole Live Baby Lobster, Melted Butter

: loover
Me

.

Broiled Fresh Lake Superior Trout, Beurre d’Anchois
,

Don’t buy ‘‘just any

cleaner,”

Baked
SugareneCured
Ham, Orange
Rum Sauce, Creamed Spinach
.
a
;
.
New York Cut Sirloin Steak or Filet Mignon, Bordelaise, Vieset Carre

-+.the cleaner women
prefer two to one over
any other cleaner. If

Medaillon of Sweetbread, under Glass, Belle Helene

zee ries seen

Roast Prime Ribs of Beef au Jus
Roast Stuffed Tom Turkey, Chef's Dressing, Giblet Gravy, Cranberry Sauce

|

Wait for

new Hoover with‘yout,
its
easier, quicker cleaning

Fried Jumbo Frog Legs, Biloxi, on Toast, Tartar Sauce

|

CW

te
e_
Hoover
Cleaners,
call us soon.

Milkfed Half Spring Chicken, disjointed, Fried in Butter
Roast Stuffed Fatted Capon, a |‘Anglaise
/

Easter Salad-Cottage Cheese, Pear, and Red Cherry
&gt;
or
Crisp Head Lettuce and Tomato Salad, Chef's Dressing

Hot Rolls

|

Strawberry Shortcake, Whipped Cream

Fudge Layer Cake

Apple Pie

Chocolate Sundae

Sherbet

Strawberry Sundae

Baked Apple

HOOVER VACUUM

Basa Cream Pie

Cherry Pie —

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Butterscotch Sundae

|

e

,
Jello ©
,
Liederkranz, Camembert, or Blue Cheese with Crackers
Coffee

Tea

Milk

:

Buttermilk

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:

Best Cleaner Yet—Order Yours Today

HERONY HARDWARE |
eyarabe WN
Highwood, III.
Tel. H. P. 2041

BAY

Call Columbia Household Appliances
Radio and Washer Repair Service

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

New Troop Rating Plan
Development of Good Troop
A new troop plan was adopted by
the executive board of the North Shore
Area council, Boy Scouts of America,
at its regular monthly meeting held
Tuesday evening, March 11, at the
Heatherstone in Hubbard Woods. The
new rating plan was developed by the
activities committee and was presented
to the board for approval by the com- mittee chairman,
J.E. Jacobs, of Winnetka.
The new system of rating the various
units of the council will cover 14 of
the most essential items necessary in
building a well balanced Scout troop.
This rating plan will be based on troop
administration, leadership, thorough
Scout training and activities, and civic
service. It will replace the antiquated
point system that has been used in the
past and often critized as being unfair
to smaller units in the Council.
How the Plan Wilk Work
Each troop will be presented with an
appropriately designed wall plaque based on the theme, “Our Scouting Record.” As each troop qualifies on any
of the fourteen points, a Blue Attainment seal will be presented to the organization by the commissioner. These
seals will be affixed to “Our Scouting

Record” plaque.
At the end of each Scoutingyear, the
troop that has successfully qualified
for all the 14 attainment seals will be
presented with a silver “Award of
Excellence” seal, and a plaque. A gold
seal will be presented to the unit that

qualifies for 11 of the 14 Attainment
seals anda silver seal will be presented those who qualify for 8 of the 14.
These awards will be made on some
special occasion, such as a court of

total enrollment of the troop during the
previous year.
4, ADVANCEMENT
At least 50%, of Scouts in the troop
must advance at least one rank during|.
the Scouting year. For Scouts of Star
rank and above, three additional merit
badges will count as an advancement.
5. TENURE
Re-register as active Scouts at least
60% of Scouts who were registered
the previous year.
6. LEADERSHIP .a. Must have troop committee which
meets at least by-monthly.
b. Must use patrol system and,have
it working satisfactory.
c. Scoutmaster or one of his assistants must have taken or be taking
Scoutmaster’s training course.
7. HIKING
Have an approved over-night or day
hike into the country. at least every
60 days from September to June with at
least 60% of the troop enrollment participating. At east three of these must

AGENT ALLIED VAN LINES

STORAGE
374 Central Ave., Highland Park

H. P. 181

WW EISOIN’S (re :

secceeeeeeeseee

heclon

By

Food Consultant to Wilson &amp; Co.

Ham Highlights Easter Dinner
Ham! Luscious ham! What a beautiful sight it.
makes highlighting the Easter dinner. And whata |
marvelous flavor it adds to this festive meal!

be overnight hikes and at least one meal

must be cooked out on each occasion.
Must be under Adult leadership.
8, PARENT INTEREST
Troop must hold at least 3 events
during the Scouting year (Exclusive of
Courts of Honor) at each of which at
least 50%of Scout enrollment is represetited by at least one parent.
9, COUNCIL PARTICIPATION
a. Must have a duly appointed representative as a member of the Council.
b. Must take part in all Council-wide
activities.
10. ATTENDANCE
Record of attendance at each Troop
meeting must be kept. An average attendance of 75% of active enrollment
(Continued on page 20)

or some other

Re-register the. troop’ on or before
the fifteenth of the month in which the
troop charter expires.
3. RECRUITING
Recruit new Scouts during the year

TRAVEL

Glazed .
Baked Ham

Without A Care!

Bake a Wilson’s Ham according to directions within the package.
One-half hour before the ham is done, remove from oven and trim off
the skin (there is a small amount left on each ham) except for a crown
around the shank end.For an easy glaze: Beat one cup of currant or
apple jelly with a fork and spread over the ham. Slip into oven for
another half hour to glaze, remove from oven, and decorate as desired. Maraschino cherries, blanched almonds, and green pepper were
used in decorating the ham above.

SPRING AND SUMMER ~
Tours to:

OZARKS

SMOKIES
CALIFORNIA

MEXICO
GUATEMALA

-Day Cruise on

GREAT LAKES|

From $98.50

:

H. and R. ANSPACH

TRAVEL BUREAU
37014 Central Avenue
George L. Lundberg, Manager
Phone:
Highland
intone
Disco 1211
Tooke Park
Sine SPUD Ce

equal in number to at least 25% of the

- FURTH &amp; COMPANY

=

The Modern Ham

Like Variety?

is a Wilson’s Tender Made Ham, :

the original ready-to-serve ham in the
_ yellow wrapper; it’s grand, hot or cold.
Wilson &amp; €o.’s special secret process makes each Tender Made Ham
“The Ham you cut with a Fork’’!

936 E. 47th

Advisers

Street

and

‘Chicago

Directors
All Phones Kenwood 0700

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
We offer complete and highly adequate facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known
Furth staff of directors.
:

adding the glaze and decorations. To
do so, cut fat surface in squares or dia-

monds to depth of about a fourth

inch, using a sharp knife. Insert cloves
where lines intersect if desired.

and full-flavored. This is the Wilson
ham that must be cooked before eat;
ing. It’s truly delicious.
When ordering your Easter ham, be

. It Saves Time
',.. to wilt thin turnip slices in salt

sure to state whether you wish a Tender Made Ham or a Certified Ham.

water 1 hr. before rolling to make lily
garnish. Then crisp in cold water 10 to
15 min. Insert carrot strip for stamen.
... to dip knife blade in warm water
before slicing hard cooked eggs. —
Creamed Clear Brook Eggs on toast
makes a grand supper dish for Easter. |
Happy Easter,
:
George Rector

Plan Holiday Menu
Baked Certified or Tender Made
Ham, scalloped potatoes, buttered
peas, fruit salad topped with orange
ice, and daffodil cake make an Easter
dinner befitting the day.

‘AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
56 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

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ORR ee

ie A as ze eS oi 5

‘

Rt

a
ices

Then be prepared with a number of
e
different glazes for baked ham. Orange =~
marmalade, beaten with a fork, is a
ny
quickie. Another? Spread hot ham
with prepared mustard and sprinklea
cup of light brown sugar over it. Pat
on firmly.

Usuil method ie to ecore fat before 2

- Take Your Choice
Wilson’s Certified Ham in the
orange wrapper is equally tender, mild,

Funeral

a

special function of the Boy Scouts.
How to Qualify
1. TROOP PLANNING
File at the Scout office on or before
October 15, on form provided, an outline of the troop’s objectives and program for the Scouting year duly approved by the troop committee.
2. REGISTRATION

:

MOVING AND PACKING OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS

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dinner

Sahn Page Ge

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honor, troop

Ss

IREDALE

-Scout Council Board Adopts
Fourteen Points Given for

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6
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EA AeipAce

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page20

NEW AND OLD

FLOORS SANDED
AND FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL
SHELBY STEWART
1
8S. PARKWAY
PROSPECT HEIGHTS, ILL.
Phone Arlington Heights 7120-M

CENTRAL 5218
Ask

for

Mrs.

Stewart

I have sanded and finished over 10606
of the finest homes along the North
Shore.

Mrs. Kirk Accepts

100 West Monroe street, Chicago.
“Under the inspiring leadership of
Mrs. Kirk, residents of Highland Park,

Local Leadership of

War Orphans Appeal

long noted for their humanitarianism,

will have an opportunity to

play a

Home Builders Plan
Ultra Modern Small
Home for Veterans

Mrs. Van Gorder Kirk of 203 Pros- major role in helping the War Orphans

Chicago area home builders have anappeal achieve its goal of $800,000
nounced development of the first semineeded
to
bring
homeless
children
from
Park chairmanship of the woman’s
Europe to a new life in America,” said standardized, ultra-modern dwelling for
| division, Chicago area, in the campaign Utley.
veterans embracing all of the “wishwe-hads” usually omitted from lownow being conducted by the US ComMarshall Field is the national presimittee for the Care of European Chil- dent of the US committee, under whose cost houses.
Designed to sell for less than $10,000
dren, according to an announcement by auspices more than 700 war orphans
Clifton Utley, general chairman, from already have been brought to this including the lot, the spacious, twobedroom home will bring realization of
campaign headquarters at Room 700, country.
most post-war living ideals to the
pect avenue has accepted the Highland

‘verage veteran’s family, the announcement-said.

Announcing the appointment of

FARMER BEVERAGE CO.
307 OAKWOOD AVENUE

PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 2030

It will include an abundance of closet
and storage space, recreation and hobby
accommodations, streamlined kitchen,
model laundry facilities, automatic gas
heating and Summer comfort attained
through newest-type insulation and a
circulating fan.
Plans for the dwelling were selected
by a veterans’ housing council representing more than 1,000 contractors,
architects, material dealers, real estate
operators and supply men comprising
the ChicagoMetropolitan Home Build-

as distributor of

ers association.

MILWAUKEE

BEER

in “the
Highland Pad,
Area

Veterans Work on Plans
Collaborating with the council were
housing committees of various exservicemen’s organizations throughout
the Chicago area.
The first group of several thousand
such houses to be erected for veterans’
families will be ready for occupancy
by early summer, association. officials
stated. More will follow rapidly.
So that ex-servicemen can inspect
one of these “perfected” dwellings at
the earliest possible date, a ful-sized
model, completely furnished in ‘every
detail, will be erected at the Chicagoland Home show to be held May 17 to
25 in the Chicago Coliseum.
Martin C. Huggett, the association’s
executive director, pointed out that most
model homes of the past depicted a
standard of living beyond the ability
of the average wage earner. He added:
“It was the association’s purpose to
develop a home combining spaciousness,
beauty, efficiency and utility with every
‘| possible post-war comfort and convenience and still keep it within the means
of the average young veteran.
“To achieve such an objective required use of every time and labor-saving method discovered during the war,
together with the most appropriate and
complete equipment and the most advanced thought in better living.
(Continued on page 25)

Scout Council
(Continued from page 19)

002A friendly host
to a host offriends
When friends drop in, serve good
Gettelman beer . . . a welcome addition to _

the best of parties. It’s a friendly,
_ satisfying beer . . . ttaditionally fine

|

for four generations. Try a case!

A. GETTELMAN BREWING COMPANY. °. MILWAUKEE,

WISCONSIN

of the Troop throughout theyear shall
be required.
11. BUDGET
Must operate on an approved Budget
plan and meet its obligations promptly
throughout the year.
12 BOX SELEFE,
~ At least 40% of the Troop enrollment
must be subscribers to Boy’s Life.
13. CIVIC SERVICE
Submit to the Scout office Batons
May 15 a report listing various civic
and institutional services rendered by
the troop during the past year.
14. SUMMER CAMP

At least 35% of the troop enrollment, must spend at least ten days at
an approved ‘summer camp.

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Suburbia
Gleanings From the Press of
Nearby Country Towns
CATALOG OFFICE
Hinsdale now has the answers to its questions, “Shall we have a World
War II honor roll located at some appropriate place in the village?” and

“Shall we have a World War II memorial?”
mittee,

charged with

‘The Memorial Survey com-

canvassing residents of the

village,

reported

that

of those replying, 80 per cent favored an honor roll, but 42 per cent were
against any memorial for the last war. Suggestions for an honor roll
ranged from plaques to illuminated signs while memorial ideas included a
swimming school, added recreational facilities for children, a hospital, a
children’s clinic, nurses’ sanatorium dormitory, a portion of a. new high
school about to be erected, a library, an auditorium, a fieldhouse, a concrete
stadium, tree planting, veterans homes and’a
place for them to meet, and a
community cented to benefit the handicapped, particularly incapactitated
former servicemen.

(D)

Trees, flowers and shrubs in the wooded section of Crow Island park,

‘Winnetka, come their buds in spring, will not be longer embarassed by
homo sapiens standing first on one foot and then on the other while he

muses, “Now what the dickens is that plant?”

Through efforts of the

Women’s Garden club, the village park commissioners have authorized funds
to prepare entrance signs for the wooded area itself, being developed as a
wild bird refuge, and also smaller signs to distinguish different varieties ‘of
growing things in what will be a native wild flower sanctuary. More than
15,000 plants were placed in the area prior to the war and more will be
added this spring.
We all know that the small boy in kindergarten is going to be a fireman, policeman or garbage collector and the girl chooses dressmaking,
teaching and nursing, but what does a high school junior year studem
envisage as his or her life’s work? Lyons Township high school, La Grange,
found in a poll that girls haven’t changed much in their selection of a
vocation except more desire secretarial, modelling, photography, music and
dietetics work. One girl chose to become a friendly undertaker and another
would adore FBI investigative activity.
The young fella, though, has forgotten the fire-police-garbage complex
and will settle for engineering, civil, aeronautical, mechanical and electrical;
mechanics; farming; athletic coaching; professions; sports writing; engraving; shoemaker; military career and one with possibly an eye for a daily
Thanksgiving menu will be a oe raiser if he has ®anything to say
about it.
\
A quick and easy guide to the village is the object Wilmette wishes.to
achieve with the forthcoming publication of a handbook as part of its
75th anniversary celebration of community incorporation. Five official
boards,—village, library, school, park and recreation will sponsor the tome
and assist in pertinent facts collated for publication. Each resident present
and future will receive a copy and, we quote from a newspaper release on
same,’—other copies will be made available to real estate brokers.

CLEANERS

CARPETING CLEANED
@® Rugs
eee
5

@ Furniture

(B) 20 C 4531 $25.50
Fed, Tax incl.

(A)

30. C4612
3 for $2.00

Smart Accessories
for your Easter
wardrobe
|

(A) Sheer pure silk hose.

8!/x10 2. 3 for $2.00

© Carpets
NO DANGER
OF SHRINKAGE. Hina
BANISHTHE |
4

(C) 20 C 3879 $4.89

Yes, Wards Spring Catalog has a wide selection of
smart new accessories! Several pages of footwear
deftly designed for style and comfort . . . handsome
_ matching purses made of finest leathers! Clever new
belts, sheer hosiery . . . in fact everything you need
to complete your Easter costume! So place your order now... at Wards Catalog Office!

RETTIG BROS.

THE WILD
SYSTEM TO
YOUR HOME.

23 C 1055
Pr. $9.95

{

(B) Lesco original in gen-

uine pigskin

$25.50 ©

(C) Matching pigskin belt

_
ea

Leather lined $4.89
ES heed

es

pr. $9.95

MOTHPROOFING
“The Time to Buy
Is Before They Fly”

Phone H.P. 676

TELEPHONE H. P. 4800

28 NORTH FIRST ST.

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Thursday, March 27, 1947

oe

LEGALNOTICE
SUPERVISOR'S
TOWN OF DEERFIELD

STATEMENT OF FUNDS FOR PUBLICATION
STATE OF ILLINOIS

COUNTY OF LAKE

:
F DEERFIELD
i eeeee

OFFICE OF TOWN SUPERVISOR

ELSIE T. PLANT
Notary Public.

‘

3
The following is a statement by W. W. Steele, Supervisor of the
_ Town of Deerfield in the County and State aforesaid, of the amount
_ of public funds received and expended by him during the fiscal year
just closed, ending on the 27th day of March, 1947, showing the
amount of public funds on hand at the commencement of said
fiscal year; the amount of public funds received, and from what
sources received; the amount of public funds expended, and for what
purposes expended,, during fiscal year ended as aforesaid.
+The said W. W. Steele, being duly sworn, doth depose and say
_ that the following statement by him subscribed is a correct statement
of the amount of public funds on hand at the commencement of the
fiscal year above stated, the amount of public funds received, and
_- the sources from which received, and in the amount expended, and
purposes for which expended, as set forth in said statement.
Subscribed and Sworn to before
W. W. STEELE
me, this 27th day. of March, 1947.
Supervisor
tae

Apr. 26
Apr. 26
Apr. 26

Apr. 26
Apr. 26
Apr. 26
May 10
May 10
May 10
May 10
May 10
May

10

May
May
May:
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May

10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
28
29
29
29
29
29
29
29
29
29

REPORT

6470
6471
6472
6473
6474
6475
6476
6477
6478
6479
6480
6481
6482
6483
6484
6485
6486
6487

Florence M. Sheahen, Collector’s help 4/15 to 4/27 ....-.-c---0---Helen O'Leary... Collector’s ‘help 4/22 to: 4/27 \vccccadecchonekecccsnns
Stella Larson,-Collector’s help 4/22 to 4/27 -.ecccececcccecesseneeeeeeee
Helen Sneeden, Collector’s help 4/22 to 4/27 -ccccccecececcesseeceeee
Moroney Insurance Agency, Bal. 1945 Collector’s Bond ........
Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund Contribution 4/1 to 4/30 -..........Press .Frint Shop, Printing Colleetor’s Office 2-2... c0c000
2.
Moroney Insurance Co., Burglary Policy Collector ............
Moroney Insurance Co., Collector’s Bond --.--cc---cccccecccececececsecee
Illinois Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 5/6 o..-.e-ccceccccseeee
Ilinois Bell Tel. Co., Service No; 2100 Bill 5/6 -2....ecc-ceccccnsIllinois Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 6009 Bill 5/6 00.2...
Bible bo Plants ealaty pb / 1 to&lt;by lb. bo vct eit ie
oe
Johnson salt
yb (Ae tomb elt
se ee
E. K. Catton, Repair office typewriter ................
Harry KE. Eichler, Assess. Clerk 5/1 to 5/15 .
Mildred Hackbarth, Assess. help 5/1 to 5/15 .......
Olson Printing Co., Printing envelopes ASSeSSOY weecceccececeeee
City Highland Park, Photost. Service, Assessor ....--.--:-2:-200--Florence M. Sheahen, Collector Help 4/29 to 5/15 -.eescccc--e-c-Helen Sneeden, Collector Help 4/29. to 5/15 ceccccccccececcccnseeeee
Stella Larson, Collector’s Help 4/29 to 5/15 -2.-.c.ccckcccccecsenceee
Helen O’Leary, Collector’s Help 4/29 to 5/15 ccccceceecececececceseee
Agnes Miller, Collector’s Help 4/29 to 5/15 cocccccceccccecccee-cseenece
Larson’s Stat. Store, Collector’s Office Supplies .........cccccccse0
Highland Park News, Pub. Town Meetings Notices ............
Eaurblie Service Company, irht pill. -b /26.. 22c.t st ccc ste
Hisies Ds Plant; Salary 5/4
Ge tae obs a se eo
dca ees
JOD Ol), WAAL
y OP LOILO “ODES oii eae
ees
te
W. W. Steele, Salary for May
Albert Larson, Services for May
WauWs svecles Meetings Tor May.
404s ee
oN Ee ea
H. P. Beverage Co., Storing Elect. Material June .....-......2...
William, .Pearl town all Rent, (anes 3 seis 2 hci
ests
Joseph ‘Morrison, Janitor Service, May .-.22-2i..c-cccccecccceecocecasnoede
Harry Earhart, Assessor, Salary month May&gt; -2...0....0.2::ccceceo-e
Harry Earhart, Assessor, Travel &amp; Transportation May...
Harry E. Hichler, Assessor’s Clerk 5/16 to 5/81 c.ncceee-c--0Mildred Hackbarth, Assessor’s Help 5/16 to 5/81
Gregory M. Sheahen, Collector, May Fees ...............Florence Sheahen, Collector’s Help 5/16 to 5/31
Helen Sneeden, Collector’s Help 5/16 to 5/31
Helen O’Leary, Collector’s Help 5/16 to 5/31
Stella Larson, Collector’s Help 5/16 to 5/81 ccicceetee
ceteeceeceeeeeee
County of Lake, Collector’s Supplies Printing &lt;..2..-.....c2.--.cc1-0
Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Total Contributions May ............
lis; Bell: ‘Tel. Co.,: Service No. 2100 Bill.6/6) 22.20. Ae.
Hise:
lank taming LOL Omige stpioe ito-ncteac ep lucue ee cee
Tene Mea be Seblar yO)
1: suOrsO YL
Of ck cee uae a
ee
Cen Ue Olney Salaty ob le GO&gt; Of
fo. hoe eo ee kere eee
Sherony Hardware, Supplies Assessor’s Office ....-222.c0-22c.c.-Husenetter Hardware, Supplies Assessor’s Office ..............-.
Harry E. Hichler, Assessor’s Clerk 6/1 to 6/15 -cocceececsccceeee
Mildred Hackbarth, Assessor’s Help 6/1 to 6/15 -..c.-...2,-0--Gregéry' M. Sheahen, Collector’s Fees June .......--222-ccccessceneeeee
Florence Sheahen, Collector’s Help 6/1 to 6/15 -.....eeeececeeeeee
Helen Sneeden, Collector’s Help 6/1 to 6/15 -......c.ccecsccceecencenee
Helen O’Leary, Collector’s Help 6/1 to 6/15 ceeccieeccccceccceeeenee
Stella Larson, Collector’s Help 6/1 to 6/15
Robert Franz, Collector’s Help 6/1 to 6/15 ......
Olson Printing Co., Printing Collector’s Office -....2..22-.22--2-P., B.’Pettibone, c/o Co., Town Clerk’s Supplies 2.02... 60c...
ieee hel. -Coswoervice NO. bond Bill O76disse
ete
Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 6009 Bill 6/6 .2..2..-s.c:sscccsesceeeeeee
Hage. TT. Plant, Salary 6/'5&lt;to.-6/30 sais
icee
atts
W. W.-Steelie, Salary Month June 2.000...22.000000...beesayeacdaance Apacs
Albert Larson, Service Month June 2i22cciccdecciccctleetesecccce-ee
sonn -Ugolini; Salany -6/26"-to 6708 ia..-8 a siete
eee
W. W.-;Steele, Board: Meetings June. -..2222.400
2ctensecaccdecence
Howard W. Huber, Board Meetings 3/22 to 6/27 .........--000-C. J. Shetzley, Board Meeting 8/22 to 6/27 2.....11.0-.eecssseeeeeeee
Samuel S. Smith, Board Meeting 3/22 to 6/27 ........
D. D. Husenetter, Board Meeting 3/22 to 6/27
Frank Nustra, Board Meetings 8/22 to 6/27
Joseph
Morrison, Janitor Service June ...-...2.....s.eccccccsccosesnccecee
William “Pearl. 7 own Mall Rent OS Wiw eg: theo cocaine

May 29

May 29
May 29
May 29
My commission expires April 29, 1947.
May 29
ye
May 29
Poor Rand General Fund May 29
_ Amount of funds at the commencement of the fiscal year....$ 24,372.64
‘$ 11,285.98 May: 29
May 29
May 29
May 29
June
13.
_ From Treasurer of Lake County Taxes collected $789.08
eee
distributed as follows
657.56
$
131.52 June 13
June
138
From Town. Collector fees
17,198.37
June 18
epee
Adds
June
13.
;
Re-imbursements
Ps
3,509.92
16.05
re
Rent from polling place
36.00 June 13
June 13
- otal funds received —
$ 4,167.48
$ 17,381.94 June 13
Total funds to account for
-$ 28,540.12
$ 28,667.92 June 18
June 13
June 13
FUNDS ACCOUNTED FOR AS FOLLOWS:
June 138
June 13
Total expenses as detailed in schedule:
June 13
June 20
Office of W. W. Steel, Supervisor, and other Town
eet Af
expenditures
$ 13,643.49
$ EL 12-T4 June 20
June 27
*Bogardus
653.94
Renorry marhart, Asseskor’s OIG
i... ccvsdece Gaul cadence
7,786.00 June 27
Gregory Sheahen, Collector’s Office ...21..10cccecceeeeeeeceeeeeeeee
4,806.90 June 27
June 27
_ otal funds expended
$ 14,297.43
$ 24,255.04 June 27
CASH IN BANK, PER BOOK, AT END OF FISCAL YEAR..$ 14,242.69
$
4,412.88 June 27
June 27
‘Less, relief orders issued and unpaid .................2..--. ee Coe $
Soote
&lt;
June 27
_ Total funds available at end of fiscal year ..........-seccccecceneveeee $ 13,919.97 4°.
$
“4,412.88 June 27
June 27
_ *—This amount represents relief granted to indigent war veterans by the Bogardus June 27
Officer, over which the Supervisor has no control.
June 27
June 27dune 27
GENERAL FUND |
June 27
June 27
Date Check No.
To Whom Paid
On What Account Paid
Amount
June 27
1946 .
June 27
mimes 2o 04c4..Kisté .T. Plant, Salary: 3/165to 3/84 cs cckcck
cee ok. $
61.63 June 27
Narre 29.6425 John Ugolini, Salary: 3/16. to 3/81 ccccccclksccsscioecisceSecdeecsccoctes
101.32 June 27
Mar. 29 6426 Albert Larson, Service for March ....................
.
72.38 June 27
Mar. 29 6427 Joseph Morrison, Janitor services March ....
10.00 July 5
Mar. 29- 6428 Harry E. Eichler, Assess. Clerk salary 3/16 to 3/31
97.82 July 5
povar. 29° 6429 Mildred: Hackbarth, “Assess. “help 22.0.
10.50 July 5
Mar. 29 6430 Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions 3/16 to 3/81........
55.16 July 16
_ Mar. 29 64381 Collector Internal Rev. Tax Withheld 3/16 to 3/31 ........2..00.-.
10.30 July 16
et
:
Bank Charge, Stop payment on check .0......0......ccccsecececceceecece
25 July 16
Apr. 5 6432 W. W. Steele, Meetings 3/22 to 8/29 .......ccicccccteeeccccececenececes
24.13 July 16
mpr. 56433 H. A. Bromberg, Legal: Blanks Bill 8/27 22.ccooiccccekecccccce
4.79 July 16
Apr. 5 6484 Baird and Warner, Inc., Office rent April .2....c...cccccccceeeecceeeee
45.00 July 16
Apr. 5 6435 Highland Park Press, Pub.. Report and Election Notices....
156.40 July 16
Apr. 5 6436 Richard W. Hawkins, Storage Election Material April ........
10.00 July 25
Apr. 5 6437 William Pearl, Town Hall Rent March and April ...............
94.00 July 31
Apr. 5 6438 Harry Earhart Assessor, Salary Jan., Feb., March ................
241.24 July 31
Apr. 5 6439 Harry Earhart Assessor, Trav. &amp; Trans. Jan., Feb., March
187.50 July 31
Apr. 5 6440 Mary B. East, Fostmaster, Postage stamps for Assessov....
45.09 July 31 |
Apr. 5 6441 Jas. A. Thomson, Postmaster
Postage stamps for Assessor
45.09 July 31
pEpin 126 o442.-. Mista. P. Plant, Salary 4/1 to’ 4/16- 2s. iok.Beeps
64.00 July 31
eats Le 6443. - John: Ugolini, Salary: 4/1 tor 4/10: 2k
ee PESSiac
105.00 July 31
Apr. 12 6444 .L. BE. Lubank Agency, Prem. bond of Overseer of Poor
........
250.00 July 31
Apr. 12 6445 The Press Print Shop, Priting Assessor’s Office
50.00 July 31
Apr. 12 6446. Harry E. Eichler, Assess. Clerk 4/1 to 4/15 wil...
101.53 July 31
Apr. 12 6447 Mildred Hackbarth, Assess. help 4/1 to 4/15 ...
69.00 July 31
Apr. 12 6448 Florence M. Sheahen, Assess, help 4/3 to 3/8 ......
29.00 July 31
Apr. 20 6449 Illinois Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 4/6
5.27 July 31
Apr. 20 6450 Ray Tamarri, Work on Election Booths 20......lecclecetceeecceenece
6.00 July 31
Apr. 20 6451 Mary B. East, Postmaster, Stamps for Collector’s Office....
715.15 July 31
Apr. 20 6452 Daniel L. Cobb, Postmaster, Stamps for Collector’s Office...
225.45 Aug. 14
Apr. 26 6453 Illinois Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 4/1 ..0 0.
13.00 Aug. 14.
Apr. 26 6454 LHElsie T. Plant, Salary 4/16 to 4/30 .......c.cccccccccensccusccecnerssccccacee
59.2¢ Aug. 14
mot an. -64b5°; John Upolini, “Salary 4/16 °40..4/30 asanccket ike
97.65 Aug. 14
Apr. 26 6456 W: W. Steele, Salary for April
182.55 Aug. 14
“Apr. 26 6457 W. W. Steele, Meeting April
:
19.30 Aug. 14
Apr. 26 6558 Albert Larson, Services for April
72.37 Aug. 14
Apr. 26 6459 Moroney Insurance Agency, Frem. Bond Supervisor ..............
250.00 Aug. 14
Apr. 26 6460 Moroney Insurance Agency, Prem. Bond J. P. &amp; Constable ....
175.00 Aug. 14
Apr. 26 6461 H. P. Beverage Co., Rent Election Material 4/15/47 ............
15.00 Aug. 22
wor. 26°. 6462 William Pearl, Town Hall: Rent May -2-2..-..cccc.ccc-cscliccccseccsecueee
47.00)| Aug. 23
Apr. 26 6468 Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service April 0.2.2.2... cctceceeeseeteee
eh, 00 Aug. 23
pr. 26 6464 Nathan Corwith, Jr., Insurance Furniture to 5/15/47............
25.04 Aug. 23
pr. 26 6465 Harry Earhart, Assessor, Salary April -...2..-.0...2.ccccecsseeccssteccee
80.41 Aug. 23
ipr. 26 6466 Harry Earhart, Assessor, Travel and Transportation ........
62.50
Apr.
6467 Harry E. Hichler, Assess. Clerk 4/16 to 4/30 .....0.00000...
93.95

_FUNDS RECEIVED:

Harry Earhart, Assessor, Salary Month® June ..------ccscesccee

:
250.638
15225
3.00
64.00
105.00
1.15
2.98
101.53
68.40
416.50
90.70
46.30
46.30
40.60
52.00
59.00
8.76
4.31
6.12
59.28
182.55 ~
72.30
97.65
4.83
85.00
90.00
90.00
45.00
90.00
10.00
47.00

80.41

Harry Earhart, Assessor, Travel &amp; Transportation June ....
Harry Earhart, Assessor, 90% Compensation Agric. Report
Harry E. Hichler, Assessor’s Clerk 6/16 to 6/80 ..........
sabe
Mildred Hackbarth, Assessor’s Clerk 6/16 to 6/30°.
é
Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions
Collector Internal Revenue, Tax Withheld
tise. Piantie Cock Tetale Pianeta
ace
Pubie (Service Oo. ight Se Pk a eas hes a lets ecacectubeae’
Gregory M. Sheahen, Coll., Extra postage &amp; Mise. Expense
Til. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 7/6 wo... leececceeteceeeeee
TH Bel TeksCoe, servise NOs 2.00 ail 74.6! shoo...
skcases
Bisted?,&lt;Piante: Salary 0 AE AGSC/ Lo 2A
i
i ee
CR lS OLE Heh lic)
MonbOath polity core cmid Ox nd savvspta ke oe eencess
Harry Earhart, Assessor Bal. Agricultural Report ............
Harry E. Hichler, Assessor’s Clerk 7/1 to 7/15 -.211:--ssscccccesee
Mildred Hackbarth, Assessor’s Help 7/1 to 7/15 .0...........00
Larson’s Stat. Store, Office &amp; Clerk’s Supplies .02..2...0u.
f tisies be Plant. salary 7/10 sto. U/lies. tae ee eee ce
Jon. Urol, soalaty &lt;1 LG LO Moo beocs rea fix brite ead pokes
s
WW
W..-Steele; Board Meetings July, 0. cea
ae
W. W. Steele, Salary Month July ico).......cc1.cesececéedeoucens
Albert Larson, Services Month July -....00.0000000..

62.50
651.38
93.95
58.25
350.29
621.20
21.95
3.22
94.50
4.14
14.40
64.00
105.00
TI
101.53
63.50
4.59
59.27
97.65
24.12
182.55
12.38

Atlas Printing Co., Legal Blanks Bill 6/28 ..
Wiliam’ Pearl, “Town Hall Rent August 2c s on caeacces
Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service August -..........-ceececcceeeseee
Harry Earhart, Assessor, Travel &amp; Transportation July....
Harry Earhart, Assessor, Salary month July. ...-....ce.ecctcteeeee
. Harry E. Bichler, Assessor’s Clerk 7/16 to 7/81 ..........00..-.
Mildred Hackbarth, Assessor’s Help 7/16 to 7/81 ............000Larson Stat. Store, Assessor’s Office Supplies .........2000.00...
Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions 7/1 to 7/81 ........
Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 8/6 ..........ctttescceeee
Hil; Bell: Tel;Co., Service "No. -2100-- Bul 8/6: isu... cicacesvsden
Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 8/6 2.2...
c.tecccceee
W. W. Steele, Postage
:
John Ueolinig: Satary 8 (6.70008 (5 sca eset aoe ae de owas a deoah
felste {B. Plant,; Salavy ‘from 18/110 8/4: niche. nssecscgeeneasioctas
Harry E. Eichler, Salary from 8/1 to 8/15 Assess. Ck.........
Mildred Hackbarth, Salary from 8/1 to 8/15 Help ............
Burroughs Add. Mch. Co., Service March Assessor % yr.
Iredale Storage Co., Moving Election Booths
W. W. Steele, Salary Month August
W. W. Steele, Meetings Month August .
Albert Larson, Service Month August ..
Elsie T. Plant, Salary 8/15 to 8/81 ...
John Ugolini, Salary 8/15 to 8/31
William Pearl, Town Hall Rent September

17.00
47.00
10.00
62.00
80.41
92.95
67.94
18.36
721.21
9.95
15.85
3.85
3.00
105.00
64.00
101.53
68.40
3.36

W.-W. Steele, Miscellaneous Expenses ..........

(Continued on page 23)

&lt;att

79.10
34.50
34.50
84.50
20.00
291.55
23.75
70.00
750.00
. 0.56
12.25
11.32
64.00
105.00
24.65
101.53
68.40
7.00
1.40
98.60
86.80
86.80
86.80
23.00
12.89
4.60
1.00
59.27
97.65
182.55
72.38
24.18
10.00
47.00
10.00
80.41
62.50
4

¢

Spy

z

¥

s

he ie Reins a as

ee

Aas

ce

2

is

es

eee eae

2.60

4

�¥

cs

.o

ae

af

*

a

Pe

Peary

Baht

hee

Thursday, March 27, 1947

i

)|

NOTICE

LEGAL

-_.
(Continued from page 22)
:
:

Aug. 28

6595

Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service August -.........--.-0::c00--+-

Aug. 23

6596

Harry

Earhart,

6597

Harry E. Eichler, Assessor’s Clerk 8/16 to, 8/381 ..................-Mildred Hackbarth, Assessor’s Help 8/16 to 8/81 ...........Picchiettie Bros., Broom for Assessor’s Office -....-.---..--------

Harry

Earhart,

Aug. 23

Aug. 23
Aug. 28
Aug. 23

6598
6599
6600

Aug. 238

6601

Assessor,

Salary

Travel

Assessor,

&amp;

August

Trans.

....

Sept. 27

Sept. 19

Sept. 27

6607
6608
6609
6610
6611
6612
6613
6614

-6615

Public Service Co., Light Bill 9/24 .:....2..--22-.-...11:---W. W. Steele, Salary Month September ....................
W. W. Steele, Meetings 9/1 to 9/27 -...........--------Albert Larson, Services for September ................John Ugolini, Salary 9/15 to 9/30 ~.:-.........-....1-..
Elsie T. Plant, Salary 9/15 to 9/30
Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service September
William Pearl, Town Hall Rent October ...............

27
27
27
27

6616
6617
6618
6619
6620,
6621
6622

Harry Earhart, Assessor’s Travel &amp; Trans. September ......:.
be t0: 97 Bie epee
Harry E. Hichler, Assessor’s Clerk OF
Ill. Retirement Fund, Contributions 9/1 to 9/80 .-...............
7/1 to 9/30/46........
Withheld
Tax
Rev.,
Collector Internal
Sapa cctecctaccpenwepete
“Or Jn Shetzley,..Mestinges 7/1 to OY 2-22
aes
2. ik 2c
to-9/27
7/1
Howard W.-Huber,- Meetings.
Frank Nustra, Meetings 7/1 to 9/27. s.c.1..c-c-ctcececcecceseesseste

27
27
27
27
27.
27
27
27

Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sent.
Sept.
Sept.

Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Megs
Sent
Sept.

27
27

Oct. 31
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

6633

Elsie T. Plant, Salary 10/15 to 10/31 ........

31

6640

Oct.

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

6647

Nov. 29

6662

14 6648
6649
21
21 6650
29 6651
29 6652
6653
29
6654
29
29 6655
6656
29
29. 6657
29 6658
6659
29
6660
29
29 6661

Dec. 12

John Ugolini, Salary: 10/15 to 10/31 -.......
Albert Larson, Services Month October ....
W. W. Steele, Salary Month October ........
W. W. Steele, October Board Meetings .........
ar
William Pearl, Town Hall Rent November
Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service October ..........Bee eae
Marry Earhart, Assessor, Travel &amp; Trans. October

Dec. 20

6751
6752
6753
6754
6755
6756
6757

W. W. Steele, Meetings March 6 &amp; 18. --....--.---.+ssseeeeeseeceeeee
Howard W. Huber, Meetings 1/1 to 3/13 ine, -...---------OC. J. Shetzley, Meetings 1/1 to 8/13 Ie. -.22-e----eeeeeereee
D. D. Husenetter, Meetings 1/1 to 8/13 ime. -..----.+------Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 3/6 ~..------------e-eeeeeeoees
Frank Nustra, Meetings 1/1 to 8/13 inc. -...-..-.----s-rr-eeeeeeees
Harry E. Fichler, Assess. Clerk 3/1 to 3/15 .-..--.-.----------------

6750

62.50 | Mar.
93.95 | Mar.
149.57 |Mar.
161.40 |Mar.
70.00 |Mar.
65.00 |Mar.
80.00 |Mar.

14
14
14
14
14
14
14

|Mar.

14

15.95

John Ugolini, Salary 11/1 to 11/15 ..............

Harry E. Kichler, Assessor’s Clerk 11/16 to 11/30. -..........-

6665

John Ugolini, Salary 12/1 to 12/15 -.......

6669

Tll. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 12/6 \..........-----

Janitor Service February: -......---.-----------+---+

Daniel L. Cobb, Postmaster, Postage stamps Assessor ......
Waukegan Clean Towel Co., Towel Service to 2/31 Assess.
Collector Internal Rev., Tax Withheld 1/1 to 3/15
Ill. Municipal Retir. Fund, Contributions 3/1 to 3/15 ....
W. W. Steele, Postage Stamps for Office -....--.----..+---s+--+0-

6760

6761
6762

4.29 |Mar. 14
64.00 |Mar. 14

3

105.00
7.90

6

97.65|Apr.
72.37|Apr.
182.55|Apr.
14.48 |Apr.
47.00 |Apr.
10.00|Apr.

6
6
6
6
6
6

|Apr.

6

105.00 |Apr.

6

:
:

:
POOR

:

59.28| Apr,

62.50

Morrison,

Iredale Storage Co., Moving &amp; Storage Clerk Supplies -......

6758
6759

30.00 | Mar. 14
75.00 |Mar. 14

To Whom Paid

FUND

On What Account Paid

10653 Treas. of Lake County, County. Home March Care -...........

10654
10655
10656
10657
10658
10659
10660

6
80.41|Apr.
93.95 |Apr. 6
146.47 | Apr. .6
5.06|Apr. 6
16.65|Apr. 6
64.00 |Apr. 6

101.53 |Apr. 6
Harry E. Hichler, Assess. Clerk 11/1 to 11/15 ..
= 5.23 }Apr. 6
P. F. Pettibone &amp; Co., Clerk Supplies -......-....-.-2---------62.70 |Apr. 22
Hospital Care Plan, Remittance 11/25/46 to 2/25/47........
51.77 |Apr. 22
ett teeee
Elsie T. Plant, Salary 11/15 to 11/80 --......---.2:ce-e
90.15 | Apr. 22
John Ugolini, Salary 11/15 to 11/80 °........-........| Apr. 22
182.55
W. W. Steele, Salary Month November ...........-..---19.39 |Apr. 22
W. W. Steele, Meetings 11/7 to 11/29 ........
1
64.88|May
Albert Larson, Services month November
1
1.00|May
W. W. Steele, Delivery Hlection Boxes .............--.-.--+-:--------6
3.86|May
Burroughs Add. Mch. Co., Service to 5/22/47 Supervisor....
6
10.00|May
ee
.-.......eer
November
Service
Joseph Morrison, Janitor
47.00|May 6
William Pearl, Town Hall Rent for December .....-..---..-.--:--+ .
6
|May
62.50
.......November
Trans.
&amp;
‘Harry Earhart, Assessor, Travel
72.91 |May 6
Harry Earhart, Assessor, Salary for November ..............------

6666
6667
6668

Dec. 12
Dec. 12
Dec. 12

Chandlers’ Inc., Office Supplies H. A. Bromberg, Legal Blanks Bill 3/1. --..------------+---.--0----+Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No.-1654 Bill 3/6 -.
Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 3/6 -.-....-.---Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 3/6 .-.-..--.-----------+------Elsie T. Plant, Salary 8/1 to 8/16 .......--.-c-.ccsecdeecceeeececeeees
W. W. Steele, Salary Month of March ........-----.---------1---11s-s00°
nent
John Ugolini, Salary 3/1 to 3/15 ....-----22----/ecececeeeeeeceeeceeee

101.58 | 4946
8.65 | Date Check No.

6663 Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions 11/1 to 11/30 .....
6664 Elsie T. Plant, Salary 12/1 to 12/15. -..-.-.----.-.:------sscssseeeeeeseecens

Nov. 29
Dec. 12

6742
6743
6744
6745
6746
6747
6748
6749

|Mar.

John Ugolini, Salary 2/16 to 2/28 +...2-.--.-cccececseeereeeeees

Harry BE. Hichler, Assess. Clerk 2/16 to 2/28
Francis E. Corrigan, Assess: Help Bill 2/25. -....-.-----------r-----Burroughs Add. Mach. Co., Assess. Mach. Service to 7/16/47
ets
Olson Printing Co., Assess, Office Pvelopes &lt;oscdek
27 6736
27 6737 Press Print Shop, Assess. Office Envelopes -...------..-.-2----++-0........
2/28
to
2/1
27 6738 Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions
27 (6739, Public Service Co., Light, Bill 2/21 ~-.-------..-----ce-cseseessesseseeoes
6740. H. P. Press, Public Notice of Registration ...
7
6741 H. P. News, Public Notice of Registration -...-----..-------:--------+°

16.21

31 6641 Harry Earhart, Assessor, Salary October .-......--..-.-/.:--:e:----6642 Harry E. Eichler, Assess. Clerk 10/15 to 10/81 °--..............
31
6643 Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions 10/1 to 10/381 ....
31
14. 6644 Ill. Bell’ Tel.. Goi, Service No. 1654 Bill T1/6&lt;.....-.---..--....
6645 Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 11/6 -.-.........
14
14° 6646 Elsie T. Plant, Salary 11-1 to 11-15 ...........-.-........-

Nov. 14

Noy.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

Joseph

6738
6734
6735

%

.6630&gt;&gt;

6634
6635
6636
6637
6638
6689

6732

:

es
H. A. Bromberg; Legal Blanks Bill LO/L4 20 5-22 seensjentcreteensen

31
31
31
31
31
31

62.50 | Feb. 27.

6730

:
“
:
=
z
d

6631 Harry E. Hichler, Assess, Clerk 10/1 to 10/15 ...--....-...-.----6632 W. W. Steele, Stamps and Office Supplies

Oct. 17
Oct. 24

H. P. Beverage Co., Storage Elect. Material March ...

:

ee eee a Salamghe ld) (1 tat. Oval Sito. feared te es dedaaeeuytap sacen
.~......-.-........-.
Hardware, Janitor Supplies Bill 10/14
29 Sherony

Oct. 17

6731

4.77

D. D. Husenetter, Meetings 7/1 to 9/27 -.--....---:cc--keeceeeeeeees
Samuel S. Smith, Meetings 7/1 to 9/27 ~..-..--....cseeeecceesreees
6625 Il. Bell Tél Go... Service No,2100 sBill 10/6 3. ia
Ot 17°
a
en
eo
Oote17 «6626-11 Bell. Tel. Con Service Nomi6b4 Bill 10762
cece
Oct 178-6627 — WisiesT: Plant, Salary) 10/10. 10/15 22 eo secs ee
ee ct.

80.41 | Feb. 27.

183.99 | Feb.

6623
6624

Sept. 27
Sept. 27

W. W. Steele, Board Meetings 1/30 to 2/27 ...
Albert Larson, Services Month of February
et
Elsie T. Plant, Salary 2/16 to 2/28 .........

64.00 |Feb.
105.00 | Feb.
101.53 | Feb.

Harry Earhart, Assessor’s Salary September

..--.-.-s1-e-css-cescrssoes

6727
6728
6729

93.95 |Feb. 27
67.73 |Feb. 27
1.53 | Feb. 27

Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions 8/1 to 8/31 ........

ae ctentnpereseceehaes
6600 —bisie: De Plant, Salary 01 6029 (AB har
ott cetteacne
6603 - John. Ugolini, Salary 9/1:to 9/15 2...
6604 Harry E. Eichler, Assessor’s Clerk 9/1 to 9/15 ........--.-.--6605 Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 9/6 .......-.0022---..-----+---6606 Til. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 9/6 -..2....-c..---esceesee-ne-

Sopt- 113
Sept. 13
Sept. 18

W. W. Steele, Salary Month February

Feb. 27
Feb. 27
Feb. 27

10.00 | Feb. 27

.....-.....---::-:------

August

6726

Feb. 27

86.45 |May 18

ay he beeg at
D beeerie
Public Service Co., Light FRE O72
Elsie T. Plant, April telephone
-.--..+------2-------secccceteeeeseeore
Elsie T. Plant; April Car Expense
Co-operative Trading Co., Food
Treas. of Lake County, County Home March Care ....-....---.-:Uptown Grocery and Market, Food «....-..----..---+-:sestssrereecroce
Mrs. J. Giallanza, Boral: Pewe s.ss.

:

10661
10662
10663
10664
10665
10666

Highwood Grocery &amp; Market, Food -....-------.-::-s-:ssseseenceeente
Richard O’Conner,Jr., Rent 3/15 to 4/15
Bernardi Hwd. Pharmacy, russ. eee Se
Sante Monfradini, March rent .......-.--.-.------c-rece
H. F. Kelley, Ambulance to County Hospital 22.55 oe
Mutual Coal Co., Coal ....---------:-2:s---creceen

10668
10669
10670
10671
10672
10673
10674
10675
10676
10677
10678
10679
10680
10681

Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital March Care
Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital March Care -.....-Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 4/6 .Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent May. .:.-.-.-&lt;-3
Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co., Drugs --...--.-.2------2p----cceeseorte
Richard O’Conner, Jr., Rent 4/15 to 5/15Sante Monfradini, April Rent
eS Sasaiechednotlesnsnyonaeertes
Fublic Service Co., Light Bill A BI
Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food
Elsie T. Plant, May Telephone
Elsie T. Plant, May Car Bxpense: -..-..--.---.---csccsecesesssssrrecseries
Kroger Grocery &amp; Bakery Co., Food
Mrs. J. Giallanza, March, Rent
Laegler Pharmacy, Drugs

147.25 |May 13
64.00 |May 13

105.00 |May 13

10667 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital March Care .....-....
.

10682 Treas. of Lake County, County Home April Care -.....------..---

10683 Treas. of Lake County, County Home April Care .....-----..---:
=
10684 Co-Operative Trading Co., Food
10685 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital April Care ......-.-10686 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital April Gare, aa
10687 Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.; Drugs ~.-.-..-.-4-2.-&lt;.0---10688 O’Conner Coal Co., Coglnt.--

W. W. Steele, Postage Stamps for Office
Harry E. Eichler, Assessor’s Clerk 12/1 to 12/15
Sherony Hardware, Assessor’s Office Supplies -.......----.------

8.00 |May 13
101.53 |May 13
2.45 |May 13

10.00 |May 20
59.28 |May 20
97.65 |June 1
72.87 |June 1

10690
10691
10692
10693

Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240
Baird &amp;Warner, Office Rent June
eenceeeecencecnneccennentnnsowens
Sante Morfradini, May Rent -.-2.-.22-2--ce-sne
:
Picchietti Bros., Food
Kroger Grocery &amp; Bakery Co., Food .......-----------------Treas. of Lake County, County Home May Care
. . . . . .-.- Elsie T. Plant, June Telephone
censnenesenconene
Elsie T. Plant, June Car EXPOSE -.2.-22------eneecnsntennnn

4.37|May 13

10689 Highwood Grocery &amp; Market, Foo

Dec.
Dee:
Dec.
Dec.

20
26
26
26

6670 Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 12/6 -.......-.....--«
:
.6671 © Bisie Ty Plant, Salary .12/16 to 12/3F ,6672 John Ugolini, Salary’ 12/16 to 12/81 .....
6673 Albert Larson; Services Month December .......-...-.---:-------0++++-

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

26
26
26
26

6675
6676
6677
6678

W. W. Steele, Meeting Month Decembe&gt; .......-.-....2---:-1-s--ser+C. J. Shetzley, Meetings 10/3 to 12/26 -.--..---..-..----seeeereeeee
H. W. Huber, Meetings 10/38 to 12/26 -.....2-.2--1:c---ceceeecereeeeees
Frank Nustra, Meetings 10/3 to 12/26 ......----------:---------seete

9.65 |June 1
57.50 |June 10
62.30 |May 10
65.00 |June 10

10695
10696
10697
10698

6680

D. D. Husenetter, Meetings 10/3 to 12/26 ---.-------+----11-+-

17.50 |June 10

10700 Bernardi Highwood Pharmacy, DYUGS --------2---cennenereersnnenerennnre

6674

Dec. 26

Dec. 26

6679

Dec. 26
Dec. 26

6681
6682

Dec. 26
Dec. 26

6684
6685

Dec. 26

6686

Dec. 26

Dec. 26

6683

Dec. 26

6687

Jan. 31
Jan. 31

6708
6709

W. W. Steele, Salary Month December ........-...-------:----------00-

182.55 |June

1

Samuel S. Smith, Meetings 10/3 to 10/26 .............-----

57.50 |June-10

Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service December ..--....------:--:-s1+William Pearl, Town Hall Rent January ...-..--2..----------ee-0+
Harry Earhart, Assessor, December Salary ........-.---------------+
Harry Earhart, Assessor, Travel &amp; Trans. December ............
Harry E. Eichler, Assess. Clerk 12/16 to 12/31 ..........

11.00 |June 10
47.00 |June 10

eee
Collector Inter. Rev., Tax Withheld 10/1 to 12/31
De
i
i
i
12/1 to 12/8
Fund, Contributions
Ill. Mun. Retirement

80.41

|June 10

oe

ae :

62.50 |June 10
93.95 |June 10

June 10
.70 | June
145.7

10694 Richard O’Conner, Jr., Rent 5/15 to C/ 15 ..-2--eneeeeneereeeeceeseees

10699 Treas. of Lake County, County Home May Care -...-------0----

~10701 Mrs. J. Giallanza, June Rent _-...........----------secrsseoseesssesrserorresene®
- -. .- - - +-+- :s c-s s s swsr
10702 Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food
10708 Karl W. Gsell &amp; Co., Drugs i--2--e coke sane seassee nnn nse sepenttne Seonteres

| -...---------ws-sesererrnennes
10704 Mutual Coal Co., Coal
ee
Co., FOOd «----.--2---------Boor
10705 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking oe
ate Seca ei es
Seabee

oe era

o ane

ace

are --i------May
bal
;
6/6. -secvonccneen--No. 8240 Bil
Bell,0 Tel,akeCo., Service
eT og di,reas.

...-..-..--------------eeeeceneeeee
10709 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office rent July
June 17
|Jyne 17 .10710 Co-Operative Trading Co., Food
Amount
aaeee
On What Account Paid
To Whom Paid
wen sicsnccdhnennnttigeaveasdasen gs
Sass
Date Check No.
FOO.
Market,
&amp;
10711 Highwood Grocery
5.00 |June 17
6688 Moroney Insurance Agency, Assessor’s Bond 1947 .......-.-.----Jan.
10712 Sante Monfradini, June Rent -.....-----------1-c-scrsscsesessereterseenenes
2.98 |Juhe 24
irene
Gone cast hawioe cena
S
ess.tdcscuek
cyOorcl
Co.,
Jan. 10 6689 MHusenetter Hardware. Janitor Supplies -...........------------6.02 |June 24 10713 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking
Jan. 16 6690 Mill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 1/6 -..
10714 Treas. of Lake County, County Home Care ..
64.00 |July 9
.....-....-.---1/15
to
1/1
Salary
Plant,
T.
Elsie
6691
Jan./16.
10715 Elsie T. Plant, July Telephone .-.-----.------eseeeenceeesseeeensnces
105.00 | July 9
Jan. 16 ~6692 John Ugolini, Salary 1/1 to 1/15 ....-------.2---seeeeereenee
10716 Elsie T. Plant, July Car- Expense
10.88 |July 9
Jan. 16 6693 P. F. Pettibone &amp; Co., Township Law Book
Mrs. J. Giallanza, July Rent
10717
9
|July
12.70
-.
Jan. 16 6694 Ill. Belt Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 1/6
6.00 |July 9 10718 Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food
6695 Dan. L. Cobb, Postmaster, Stamps Assessor’s Office ..........-‘Jan. 16
of Lake County, County Hospital June Care
Treas.
10719
9
|July
101.53
oes apaieds canter
June CATR tects
Home
6696 Harry E. Hichler, Assess. Clerk 1/1 to TA
County
County,
Jan. 16
Lake
of
10720 Treas.
2.98 |July 9
p[Circ kentecussene salysatp oe
Jan. 16 6697 Husenetter Hardware, Assess. Office Wu
10721 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital June Care
2.15 |July 9
322. Shine,
Supplies.
Office
Assess.
Hardware,
...---c22-----neseenseeeneneees
T/15
to
Husenetter
C/1B
6698
Rent
24
Jan.
10722 Richard O’Conner, Jr.,
1.07|July 9
~--------2------+--- Jan. 24 6699 Chandlers, Inc., Office Supplies
10723 Victory Memorial Hospital, Care 6/10 to 6/25
59.27 |July) 9
-....-.----------s----eresessnsenereoeees
1/381
to
1/16
Salary
See
Plant,
.....-.....-.
T.
6700 Elsie
Jan. 31
10724 Kelley &amp; Spalding, Burial
182.55 | July 16
.....-------.----------«reer
Jan. 31 6701 W. W. Steele, Salary Month January.
Drags
00.
&amp;
W.Geell
3.00 (July 16. 20726 Darl.
Jan. 31 6702 Elsie T. Plant, Stamps for Office -...-....---/----+-+------10726 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., Food
97.65 |July 16
...;
ood
6703 John Ugolini, Salary 1/16 to 1/81 ........--..------Jan. 31
10727 Co-Operative Trading Co.,
72.88 |July 16
Season
mC
eS
i
c
e
.....-January
Month
Services
6704 Albert Larson,
Jan. 31
10728 Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 8240 Bill 7/6
23
July
|
20.00
February
&amp;
Food
6705 4H. P. Beverage Co., Storage Elec. Met. January
Market,
&amp;
Jan. 31
Grocery
10729 Highwood
78.00 | July 23
Jan. 31 6706 Paul Downing, Floor install. Town Hall -....-.-..-.------+--2:1--5-10780 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent for August -..-------45.00 | July 23
6707 Olson &amp; Nord, Carpenter Work Town PEGye tecdints eosgucucovibontese™
Jan. 831
-.---:--2r--2---eenrsenerenerees
Jan. 31
Jan. 31
Jan. 31
Feb. 7

Feb.

7

Feb.

7

6710
6711
6712
6713

6714

Feb. 14
Feb. 14
Feb. 14

Feb. 14

William Fearl, Town Hall Rent February: -........
pd
Harry E. Eichler, Assess. Clerk 1/16 to 1/31
Se
Ill. Mun. Retirement Fund, Contributions .............
ne
cnwstasa
gL
TDBWE
Bill
Supplies
Office
Store,
Stat.
Larson’s

Atlas Printing Co,, Legal Blanks -....-..-.-----2---1--pe--steeIll. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 1654 Bill 2/6 -..........-..--

6717
6718
6719
6720

6721

6722

Feb. 14 6723
Feb. 21 -: 6724
ee, Feb. Zk:

6725,

Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 2100 Bill 2/6 ..........-..-Elsie T. Plant, Salary 2/1 to 2/15 -..---2-ess--secsecseseceeneeneneeen

John Ugolini, Salary 2/1 to 2/15 ....-.---.--cscecescecseeseteteeeceees
Harry E. Eichler, Assess. Clerk 2/1 to 2/15 ..---.----ssee----3
Sherony Hardware, Assess. Office Supplies Bill DPE
¥
Picchietti Bros., Assess. Office Supplies Bill 2/1. -.......-

Cee ee
Larson’s Stat. Store, psi
perio
:
i
Rem ittance per
Care,
lan : for Hospital

ee 2/18 aia
: 0 5/25
/

me

aird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent for March .............-.-..-.----

ee a

¥
he AT

pt

é

;
Se

Sr

4
tee
a

cons

an

fe

et
ek
EO

Se
SA

os

y

36.06| July 30
10.00 | July 30

47.00| July 30
93.95 | July 30
181.23] Aug. 5
2.09 | Aug. 5

9.00 |Aug. 12

38.00

Hall ........
6715 Louis Louts &amp; Sons, Painting Work Town

Feb. 14 6716

Feb. 14
Feb. 14

Davis &amp; Maurine, Light Fixtures Town Hall ...........-.--------Joseph Morrison, Janitor Service January -...---.--.---------------ast

|Aug. 12

10731 Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, FO0d
7/15 to 8/15 ----2-----10732 Richard O’Conner, Jr., Rent,Co.,
FOO ---.-..-----c--:--cceeeesesecssnerees
Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking
Sante -Monfradini, July Rent ....-....-------Public Service Co., Light Bill V/2b° &lt;a...-2-22-2-ae
Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., ores July 6pee rans
Home duly Vare -.-10787 Lake County Treasurer, County
heane
10788 Kelley &amp; Spalding, Burial Ses ease

10738
10784
10785
10786

of Lake County, July Care

County

Hospital

-.....--.---

10739 Treas.
ro
10-30 | Aug. 12 10740 Milsie T. Plant, August Car Expense ----.-----.---r
reea
Elsie T. Plant, August Telephone
10741
12
Aug.
64.00|
eo
Office nt
5.23 | Aug. 12

105.00 | Aug. 12
101.53 | Aug. 12
4.35 | Aug. 12

1.05 |Aug: 12.

eet
70

Aug. 19
:

10742 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., September
107483 Treas. of Lake County, Care July

anaes OSCR

ety

Home
10744 Treas. of Lake County, Care July County
sone edeoseensepeene ate?
°-.-------cr
August Rent
10745 Mrs. J. Giallanza,,
SowsUaneaapacgnones
oc
Delay
Ss
PYAR
Co.
&amp;
Gzell
W.
10746 Earl
on
: page 24)
(Continued
'

�PRN
pate

EE NDE
SrA

SE

Ee UIE IS ee
.
Bey
4

SetAG eeee
2

eee

Thursday, March 27, 1 947

SUBURBIA

LEGAL NOTICE
Aug. 26
Aug. 26
Aug.
Aug.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.

10755 Treas. of Lake County, County Home August Care
10756 Mrs. J. Giallanza, September Rent
10757 iptown:, Grocery... 67. Market, “bh 00d: shi ovine
tee
beste
10758 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital August Care
10759 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital August Care
10760 Charters. “ines. Offreas Oily Wesesoices a ote a eee
cae
10761 Elsie T. Plant, September Travel Expense
10762 isies TP. Plant. \Septenmbeéer Telephone 46 0 Se
ae
10768 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent October
10764 Co-Operative Trading Co., Food
10765 Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co., Drugs
10766 Til. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240Bill 9/6
10767 Co-Operative Trading Co., Food
10768 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., Food
10769 Sante: Monredini, September “Rent 8is iene
es,
10770 Bill Dozier’s Sanatorium, Care 9/15 to 10/15
10771 W..W. Steele, Refund R.R. Fare Relief Care -.2....1.4...4.00.2006...
10772 Treas. of Lake County, County Home September Care
10773 wont LiOhiie&lt; S0aID pes FON: ORCC. =e eee
eas aos 2 oy
10774 Elsie T. Flant, October Telephone .........
10775 Elsie T. Plant, October Car Expense
10776 Josephine Giallanza, October Rent
10777 Hishwood Grocery &amp; Market: FO0d«&lt;8 25 ee
10778 Treas. of Lake County, County Home September Care ...........10779 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital September Care ....
10780 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital September Care ....
10781 LL NV eC er OOap MT gah eI ee et ee
10782 Kelley &amp; Spalding, Cars to County Hospital
10783 Uptown Grocery” &amp; = Market: Boéde 72 4035. 3
10784 Ill. Bell -Tel. Go., Service No.: 3240 Bill 10/6 °..2.2.2.
10785 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent for November
10786 Bee Dozier’s Sanatorium, Care 10/15 to 11/15
10787 Sante Monfradini, October Rent
ae
10788 Public Service Co., Light Bill 10/23
10789 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., Food
10790
- Bernardi Highwood Pharmacy, Tr ria.ce
Z
ae RR
10791 BGRde uel: Ane 0 Ofbetta tae enciwe, ho iy SeeAc
10792 Treas. of Lake County, County Home October Care
10793 Elsie T. Plant, November Car Expense
10794 iilsie.T,. Plant, November: Telephone ii. Bi
10795 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital October Care
10796 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital October Care
10797 Whirl ConisOo.ps.Olea eeee
10798 Treas. of Lake County, County Home October Care
10799 Mrs. J. Giallanza, November Rent
10800 ape WVoe Celine SO! MIRO ta ieee ce as oe
en
10801 Bee Dozier’s Sanatorium, Care 11/15 to 12/15
10802 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., Food
10803 Highwood Grocery &amp; Market, Food ...
10804 Co-Operative Trading Co., Food ~..2.00........
10805 Kelley &amp; Spalding, Ambulance to County Hosp
10806 Hl. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 11/6
10807 Libertyville Cab Co., Cab to County Home ................
10808 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent for December ....
Kroger

Grocery

&amp;

Baking

Co.,

Up goes the requirements of taxicab owners, for insurance, who choose
to operate in Kenilworth, Wilmette, Winnetka and Glencoe. A uniform
taxicab ordinance adopted by the four communities says that from here on
in cabs will carry $10,000 and $20,000 to cover personal injury liability and
$5,000 to cover property damage. The law was passed after the villagers
had conducted an exhaustive study into what is considered adequate rider

protection.

Plans are drawn and work will begin this summer on an addition to
Berwyn’s MacNeal Memorial hospital which has served that and surrounding
communities well for a quarter of a century. The modern wing will double
the institution’s capacity as well as provide spacious nurses’s quarters, The
new four story building which will cost in excess of $1,400,000 is under
administration of the Berwyn Hospital association.
New Trier (Winnetka) Evening School for Adults has started its second
semester with several additional courses while continuing the standbys of
last term: Spanish, typewriting, shorthand, interior decorating, sewing and
woodworking. New courses provided for persons over high school age are:
illustrated art lectures, reading and writing techniques, photography for
amateurs, beginning Spanish and public speaking. Possibility of reopening
the school’s rifle range under proper supervision and instruction is also
in the offing.
An increase of 51 per cent over the prewar year of 1940 in the employment of inexperienced college and university graduates by business and
industry during 1947, is good news for those young people who are full of
knowledge and don’t know what to do with it. This information is the
result of a survey conducted by the bureau of placement at Northwestern
university, Evanston, and covered more than 100 manufacturers, banks,
department stores, insurance, oil, rubber, and chemical companies, airlines
and public utilities. For future graduates of colleges is the additional good
news that business leaders anticipate such an absorption of personnel without prior business experience will continue for the next several years,
barring an economic depression.

Food

10810 Sante Monfradini, November Rent
10811 Public Service, Light Bill 11/22
10812 Kelley &amp; Spalding, Burial expense ...
10813 Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food
10814 Treas. of Lake County, County Home November Care
10815
© Elsie T. Plant, December Car Expense
10816 Elsie T. Plant, December Telephone
10817 Mrs. J. Giallanza, December Rent
10818 Matial Coal 3G oc Cote, se
aeeetenergerd toescoy ee
10819 Treas, of Lake County, County Home November Care
10820 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital November Car
10821 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office rent January 1947 ....c.4.002
10822 Bernardi Highwood Fharmacy, Drugs
10823 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., Food
10824 Highwood Grocery &amp; Market, Food .0.....ccc02.ececccee---10825 il. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 12/6
10826 Sante Monfradini, December Rent
10828 Harl W. Gsell @&amp; Co., Drugs
1028 Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co., Drugs
10829 Co-Operative: Trading. Cow hoods 2:. 22 fee hs
10830 Public Service Co., ‘Light Bill 12/23
10831 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking ‘Co., Food
10832 Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food

\

Downers Grove is making money hand over fist with its brand new
auto parking meters judging by a report of the village treasurer for a two
month period after their installation last November. One thousand two
hundred dollars clinked into the village coffers during that period, and
there are only in the experimental stage. Wonder what the meters would
do for the community if they only knew they were permanent?

10833 Treas. of Lake County, County; Home December Care
10834 Klsie T. Plant, January Car Expense
10835 Haier eb ate, eatitlaty Pele
phOne:
es we
Te bape ee
10836 Treas. of Lake County, County Home December Care
10837 Josephine Gialavizag,. saaby: Went
os hs es
Oe
10838 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital December Care
10839 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital December Care
10840 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital December Care
10841 Goelperntiy ent EsOmo AO ROOM ott aso
ee
ge
10842 H. P. Social Service, Transportation Reimbursement
10843 Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 1/6 ......-..2i.02.2...
10844 Bee Dozier’s Sanatorium, Care 12/15 to 1/15/47
10845 Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co., Drugs
10846 Baird &amp; Warner, Inc., Office Rent February
10847 Bee Dozier’s Sanatorium, Care 1/11 to 2/15
10848 Waite VEOMEnA IN, shamUaAry. NCU: 2.8.00
ukeae ke
10849 Public Service Co., Light Bill 1/22
10850 glow ne-cpoceryaee esVWarket,&lt; MOOGs.c25 bo eC se epg he
10851 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital January Care
10852 Treas. of Lake County, County Home January Care
10853 disiest.&gt; Plank: Pebyiary.&lt; Telephone salience
10854 Elsie T. Plant, February Car Expense
10855 Mptuel: Gonk Cog soOkk: iia
tai.so:wee
10856 Kroger Grocery &amp; Baking Co., Food
10857 Mirsada kode latizet, GOrhiar
ys, NONG) tr desasc ccs
se
10858 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital January Care
10859 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital January Care
10860 Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital January Care
10861 Treas. of Lake County, County Home January Care
10862 CorvOperative: iradime.: Co. “Ho0dencin
ot
eas oe
10868 Kelley &amp; Spalding, Cab to County Home and Hospital
10864 Bee Dozier’s Sanatorium, Care 2/15 to 8/14
10865 Ill. Bell Tel. Co., Service No. 3240 Bill 2/1
10866 Bernardi Highwood Pharmacy, Drugs
10867 Sante Monfradini, February Rent
10868 Treas. of Lake County, County Home February Care
10869 Elsie T. Plant, IVER Tere Re
LOPOMe = foe Secs eo oedis: olen ake ee

) 10870

10871
10872
10873
10874
10875

Elsie T. Plant, March Car Expense
Earl W. Gsell, Drugs
Treas. of Lake County, County Home February Care
Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital February Care
Treas. of Lake County, County Hospital February Care
Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food
ys

€

i

|

Every member of the Oak Park-River Forest Symphony orchestra
must feel a glow when he recalls his part a few weeks ago in the possibility of having helped to make a future musical star. That, however, is
probably mild when compared to the thrill which four girls and one boy
from suburban high schools experienced as they played, three on pianos, one
a violin and the other a French horn, in concert with the orchestra. The
participants representing Oak Park, Proviso, Riverside-Brookfield, Morton
and Lyons Township High schools all received awards or scholarships for
further study, and the memory of a magnificent step upward in their musical
careers,

10747 Sante Monfradini, August Rent
10748 Co-Operative Pradine OO hoods a
kai oe Ne
ie
10749 Highwood Grocery &amp; Market, Food
10750’ Bernardi Highwood Pharmacy, Drugs
10751 Public Service Co., Light Bill 8/23
10752 Kroger Grocery, &amp; Baking, Food {220.2
10753 Treas. of Lake County, County Home August Care ...
10754 Uptown Grocery &amp; Market, Food

10809

|
(Continued from page 21)

(Continued from page 23)

With the season of annual reports among us comes that of Austin

public library on reader preference. Almost 200,000 books were withdrawn
in 1946, an increase of more than 3,000 over the previous year, of which
91,000 were taken home by children. Less fiction than in 1945 and a marked
increase in non-fictional subjects such as psychology, economics and sociology in the field of learning; interior decorating, house repair, bookkeeping,
carpentry, home building and time study in the field of practical work and
living as well as a marked advance in the number of language tomes, especially French, were among the interesting facts noted in the report.
War’s termination has brought again the ring of an old English song,
“The boar’s head in hand bearI,.bedecked with bays and rosemary,” through
the cloistered halls of Seabury-Western Theological seminary, Evanston.

The ceremony dating back to pagan Roman feasts, kept alive by early
British Christians and the triumphant Normans, and inaugurated in Eyan|ston in 1880, has been revived after a lapse of six years. Legend hath it
that in 1340 a student at Oxford, England, was rushed by an open-mouthed
boar into which aperture the student thrust a volume of Aristotle he had
been reading and accomplished the feat in the best and calmest Oxford
manner, after which Queen’s college played host at a boar dinner.

12.65
218.70
155.00
154.00
45.00
$14,297.43

After 16 long years of anxiety as to what became of the Joneses, Oak
Park, River Forest and Forest Park are on the threshold of finding the
answer: On July 1 the first directory of the villages’ inhabitants since 1930
will be published. Every resident in the three communities who is 18 years
of age or older will be listed, his profession or trade, address and employer as well as a complete street guide will be included. A new directory
is projected for every two years.
e

�Ve CHEST ee
toBUY, REPAIR or REFINANCE

Thursday, March oe 1 947

Services Held for

Women Voters Group

Philip Schreiber

To Discuss Economic
Theories Tuesday

Funeral services were held Friday
for Philip Schreiber, 83, of 520 Glen“How the Wheels Go ’Round” will be
coe avenue. Mr. Schreiber died after an the subject for discussion at the meeting of the Evening group, League of
illness of one year.
He was born in Germany and came
to Highland Park when 17 years of
age. He joined the US Army and
served 12 years, being active in several
fights with the Indians that occurred.

Women Voters, on Tuesday, April 1.

Let us help you with our
low-cost financing plan!

The group gathers
inthe public library
historical room at eight o'clock. This
will be the last monthly group meeting for this season.
In January a pamphlet, which is a
in the Southwest. He married the for- simply worded and clearly organized
primer of economics, was mailed to
er Elizabeth Blattel of Highland Park,
each member of the Highland Park
who survives.
League. It is a publication of the naOther survivors are: a son, Theodore, tional organization. and presents step
of Minneapolis; a daughter, Mrs. R. by step the economic theories underM. .Cobb, of Highland Park and two lying the ‘free enterprise’ system. Memgrandchildren.
bers have been urged to read this

_ There Is No Loan Commission

Charge

HIGHLAND PARK BUILDING LOAN
AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION

LiH.
PP; 361

21 N. SHERIDAN ROAD

Funeral arrangements were in charge

-amphlet, which will be the basis of
of the Kelley &amp; Spalding Funeral the discussion.
home, Burial was in Rosehill cemetery,
Miss Loraine Sinkler, social studies
Chicago.
teacher at Ravinia school, is the leader
of the discussions for the Evening
group. Anyone may attend to listen or
to participate.
(Continued from page 20)

Home Builders

“In accomplishing this—throughout Former HPHS Football Man
the structure and in placing the equip- Resumes Play At U. of Dayton
ment—the principle of modular coMartin Kopp, former Highland
ordination has been utilized to a considPark High school football letter man,
-erable degree.”
reported last week for spring football practice at the University of
Use Standard Measure
Dayton. Kopp, a 180-pound fullback,
Hugett said an established standard is considered a good backfield nrosof measure was adopted so that ma- pect by newly-appointed Dayton
sonry fits window spaces and door coach Joe Gavin.
A veteran of overseas service in
openings and coordinates with pre-cut
andpre-assembled ‘wall panels and roof the navy, Kopp is a freshman engineer. In high school he participated
trusses.
This process makes possible speedier in boxing and swimming.
construction and erection, effecting conDEAR MOM: There’s no separate
siderable saving in overhead which has
been responsible for recent high con- playfield for girls on Morgan playground. But there will be—if we
struction costs, he asserted.
Yet the use of modular coordination, contribute to the Morgan Playground
according to Huggett, should not be Improvement trust.
confused with factory-built ’ “pre-fab-

ricated” homes, many of which fail to
qualify under

Federal Housing

Ad-

ministration minimum construction re-

quirement. He explained:
“Modular coordination merely standardizes numerous component parts of

the dwelling and its equipment and
permits pre-assembly of certain sections without cutting and trimming
to speed erection and reduce costs.”

SPORT HAS
es
BE

YOU MIGHT ALSO MENTION WERE
GIVING A NEW TWIST TO TH’ OLD
MOUSE TRAP PLAY #

Besides two comfortable bedrooms,

As seen in
MADEMOISELLE

Another version of the famous ‘‘Beauty-in-the-Box’’. In
butter-soft Tish-U-Tex Felt,* the quality felt. Comes to
you in the see-through acetate box that doubles for hankies
and jewelry . . . that nestles so nicely in your bureau
drawer. All new butterfly colors.

the “perfected” home has commodious

sleeping accommodations for guests and
numerous practical innovations, accord-

ing to the association.

*A Merrimac Felt Body

. HAT and BOX

96.39

We've added a “new twist” to our
service. You simply bring your
ailing appliance to
Columbia
Household Appliances and we fix

It’s A Leighton

it so that it works like new.
Guaranteed

©FEATURES PUBLICITY:INC,
“You certainly can depend on
Zagalia’s Battery Service no matter what weather conditions are!”

Zagalia’s Service Station

rrr

PE

Radio VT)ddae

arent TTS
305 WAUKEGAN AVE.
-°
HIGHWOOD, ILLINOIS
PHONE HIGHLAND PARK 1533

\

127 N. GENESEE

WAUKEGAN, ILL.

~

�Page 26
Camp

Thursday, March 27, 1947,

North Woods—for Girls 7 to

Nestled in the pines
of Northern Wisconsin, altitude 1750 ft.
above sea level offers
a
real
camp
life. {|
Canoeing, Horseback
riding, Adventure- |
some
trips,
nature
lore, health and char‘acter building, fine
staff, Posture correc-.
tion.
Write
J.
Mors, 228 N. La Salle
i
Chicago
tH.

17

Now You Can Call

Chicago. Occupants of suitably equipped vehicles, when operating within the
range of the Chicago urban station,
are able to make and receive calls to
and from any telephone reached by the
Beginning last October, mobile radio- Bell system. Subject to further tests,
telephone service was offered for public it is expected that the service range
use in Chicago by the Illinois Bell will extend 25 to 35 miles from the
Telephone company. This service per- Loop.
To call from a vehicle, the driver
mits two-way telephone conversation
with vehicles operating in and around merely lifts the receiver of the tele-

Home while Speeding
Along a Highway

phone installed under ‘his dashboard,
signals the Illinois Bell mobile service
operator, and gives. her the number he
desires. His voice travels by radio to
the nearest receiver and thence bywire.
House-to-Car Service

If a person wishes to call a vehicle

from a regular telephone, he dials or
asks for long distance and then requests the mobile service operator. He
gives her the vehicle’s telephone number, and she sends a signal over the
proper radio channel. This signal selects
the particular mobile unit desired and
causes a bell to ring and a light to go
on in the vehicle. If the driveris away,
the visual signal remains lighted so
that he will see it when he returns.
A 250 watt fixed transmitter located
in the Loop will relay signals and conversations to vehicles throughout the

area. The antenna is installed atop the
telephone building at 208 W. Washington street, about 330 feet above
ground level.
Each mobile unit contains a compact
radio transmitter and receiver, antenna,

|hand telephone and

selective ringer.
Power of the mobile transmitter is 30
watts. The hand telephone set is mount-

ed under the dashboard.
Associated
with a control unit under the dashboard
is a power switch to be operated at

the start and end of a day’s operation.
Transmissions from the mobile units
can be picked up by fixed receivers located at the following points: 5000 East
End Avenue and at the Superior, Longbeach,

Austin

and

Newcastle

central

office buildings in Chicago; and at
Lake Forest, Arlington Heights, Downers Grove, Tinley Park, and Crown
Point, Ind.
:
Frequency Modulation
All the radio equipment, both fixed
and mobile, is frequency modulated.
The fixed transmitter will send on a
frequency of 152.63 megacycles, while
the mobile units will transmit on 157. 89
megacycles.

AVY GABARDINE in a double.
breasted suit, sizes 10 to 20, $155

The ova

to match, $115

Three classes of service are offered:
(1) a general two-way telephone service between any vehicle and any regular
telephone or other mobile unit; (2)
A two-way dispatch service between a
firm’s office and its own mobile units
only, and (3) A one-way signaling service to mobile units to notify the driver
that he should comply with prearranged
instructions,
;
The radio. equipment on the vehicle
may be provided either by the customer
or the telephone company. If furnished
by Illinois Bell, installation costs $25,
and a monthly service charge of $15
applies.
For general and dispatch service, the
customer must pay a minimum of $7
for local calls each month. Rates for a
three-minute general service message
within the Chicago mobile service area
range from 30 to 40 cents, depending
on the location of the land telephone.
The charge for a one-minute, two-way
dispatch call is 15 cents.
Rates Do Not Vary.

The rates for most calls do not vary —
with the location of the vehicle. If the
calling or called land telephone is outside the mobile service area, toll rates

THE DRAKE SHOP -

IN THE DRAKE HOTEL

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ea

'

THE EVANSTON SHOP + 1636 ORRINGTON

are charged.
Bell system’s “Telephone on Wheels”
service differs from police and other
operating radiophone systems. Unlike
the others, it is connected directly and
integrated ‘with the regular telephone
system, just like any other telephone.
Bell system first used radio channels
for telephone conversations in 1920, to
link Catalina island with California.
Overseas radiotelephone service began
in 1927 and now extends to most of the
countries in the world,

;

�) pee 27

Thursday, March 27, 1947

To Select Nominating
Committee at N.S.
Citizens’ Meeting

“The King of Kings”

Braeside Barn Dance

To Be Shown at

Planned March 28

St. John’s Church.

—

The Braeside Parent-Teacher Civic association will present its annual barn dance on Friday, March

The North Shore Citizens’ commitUne of the features of Holy Week
tee will hold their bi-monthly meet- services at St. John’s Evangelical
ing on Monday, March 31, at 8 p.m.
and Reformed church will be the
in the Winnetka Community house.
- Business at the meeting will con- showing of the movie, “The King of
sist primarily of the election of a Kings.”
nominating committee whose duty it
Rev. Felix B. Peck, director of
will be to choose candidates to fill
the positions on the board of direc- Church Extension, of Chicago, will
present the film on Wednesday, Ators.
pril 2 at 7:45 -p.m.
The term of the resent board of

28, at 8 p.m. in the Braeside auditor-

YW.C.A. Calendar
TUESDAY, April ee
8 p.m., Dunbar club program. The |
public is invited.
WEDNESDAY, April 2—
10 a.m. Sewing group.
THURSDAY, April 3—
10 a.m. Creative Writers.
6:30 p.m. Friendship club.

ium.
Decorations will be appropriatefan
the occasion and Guy Calheys, long a
7:30 p.m. Painting class.
ie
favorite of Braeside hill-billies, will
be on hand to call the numbers.
In addition to all PITA members, by the room mothers and cermin
students of the sixth, seventh and ments will be in charge of Mrs, eS
eighth grades have been invited to George Wadsworth and a committee
attend. | Tickets are being handled of fourth and fifth grade mothers. |
“The King of Kings”, which: por-

directors expires in May, and at the
annual May meeting a new board trays the life of Christ, was produced

will be elected.

by Cecil B. DeMille in 1926, and is

_ During the meeting Monday, a report will be presented by L. Julian shown some 1500 times every year|
Harris of Highland Park, chairman throughout the United States. No
of the committee on legislation on other film has had half as many
pending Fair Employment Practices spectators. Among the records of
legislataion in the Illinois State leg- the world’s most tremendous-historiislature. There will also be a report cal events, and in all the greatest

writings of all times, nothing ap-

of the committee’s delegation to
Springfield last week where testimony was presented before the
House and Senate judiciary committees considering Fair Employment
legislation.
The meeting next week will be
open to the general public.

proaches the awe inspiring magnificance of the story of Jesus of Nazareth, the King of Kings, . whose

words and deeds have swayed humanity for almost two thousand
years.
Other services of Holy Week at St.
John’s are

Rabbi Shulman Will Cover
Greek Problem Tomorrow
“Greece, Russia and our American

Destiny” will be distussed by Rabbi

the

Maundy Thursday

Communion service on April 3, at
7:45 p.m., and the Good Friday Lenten Quiet hour on April 4, at 7 7-45,
p.m.

St. John’s extends an invitation to}
Charles E. Shulman from the pulpit
of North Shore Congregation Israel the public to attend its Holy Week
services.
tomorrow night at 8:15 o’clock.
e
The sermon of the week is an |
|
Eon
appraisal of contemporary events in opportunity for greater leadership
the light of America’s remarkable among the nations in the days ahead.

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Thursday, March 27, 1947

Graduate at St. Therese Hospital

CATALOG

OFFICE

for these

SPECIAL
CATALOG VALUES
Phone H. P. 4800
OR COME TO
28 N. First St., Highland Park

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Miss Norma M. Santi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. Santi of 490
Deerfield avenue, and Miss Gladys M. Loizzo, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. V. Loizzo of 1200 Deerfield road, became.graduate nurses at
St. Therese hospital, Waukegan, February 16. Both entered the
school of nursing there in 1944 as members of the Cadet Nurse corps,
and last August were assigned to the veteranshospital at Hines for
six months’ training as senior cadets.

aea 19 |

Catholic Women to
Close Lent with
Special Service
TEEN AGE RAYON DIRNDL FROCK with bright
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Tuesday; :April- J. &lt;Ehe “Revit de
Dussman of Glenview, well-known
radio speaker, will conduct the services of the day beginning at 9 a.m.

Mrs, F. T. O’Brien of Chicago and
The North Shore Catholic Woman’s
league will observe the closing of Mrs. John E. McCaffrey of High- Lént with a Day of Recollection, to iand Park are co-chairmen: in charge
of arrangements.
be held in the convent of Malli
nThe League’s annual business meet-_
ckrodt High school, Wilmette
, on
ing will be held on the following
San
es ee eeee
Tuesday, April 8, in the Winnetka
Community house at 1 p.m. Yearly
reports will be submitted by commit‘Protect the Things You Own”
tee heads and election of officers will
take place. Mrs. A. J. Bremner and
PRESERVE
Your Wood Shingle Roof
Mrs. Richard Finn of Wilmette are
hostesses of the day.
with our scientific treatment
applied hot. The shingles still
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Repairs made if needed.
The postponement of improving
Morgan playground would deprive
growing children of the necessary
physical development they neeNOW.

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~

�Page 29

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Cadet Wilbur Wins

Brigade Boxing Title
At West Point

avenue, has battled his way to the brigade boxing championship at the United
States Military academy.
The intramural athletic program at
the academy insures the physical development requisite to a career as a

gaining both athletic skill and knowl- ‘nd during the war served as an inedge in a wide variety of sports, both fantryman, thereby following in the
of which are a major part of his trainsteps of his father.
"
ing at West Point.
The outstanding cadet won the briCadet Wilbur was appointed to the gade wrestling championship in 1946
military academy by Senator Hiram.
and was an important member on his

Cadet William H. Wilbur, son of regular army officer. Every cadet plays Johnson of California. Prior to his apCongressional Medal of Honor holder on one of the several teams each sea- pointment to the academy, he attended company
General W. H. Wilbur, 1540 Judson son, thereby in the course of four years Phillips academy at Andover, Mass., fall.

cross country team this past

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�oka

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Lake Forest College
Authorize Army
Annual Alumni Dinner Enlistment for
To Be Held April 11
Some Disabled Vets

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The annual alumni dinner of Lake
Forest college, called the “Pre-Century
dinner” because it will celebrate the
ninetieth anniversary of the school, will
be held in the Crystal ballroom of the
Edgewater Beach hotel Friday, April 11,
with dinner starting at 7 p.m. Informal

M/Sget. A. J. Juniewicz, of the
local U.S. Army Recruiting station,
326 North Genesee street, Waukegan,

address.

personal needs.

Chicago . . . AMBassador 3222

Duraclean Co.
Division of HOME SERVICE CO.

HEALTH OR DISEASE? IT’S UP
iy US
I,

announced this week that enlistment

For several years the League of
in the regular army of partially dis- Women Voters has been studying
abled combat wounded veterans of
public health problems in our county.
dress will be in order.
World War II, who possess or can
Col. Charles Mather, “Lake Forest be trained in certain critically needed They recommend a post war plan for
14, well known lecturer and educator, skills, is authorized.
health, by the establishment of a
will serve as toastmaster for the occaAccording to Juniewicz, applicants County Health Department.
sion. Following dinner a short report must meet the standards for general
What is a County Health Departon the college will be delivered by Dr. military service with the exception of
Ernest A. Johnson, president, and their specific combat-incurred dis- ment? A part of county government
‘Joseph B. Fleming, president of the ability. All applicants must be cap- which concerns itself. with the pro- ~
alumni association, also will give a brief able of caring unaided for their own tection of all citizens against sickness
Highlights of the evening will be the

Phone, today

Phone Deerfield 444

League of
Women Voters

Immediate Service
Typewriters, Adding Machines,
Calculators, Registers,
Pick up and delivery |
511 Waukegan, Highwood
Tel. H. P. 5505
:

The announcement also stated that

and death
hazards.

caused

by public health

What does it do? Controls comformer enlisted men, who enlist be~diseases. Prevents comfore March 31, 1947, or within 20 municable
days from date of discharge, may municable diseases by promoting
immunization against
be enlisted in grade held at time of county-wide
discharge from last active service. them. Works to bring about safe
Former commissioned officers, flight water, milk and food supplies. Proofficers and warrantofficers may be motes proper disposal of human
enlisted in the first grade provided waste, industrial waste, sewage, garapplication
is
submitted
before bage, etc. Encourages better sanitaMarch 31, 1947, or within 20 days tion in eating places, tourist camps,
trailer camps, swimming pools, parks
of release from active service.
and other public places. Aids in savCombat wounded veterans may obing the lives of mothers and newtain more information by contacting
born babies. Helps to prevent accithe local recruiting station at Waudents. Develops good health habits.
kegan.
;
Collects and interprets vital statistics,

Imparts health information to citizens of all ages.

Your Horist will be

|

2

happy to help you with

eciated
Gifts—so appr
your selectio ns of Flower
home, oF
at Easter by loved ones, for the
|
ut-in.
sh
e
th
d
an
ck
church, the si
looktoo—delightful
e Remember CORSAGES,
.
d daughter that
for mother an
ES
AG
RS
CO
e
ik
al
esigned
ng
hi
yt
er
ev
in
match

by your Floral

YOUR FLORIS

artist.

1 CAN WIRE FEOWE

RS ANYWHERE

presentation of a plaque for the outWhat does it cost? A county tax
standing alumnus of 1946, to be presented by last year’s winner, Philip L. levy not to exceedfifty cents per
~neidel, president of Lake Forest Na-: thousand on the assessed valuation
tional bank; and of a “special award” of taxable property.
for the alumnus traveling from the
Do we need it? Yes, as long as our
farthest point in order to attend the county has sickness and deaths from
dinner,
|such diseases as smallpox, diphtheria,
Entertainment and dancing also are whooping cough, scarlet fever, tuberon the program. Attendancé is by re- culosis, syphillis, gonorrhea, malaria,
servation only. Tables will be arranged undulant fever, rabies, tetanus and
to seat 10, and places may be reserved other communicable diseases. Yes, as
by contacting Mrs. E. C. Fleming, long as our county has sickness and
Alumni Association, Lake Forest Col- deaths from such diseases as typhoid
fever, dysentery, intestinal disorders,
diseases spread by mosquitoes, rats,
flies, ticks and other pests or caused
To Discuss Easter Event at
by other unsanitary conditions. Yes,
Dorcas Group Meeting Tuesday as long as our county has preventable
The Dorcas society of Redeemer deaths of mothers and new-born
Lutheran church will meet on Tues- babies. Yes, as long as our county &gt;
day, April 1, at 8 p.m. at the home of has illness and deaths from accidents,
Miss Ruth Rectenwald, 810 “South poor housing and poor nutrition. Yes,
Ridge road. Plans for the Easter as long as we have absenteeism in
Coffee will be thoroughly discussed industry and schools because of preunder the leadership of the commit- ventable illnesses. Yes, as long as
tee members, Mrs. Edith Hundley and there are people in our county who
do not practice good health habits.
Mrs. Ray Rectenwald.
é

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.

Thursday, March 27, 1947

A Wastebasket Hunt
Leads to Consumer

Green Bay School Rummage
Sale Closes at 4:30 P.M.

Research Technique

A wide variety of unusual articles
still is available at the annual rummage sale of Green Bay Road school,
being held yesterday and today in
the teacher’s room at the school from
9 o’clock in the morning until 4:30
p.m. The sale is being mquenet by
the PTA.
Clothing, shoes, rubbers, galoshes,

A systematic analysis of postoffice
wastebaskets a number of years ago

lead to the expert techniques em_ ployed today by a consumer market
research

specialist

at

Northwestern

university.
Prof. Charles L. Allen, assistant
dean and director of research of the
Medill School of Journalism at the
university, is a man who can tell you
what percentage of a certain food the
average housewife stocks today because he became interested in people’s
consumer habits when he was a newspaper publisher.
“One day a fellow challenged me,”
Prof, Allen related. He said he didn’t
believe anyone read my newspapers,
and that subscribers dropped them

household

equipment

and jewelry

are among merchandise available at
the sale..

City of Highland Park
Lake County, Illinois

GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION
Tuesday, April 15, 1947

their eggs direct from the farmer, the

Nominees for

most recent compilation of the con-

Mayor, Commissioners and Police Magistrate

tinuing consumer inventory revealed.
Only eight per

cent of all families

polled buy any yeast. And canned
asparagus and carrots don’t land on
pantry shelves nearly as often as do

other canned vegetables. Fifteen per

of the City of Highland Park
at the
General Municipal Election

cent of the families interviewed buy

into postoffice wastebaskets as soon advertised brands of dog food for
Rovers and Spots. Threeas they removed them from their their
mailboxes. To prove him wrong, I quarters of all pantries stocked cat;
.
analyzed the contents of wastebaskets sup.
Because the poll is continuous, Prof.
in the postoffices of three Illinois
- towns every week for .eight months. Allen and his investigators have
I never found a single copy of my learned some unusual facts about
newspapers, but I did collect some seasonal buying. For some wunexinteresting, discarded love letters plained reason, housewives stock
after sorting through bales of direct more coffee during the summer than
in the winter. When they drink most
mail material and circulars.”
After that experience of the early of it has not been determined.
Canned goods move fast off home
30s, Prof. Allen began to devote
pantry
shelves, the survey showed,
increasing time to analyzing people’s
buying and reading habits, with the while certain other products, termed
result that today he is an acknowl- “shelf-sitters,’ remain in pantries as
edged expert who passes on his findings to journalism students in his
advertising and publishing classes.
One of Prof. Allen’s market analysis
techniques is what he calls a “pantry
poll.” Directed by him and conducted
by students in the journalism school,
the poll has come up with some
enlightening facts about city housewives’ food-buying habits.
For example, the majority of home
managers prefer to shup on Friday.
_ Women who want to get into stores
on the least-crowded days will, if they
take a tip from the poll, invade the
markets on Wednesday.
Urban dwellers still prefer to buy

Specimen Ballot

long as two years.

and

what

(Vote for One)

ROBERT FERRY PATTON
ROBERT F. WALKER

—

“There’s .a tremendous difference
between what the housewife purchased

FOR MAYOR

she

thought she

bought,” Prof. Allen explained. “We
have found a 5 to 50 per cent error

FOR COMMISSIONERS
(Vote for Four)

in the memory factor.”
He won't reveal any details at the
present time, but Prof. Allen is planning to make an even deeper scrutiny
of housewives’ shopping habits. He
has developed a _ sound-recording
mechanism by which the grocerybuyer will automatically keep an accurate record of what she buys, without having to rely on her faulty
memory.
Z

Specimen Ballot
City of Highland Park
Lake County, Illinois

LYLE GOURLEY
WILLIAM C. HEINRICHS
A. GORDON HUMPHREY

CLAYTON F. LUNDQUIST
WALTER E. MEIERHOFF
EDWARD J. MORONEY, SR.
SIDNEY M. SCHWARTZ

GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION

Tuesday, April 15, 1947

OLIVER S. TURNER

Place a cross (X) to the right of the word indicating the way
you desire to vote.
Shall the tax for ‘Library Purposes’ levied and
collected by the City of Highland Park, Illinois,
under Section 1 of an act of the General
Assembly of the State of Illinois entitled, ‘An
Act to Authorize Cities, Villages and Incorporated
Towns and Townships to Establish and Maintain
Free Public Libraries and Reading Rooms’ aproved March 7, 1872, as amended, be increased

FOR POLICE MAGISTRATE
(Vote for One)
YES

rom 1.2 mills on each dollar of taxable pro- | NO

perty in said city annually, to 2 mills on each
dollar of taxable property in said city, annually?

City Clerk.

HENRY ANDREW HANSEN
~ JOHN P. WHITE ~

�PSA

RMN

TNS Lm, iy RY

BEWARE

Leen

By

ra

Tete

PE

TY

ee

eu

Boye

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page 32

Spring Clearance!
Briggs Gas Water Heaters
30-gal. Extra Heavy.
Special $1] 9200

Re Coes

Rheem-White
Electric Water Heaters

ye

52 and 66 gal.

- Oil Burning Water Heaters
30 to 500 gal. capacity

Freeman American Radiator Stokers

30-Ib. $157750

Period Csbicat
Formerly $122.95

Radios
Special now $7995

10 to 20 per cent reductions on
Electric Heaters —- Portable Phonographs
Sun Lamps — Radios — Lamps
Other Small Appliances
Hours | p.m. to 9 p.m.

North Shore AVC to

At Church April 1

Hear Discussion of
Conditions in Greece

World Series Film

The sound motion picture film, “The
World Series of 1946 and The All
Star Game of 1946,” will be presented
by Scout Troop 324 in the Scout room
of Highland Park Presbyterian church
Tuesday night, April Ls Staring abso:
o'clock.
The film was produced by the American-National leagues of professional
baseball under direction of Lew Fonseca, former Chicago White Sox star.

Highlights of all seven games of the
series between the Boston Red Sox and
the St. Louis Cardinals will be shown,
together with outstanding scenes from
the All Star game of 1946.
Guests of the troop will be the Scouts
of Troops 30, 33 and 35. Group singing and special entertainment will be
included in the program.
This meeting will be open to the
public, and any baseball fan is cordially
invited to attend and help usher in the
1947 baseball season.

“Magic With Laughs”

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house.

The local American Veterans committee will hear Nandos Pamagopolis,
former Greek soldier, and Prof. Hartzel, head of the political science department at Lake Forest college, speak
on the subject “American Foreign Poli’ at the Crossroads.”
Pamagopolis, whom the Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations regards
as particularly well qualified to speak
on Greek internal conditions, is now a
of Chicago. He
student at University
served in the Greek army during the
war until captured by the Germans.

Women of Moose
Plan Two Social

Events in April

Women of Moose, Chapter 806, is
| planning a barn dance to be held at the
Masonic temple April 12, starting at
9 p.m, Square dances and refreshments
Miss Marian Day, often acclaimed are on the evening’s program, and wothe midwest’s leading lady magician, men will attend garbed in calicoes and
will present her “Magic With Laughs” ginghams, their escorts in overalls. Vershowat the open house party of Teen nah Sjoberg is the chairman in charge
Age club in Community center tomor- of the dance.
‘row night. Due to this added attraction,
Witten hall will be the scene of a
&gt;» record crowd is expected to attend potluck supper given by the organizathe party, according to Dick Eubanks, tion Wednesday evening, April 16, at
ident of Teen Age club.
9:30 o’clock. Dancing, refreshments and
In addition to Miss Day, the program entertainment will be featured for the
will include dancing to the music of Loyal Order of Moose, Women of
Roger Morrison’s orchestra from 8 to Moose, and their guests. Co-chairmen
11:30 p.m., ping pong, checkers, cards, of this event are Jean Mett and Frances
Porco.
and refreshments.
All teen agers living in the Highland
Park High school district are invited to To Hold Sale of Used Books at
attend. Playground and Recreation Elm Place Monday and Tuesday
board sponsors the Teen Age club.
A sale of used books is being held
early next week at Elm Place school.
From 3 until 5. o’clock Monday and
Tuesday afternoons, a large and diversified stock of these second hand
volumes will be displayed in Miss
Turpin’s room. Books for both adults
322 N. First St.
Tel. H. P. 77
and children will be included in the
stock.
Every Elm Piace pupil is requested
to bring used books for this sale, and
to take them first to his home room
for counting, since the room having
the largest number of contributions
will be awarded aprize.. Books must
be on hand by Monday morning.

DAHL’S AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION
AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A SPECIALTY

WET
_ BASEMENTS |
WATERPROOFED

1

ae
$3 °
Due ” Blection on April 1st, we will be closed all day.
On April 12 we have a school board election and will be
closed from noon till 6 p.m.... Tuesday, April 15, we will be
closed all day for city election. Please order early.

317 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

Two well informed speakers will
highlight a discussion of the Greekcrisis when the North Shore Chapter
AVC meets Wednesday, March 26,
8:15 p.m. at the Winnetka Community

At Teen Age Party
Tomorrow Evening

|

A fine general
service whiskey
both light and—
full flavored.

é

Troop 324 to Show

and Redecorating Service

JAMES J.

MOONEY

Tel. H. P. 6443

TEL. HIGHLAND PARK 443
{ies Soe
atigeoeer
a

�GAS
WILL
SOON

BE
HERE!

North Shore Gas Company
“The Friendly People’

T. P. (Tom) CLARK, Division Manager

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

MALE
HELP

an

d FEMALE

D

ANTED

W

‘

:

No Experience Necessary

e

Bowlin

To fabricate essential electrical

equipment
construction.required in home
.

|

@
i
_

*

2

ODrilling
oe Tapping
- @ Assembly Operations
Phone Northbrook 102

THE M. B. AUSTIN CO.

Shermer Rd.

Northbrook

eer

8

John Gourley” &amp; Co.
Reliable Garage ..............-....-

field
1é

Academ

fiat
ar

cease

29

URAC
Gee eeu
rate
Lorett’s Girls

42
48

For IdealSunday Evening Entertaining and Dinner. Open at 4, Dancing .
from 6. Excellent Cuisine in a Spacisous and Beautifully Appointed Rooml

Each Saturday at 2:30.
Reservations Advised!
WHitehall 4100

eea

pays tribute to a favorite dish

Good Old:

BreadéGravy
Serve it often. And for a special,
extra delicious, smooth, creamy
brown gravy use Wilson’s B-V
and the simple fool-proof Rector
recipe
below. No meat juices
needed. Buy Wilson’s B-V at
your grocery or meat market,
‘

-

ae

&lt;

Son the first and last game, but Somenzi
took the middle one.
Although out hit
in total pins, the Lorraine boys got the
last laugh. This one hurt as I was bowling against my cousin and I’ll never hear
the end of it. The fact that we are ahead
of them seven games to five, will never
help

out

with

him,

so

Ill

just

have

to

hang my head in shame when he starts
to blow that breeze my way.
Duffy and Duffy went “big shots’ on
us as they bowled the 400 Club on Sunday
afternoon and won two.
The boys left
Monday morning for the West Coast,—
(hope they bring back some of that California sunshine when they come back).
Frigid Freeze came to life and won two
games from R. Seul’s, and F. Spannraft
had 600 while B. Walter had 626 for
Seul’s. Frigid Freeze really had their night
as they clipped out a nice 1040 game, and
the last two men blew the last frame
with strikes up in the ninth. Shame on you
boys! You really had a chance to knock
off that old 1100. Isn’t every day a team
ean get that close.
S
As you read the above you probably
noted that B. Walter had a 626. All season long you have seen that name.
He
has carried a mediocre team into contention for a while and his bowling has been
a bright factor in our league. He has
second high individual average of 187, and
throws a “heavy ball’? always around the
pocket.
-He is a good sport and seldom
complains about anything.
Bucky has to
travel from the near North side of Chicago and that explains why a lot of you
do not know him personally. However, the
boys in the league respect his bowling,
and he is a good addition to our league
and I hope that he will be with us a long
time.
Nice shooting, Bucky, keep it up!
As we swing into the last four nights,
we find the Paganelli and Duffy and Duffy
teams tied for first place with 50-34
record. Somenzi holds over in third place,
five games out, and-is followed by Club
Lorraine six games.in arrear.
Tied for
fifth, sixth and seventh are the Braun
Bros., R. Seul’s and the 400 Club, with
Frigid Freeze holding up the league. Looks.
like it’s either the first two teams all by
themselves and battling it out t6 the wire,
with the breaks one way or the other
deciding the final issue:

APPRENTICE
MOULDERS

IT

Young men 20 to 35 years of
age, who want to learn a good
trade and earn good compensation while doing so, would
do well to investigate what

A Rector B-V Recipe

we have to offer.

THE CHICAGO HARDWARE
FOUNDRY COMPANY —
aly avoneo

Crepe

ae nee

:

L.
28

ee

26

34

ag

43
57

Py we cece see aabeacctauson

Club Lorraine poured it on Somenzi and Lauterburg

Are
Seeking

of concentrated meat extract and
selected vegetable flavors.

Ee reas shen

Clavey’s

5a

We

aye
* * &amp;
Wilson’s B-V isa delicious blend

Rolling ’40’s

Seul’
ES
Bink

(a tue pels, WE avetucs bastcca/eonmaans
Reagan’s -.....cs..-t

YOUNG
_ MEN
VETERANS

‘Once again a whole nation

TUESDAY EVENING
League standing March 18:

Gus Klemp was high man for Braun Bros. fe

MONDAY
Wickory EVENING
Rollers

Fashion Parade and Dansant

Monday night the boys resumed
aids
:
start off, FPaganelli Bros. tripped

|

NewHorizon Room

Rich Brown Gravy
Melt 2 tbsp. fat or drippings, add
2 tbsp. flour, blend well. Add 1
cup water, milk or vegetable water,
stir until smooth. Add 1 tsp. B-V,
dissolved in small amount of the
hot mixture. Cookjuntil thickened.
Serves 3 or 43

Last
and to

50
58

60

Major League

Betty Rich—High individual series—582.
Theo Hamill—High individual game—212.
The Haven—High team series—2338. The
Haven High team single game—850.
Team standings:
Ww.
L.
The Hayen: ..2...:Seti Reeds. fookatnuediuvin 59
25
Die bi Pua sana tes ace eo
25
DCAVICLE
Bi

34

Erie’s D-X Station

“ MAJ. 577

NORTH CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Take North Shore to North

Chicago Junction and walk one
block west.

59

High Series
Helen McLaughlin
Rosemary Beckman ..
Betty? nieine &lt;6 aes
Luella William
Bety Krase
High Games
Rosemary Beckman
Bety Rich

Seul’s high game

WEDNESDAY EVENING
American Legion
Team

standings:

Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team

38—F. Coleman
6—R. Dunham
4—J. Klemp. ..........2...2......8—W. Johnston ................ 38
2—E. Hurt
5—F. Riley ....
1—O. Trute
7—M.

L.
28
36
36
37
37
38
42
44

Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
Team
CREST

No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
aN

‘bas
30
31
34
34
36
42
42
43

2
7
8
6
1
3
5
Ae not er anys Sas Sen rE 32

Team High 3 games, No. 6—2623; team

High No. 2—2609; Team No 1—2576.
Team High single game—Team No. 1—
931; Team No. 6—925; Team No. 8—922.
Individual Leaders:
Individual High 3games—1. M. Mailfald—643; 2. E. Horenberger—635; 3. M. Fredericks—625. ©
Individual High single game: 1. M. Mailfald—246;
Cameron—245; 3. M.
Schmauss—245. ~
‘

THURSDAY EVENING
Bethlehem League
High scoring tonight was by Tom Sloot
with 556 for series and 221 for game,
Aksel Peterson and Malcolm Hans tied
for second with a series score of 527 pins

‘

each.

‘

Standing of teams:
Ww.
L.
WE
Ss eet
;
26
Paks ste
31
Sparrows
35
Orioles
36
WAGsose ee se
36
Robins
38
Owls
38 ”
GrOwSe See
yneeaca
AT
Holy Cross League.
Holy Cross league will not bowl on
Holy Thursday; April 3. This period from
9 to 11:30 p.m. will be for open bowling
on 8 alleys.

FRIDAY EVENING
St. Paul’s League
Team No. 1—had high series—2339.
Gene Capitani had high 8 games—600.
Eddie Johnson had high game—236. Alice
Clavey also did very well—a 201.
Presbyterian League Team standings:
Redskins
Steelers
36Lions
42
Cardinals
42
Packers
43
Ginnise (os aes
46
Bear ee tok
46
Dodgers
46
:
MATCH GAMES
Northbrook vs. Wheeling
Sunday afternoon at Deerfield Bowling
academy, Northbrook All Stars team met
the Chicago House team of Wheeling and
won by 77 pins.
Northbrook’s winning
team included Don Brown, Rudy Abel, —
Rudy Kennedy, Wally Rogner, and George
Roehr.
Chicago House of Wheeling team
included Bob Koeppen, Earl Schultz, Earl
Dubball, Eddie Glick, and Ed Welfin.
Score: total pins—2271 and 2194.
;
Among those cheering the Wheeling
team was Dorothy Miller of Columbia
Recreation, a recent winner in the Deerfield mixed doubles tournament with ladies’
high series.

FOR
LOCAL
DELIVERIES —
PROMPT SERVICE —
Phone

Highland Park 570

National Delivery
Service

212 Railway Ave. | Highwood

�RELEASE 1947 GRID SCHEDULE
\

Thursday, March 27, 1947

~

With First Meet Against Argo
With six full weeks of practice behind them the Highland Park High
school Thinlyclads will travel down
to Oak Park to compete in the Oak
Park Relays this Saturday, March
29.
The meet will be one of the most
important indoor meets for the tracksters who made their debut in the
Suburban League last year after an
absence of five years.
Last week the Blue and White
Thinlyclads traveled down to Oak

\

\\\\

Start Outdoor Track Schedule

Highland Park
Has Three League
Games At Home

This Would Help

Tracksters Vie In.

Oak Park Relays
This Saturday

Page 35

°
*

Too BAD THERE
is SO LITTLE
TALENT THIS

TEAM
LOSES

Open Play At Argo In Only
Non-League Match for Parkers

MEET

EZA*€

By Ray Geraci

LESS 7:

“SOLICITATION

The 1947 Suburban League Grid
schedule has been released by Harry G. Pertz, Secretary of the Suburban League. Highland Park High
school will play three league home
games, meeting New Trier, Thornton, and Proviso, on the local field.
Morton, Evanston, and Waukegan
will be met away.
—
The Little Giants, coached by
Dave Floyd, will open the 1947 Grid
campaign with a non-league game
at Argo High school of the South
Suburban League. This is the only
non-league game that Highland Park
has been able to schedule thus far,
with two open dates remaining before the regular Suburban League

Park to compete in a practice meet

with Waukegan, Evanston, and Oak
Park in preparation for the coming
Oak Park Relays. In'the meet Highland Park showed considerable improvement. Highland Park’s shuttle

relay team looked good, while in the
pole vault Pete Haupt seems to be
leading all contenders except Miller
of Evanston. The frosh-soph have
high hopes in Dug Deaver, John McKenna and Steve Behr. The practice
meet at Oak Park was run for more
of a practice nature than actual competition and it gave the boys a

|
MORE
PARTICIPATION

May 17—District Track
at Evanston

Highland Park will travel to Morton High school
first conference

Highland Park in State
Cage Finals - - Back In 1935

chance to gain experience and improve their time.
Highland Park will open their outBy Ray Geraci
door season with Argo April 23 at
the Athletic field on West Park ave- iS ODD BUT: TRUE—Hichland
nue.
Park High school went down state
1947 Outdoor Track Schedule
for the State Basketball Tournament
Wed., April 23—Argo Varsity (Here) once—back in 1935, and that’s not all,
Thurs. April 24—Argo Frosh-Soph they also won the Suburban League
Championship. Yes, that 1935 bas(There)
ketball team showed that it can be
Sat., April 26—Wheaton Relays
Wed., April 30—Waukegan Varsity done, even by that very small school
then known as Deerfield-Shields
_ (There)
aS
Thurs., May 1—Waukegan Frosh- Hig® school. The ever popular “Solly” Thurston was the basketball
:
Soph (Here)
coach at the time.
Sat., May 3—Mooseheart Relays
Tues., May 6—Maine Varsity (Here)
The cage team of 1935 defeated
Wed., May 7—Maine Frosh-Soph New Trier, 38-18; to win the Subur(There)
ban League Championship for the
Sat., May 10—Frosh-Soph Invita- first time in a decade. It’s already
tional at Evanston
been a/decade since the last chamSat.,

race gets under way.

Meet pionship, but you know the old saying, “Never look back, look ahead.”

Fri, May 23—State Meet at Cham-

New Trier will open Highland Park’s
1947 home schedule on Saturday, October 11.
;
One Night Game

One night game is scheduled for
the Suburban League, with Thornton of Harvey played at Proviso on
ment at New Trier, and qualifying
Friday, October 3rd at 6:00 p.m.
for the Illinois’ State Tournament,
the following telegram was received
SUBURBAN LEAGUE
from Craig Ruby, then basketball
coach at the University of Illinois:

-

Meet at Evanston

it was an overtime, 23-21.

Different Rules

Basketball, Swimming
Letter Awards Tuesday
At Local High Sshool
With the basketball and swim‘ming season over, the annual letter
award meeting will be held at the

Highland Park High School on Tues-

day night April 1, at 7:30 in the English Club Room.
All squad members ‘and their fath-ers are invited to attend. All faculty
members on the athletic committee
are also invited.
Light refreshments will be served.

Illinois, I want to congratulate you

and your team on your achievement. Please let me know if we
can be of any service to you during your stay stop Please write me
immediately special delivery giving time and method of your arrival and where you will stay.

Craig Ruby
their first opponent, and for the first
half of the game it looked as though

Highland Park would have no trouble disposing of Champaign. After
taking a 7-4 first period lead, the Little Giants went on to hold a 12-6 advantage at halftime. But the third

daca

ing the Parkers to 4. Inthe final period,

Champaign

stalled,

and

FRIDAY—OCTOBER 3
Thornton at Proviso (6 p.m.)
Evanston at Oak Park
Waukegan at New Trier

HIGHLAND PARK at Morton
_ SATURDAY—OCTOBER i1
Proviso

Highland Park drew Champaign as

came

out with a 25-21 victory over DeerThe set-up at that time differed field-Shields (Highland Park). It
from the arrangement today. If a was a tough game to lose as far as
team lost in the district, it was not the Parkers were concerned, because
eliminated, but could still compete in they haven’t seen the University of
Ahe sectionals.
&gt;
So, Highland Park Illinois gym since.
went to the Sectionals at New Trier.
Here is the Highland Park box
Their first opponent, Elgin, fell eas- score of that history making game
ily. The next hurdle was a little with Champaign.
tougher, but it too fell, Geneva, 32Boorse F

at

Evanston

¥

New Trier at HIGHLAND PARK
Morton at Waukegan
Oak Park at Thornton

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18
Morton at Oak Park

Thornton at HIGHLAND PARK
Evanston at Waukegan
New Trier at Proviso

SATURDAY—OCTOBER 25
HIGHLAND PARK at Evanston
Proviso at Morton
Oak Park at New Trier

Waukegan at Thornton
SATURDAY—NOVEMBER 1
Waukegan at Oak Park

Proviso at HIGHLAND PARK
Evanston at

Morton

3

0

1

Thornton at New Trier

Nametits es agrees o&gt;
ment by defeating, guess who, New Orsborn’ 235 oe
0
Trier, 36-19. Oh! For the good old Shelton 63708
0 ee. 0
days.
;
|
Maintan 3.2.66
no3s 0
Face Champaign
Moseley oes
FoSh x 1
After winning the sectional tourna- Deanne
oe ea 3

aa

0

1
0
0

2
0
4

SATURDAY—NOVEMBER 8

By

oe

Oak Park at Proviso
NewTrier at Evanston

z

3

Morton at Thornton

29. Well, the rest is history, Highland Park won the sectional tourna-

~

1947 Football Schedule

In behalf of the University of

(Shall we say the year 2000 A.D.)
After winning the Suburban League
Sat., May 24—State Meet at Cham- title, the next step was the District
;
paign
Tournament at Libertyville. Here
Tues., May 27—Lake County Meet at Highland Park met disaster, and who quarter was the Highland Park downLake Forest
do you think defeated them? New fall, with Champaign controlling the
Sat., May 31—Suburban League
Trier, and to make it doubly worse ball and scoring 12 points while holdpaign

(Cicero) for their
game of the year.

Hansens

20 eine.

HIGHLAND PARK at Waukegan

ot

|

�Its YourBuickSut our Sweetheart

axe

Be

\

HEN you first slipped behind

That’s exactly what we’re set to

the wheel of that Buick of

give. In our shop we have the special Buick tools to do jobs quicker
and better. In our parts department is a stock of Buick engineered parts for Buick cars. And
we have a staff of thoughtful,
eapable specialists who know
their Buicks lock, stock and
barrel.

yours, remember how your heart
lifted? Remember your happy
smile as your toe touched off the |
hum of Buick Fireball power?
And your widening grin when all
roads seemed downy as you
winged along on BuiCoil springing
P
That’s what Buicks are built to
do. And they’ll do it long and well
whenthey’re cared for as anything so fine should be.

Not just an occasional oil change,
mind you. Not a haphazard “Look
’er over, fill the battery, check the
air.” But interested, competent,

understanding car care that keeps
your Buick at its best.

No, it’s not ordinary service you
get here. It’s expert car care — by
an organization devoted to seeing
that you get the most out of your
Buick. And surprisingly, for the
same work done, it costs no more.
Think it over. Isn’t it wise to let
us care for your Buick? After all,

Buicks are our sweethearts, first,

nes and style

Your Buick haslls.
li a you oe
that win wo If ca d han so
me e
O
ing

its mart an

you

Sould be? Are its luster an
oks,
its good lo
color?

it that Buick

‘sa wa

ae
y is right. : s
Eiieart sa - This is eee

ng
nes
that gives
buffed finish
res the su
cec
prot
and d a
esr
r
di
pere
an
e
road grim
Gee against

Porcelainizi

That's the way

we do it here. Try

it. See how 't

keeps. a new gS
ies how

it

gives

lustrous longe ew lease on goo

older ones a 1

— jooks.

CAR CA RE
TO GET BUICK
IT ALWAYS PAYS

last and always.

NORTH SHORE BUICK CO. INC.
110 So. First St.

Highland Park

�Thursday, March 27, 1947
HPHS Tennis Teams
Start Practice For

graduated. Some of the promising
men on this year’s team are Carky

Coming Season

King and Ken Cahn.
Terminating a hard month of ten-

By

Steve Herz

Rubens,

Warner

Rosenthal,

Dave

nis the season will be highlighted by

Miss Cruickshank to
Speak on Lions ©

Ladies’ Night Program

304 Railway Ave., Highwood
Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty
Graduate Masseuse

li will He dics’ nigh? foc! the
|

the State and Suburban -matches Highland Park Lions club this evenHighland Park High school’s var- coming on May 23, 24 and May 31 ing at 7 o'clock, at the Highland
sity and frosh-soph tennis teams, respectively.
House. Miss Irene Cruickshank, excoached by Mr. Broming, began
The tennis schedule for the 1947 change teacher of Edinburgh, Scotpractice this week in preparation for season is as follows:
land, will be guest speaker and will
the coming season. Scheduled for
Fri., May 2—Highland . Park = at give a talk about her native country
three dual matches at home and Morton.
illustrated with slide pictures.
:
.three away the tennis team will open
Miss Cruickshank is in the United
Tues., May 6—New Trier at Highthe season against Morton at Mor- land Park.
States for the school year 1946-47,
ton on Friday, May 2.
teaching the class of Miss Laura
Sat., May 10—District Meet.
Last year the local high school had - Thurs., May 15—Highland Park at Deerinck at Elm Place school while
Miss Deerinck is teaching on an
one of the best outfits to represent Proviso.
Tues., May 20—Highland Park at exchange basis in Scotland. The
Highland Park in several years. Led
Scottish teacher will compare the
_by Captain Charles Schaaf, who took Evanston,
ADhiirs..&lt; &lt;Nilay 22—Waukegan— at school systems of her country with
second place in the state finals, the
those in America.
Little Giants ranked third in the fi- Highland Park.
nal Suburban League Standings losBrix Sr-Sat, “May. 23.0 24-—State
He who 1s afraid of being too gening only to Evanston and New Trier. Meet.
Tues., May 27—Oak Park at High- erous has lost the power of being magThis year’s squad seems to be lack‘
ing in experience and the majority of land Park.
nanimous, The best man or woman is
Sat., May 3l1—League Tournament the most unselfed.
boys from last year’s squad either are
transferred to other schools, or have at Evanston. _
—Mary Baker Eddy

Packard Announces All-New

ELVIRA
HEALTH SALON

Gonwerible

ai):

ay e
COLE Yaak

NEW BROWNIE REFLEX
Synchro Model
For pictures indoors or out, in
black &amp; white or color. Combines simplicity of operation
with excellent performance. 12

pictures on

Oecd Se ec

63

ew

$8

UNIVEX UNIFLASH
With coated

$ 87 5

lens

NEW BEACON CAMERA
A modern miniature camera.
Coated lens. 16 pictures $995
on 127 film
Everready Case
a

Phone or Mail Orders

CAMERA CO.
This 1948 Super-Eight Convertible first all-new
“new

from

the_ tires up, &gt; with
production scheduled for

quantity
June, has just been announced by the
Packard Motor Car Company as a
supplement to its present Clipper line.

Among many standout features
of the car, described as ‘America’s

postwar

convertible” are power-operated, The instrument
and shown above, are ‘“flush-con- panel, with keys that push for both
tour” styling and a new 145-horse- “on” and “off,” has dial illumination
power engine cradled in a specially of “black light,” which eliminates
built frame.
night-time glare.
There are no rear fenders, the
The distinctive front end design,
body itself sweeping over the wheels. company officials point out, preAll windows, front seat and top serves and enhances Packard identity.

Evanston Store
Hours 9:30 to 5:30

Open Mon. &amp; Thurs., to 9 p.m.

1645 Orrington - Davis 2363
Chicago Store, 34 N. Clark St.
Phone: Fra. 2230-1

caster Handbags
Poets say they are a poem, musicians say a

symphony. Whichever, these bags of Spring
Gabarelle* topped with crowns of fluted gold
- are the keynote of elegance. for this new season. Satin linings and luxury appointments,
the LEWIS watchword for beauty and perfection.

134 N. GENESEE ST.

~ WAUKEGAN

.

�Page 38

Thursday, March 27, 1947

High School Trades

\

BOARD AND LODGINGS ON
FARM FOR 13 YEAR OLD
BOY
He attends military school in
Indiana during winter months
and wants to spend summer vacation on farm near Chicago.
‘Will pay $60 per month and
help out in other ways. Write
fully. Address box K-2 Highland Park News.

educational experiment for the community but won for the students the

(Continued from page 5)
national first prize in Better Homes
‘of the high school selected and placed in America campaign.
the furnishings, local and Chicago
The building of a new ticket booth
hoe. lent furnishings and the and refreshment stand at the athletic
community touch was added when field, relaying of the auditorium stage,
ladies of the local chapter of Better and remodeling
of the machine shop
Homes in America campaign formed and forge shop into art rooms occucommittees to work with the vari- pied students in Building Trades durous groups in an advisory capacity. ing the next few years. Two more
When the project was completed, it
was reported that several thousand

visitors

inspected

it.

The _ result

proved to be not only an interesting

houses were constructed, both built
for owners, one of which was of brick
veneer construction giving the boys

the experience to work with brick.

ae NAME is Lady Borden Ice Cream.
To taste it is to know the satisfying
smoothness of thick, golden cream . . ‘the fresh, clean taste of choice fruits...

the subtle delight of flavorings of rare

excellence.

-

Every true, full-rich flavor of this
superb ice cream is blended as only
the most accomplished ice cream makers
jn America can blend it.
‘There’s a difference you can taste.
Naturally, it costs a little more.
Ask for Lady Borden Ice Cream at
your Borden Ice Cream dealer’s.
“

e493

\

Comes

to

out of its

TOZeMs

ready to dip
.

ants ay colored package
fresh
you
z
dis tinctiv e

K

The furnishing of the new Lake
Forest High school which was under
construction at the time, offered a
good opportunity for the boys to ob-

tain cabinet making experience. Following this, erecting of the new field
house for the school was_ started.
This developed into a two-year pro-

ject but one which was of special interest to the boys as most of them

were active in sports.

The building

has two complete units, one for the

home team with 167 lockers and a
girl’s or visiting team. locker room
(Continued on page 42)

�SER ees

Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page 39

1947 Red Cross Fund Drive

@® PERMANENT

Opens in Highwood This Week

@ LOW OPERATING COST
e LASTING

Chairman Otto Fisher Appeals
For Contributions: $600 Goal

American Legion Bowling League

The opening gun in the Highwood
1947 Red Cross fund campaign was
fired this week by Otto Fisher, chair-

man of the Highwood drive, who
announced a committee is being recruited to work for the community’s
goal of $600.

March 22

=

TPOWEDCaSINOoso os
At Sete eae
Washington Gardens ..................
Press: Print Shop: -.....2Be ict
ead
Vowue Cleaners. 2053 4k
IDE ErOM OOMh as Na nen
be iss
ANCHO GAINS HYANGes 2h weno
ce
Ae Ge Nie Phersonc2 Ne ret:
Tommy’s

Service

i

tig

Station

41
41

.....2...:......

Labor Temple Tavern -......2....-...-Manhattan Hat Shoe Service .... 37
ee 34
LOC LAVEIN hee 34
ANOS
bl ARNO hice ny 34
Gadadiers “baal tk eo aes 33
coat OD
NY ester
ee a Ae Ng cs a
F. Bertucei ..
F. Coleman ...

“It is our turn now to help the Poin. NaS Wels. ee

American Red Cross, which always

_ stands ready to lend immediate aid in
war and famine abroad or in disasters

.of every kind here at home,” Mr.
Fisher said. “We can do no less than
to give financial assistance to the full
extent of our ability in this worthy
campaign.”

N.

Freberg

ers

wood. Names of Highwood committee members will be announced in
next week’s issue.

Highland Ten Pin

....

Does Noise Get On Your Nerves

Pereyra i= dee

AS. Harmison

CUE
Contribution checks, the chairman J. Carani
said, should be mailed to him in High- Eee METDIS

H.
W.
W.
BINS
‘A.
WR
L.
A.

ECONOMY
LIFE

42
44
AT
47
47
48
201
218

ie WSETISO
Re ee pre ee hit Pen oe eno
O. Carlson
KaGisy ton ts
SP

.

39

Duffy &amp; Duffy Cleaners .2.2:..2...:.:
Shop.

@ LONG

i
28
36
36
37
38
388
28

Highwood

Bump

@ SILENT

208

es iss

cs

gis toe,
Se
Johnson
Waldie
Fossbender
NVA
CLOGAG tac oo nee Os Se ea a
Vanni
RAM oo ae
Garino
Ori

The Servel Is Completely Noiseless

206

When will work start on improving

Bowling News

Morgan

Playground? That depends

on YOU.

Is your contribution in?

Moose 446 Bowling League
PemeOM
ES SOSoo
ee Ce ei oteess
Garino Accordion ....
ee
Esthers Tavern ...........
a
Modern Decorators ....
North Shore Buick
Seguins Funeral Home ...............- Al
Giangorgi Grocery &amp; Market .... 40
Del Rio Grill
Manhatten Hat &amp; Shoe ...
- Northbrook Tavern ........
Fe
Biiesia “VOSS es pees
eat

L.
29
33
33
35
36
37
38
39
39
39
39

BeOS TOS, 5s gd octet 35

43

Meyer &amp; Brother
Z
Russell’s Huddle
Farmers Beverage ....0......c.cecees-- 31
BEMIS NAVON 9 oils.
ae 31

44
44
44
AT

High
3 Games Games
542
201
2235.
207
209
ee
216

High Bowlers ~
M. Lunardi
Resend
J. Koopman
Pie erenCU Ole scam Se
"BRA. BS
= 7sa
DD. Mau &lt;....ats
T. Crovetti -..
F. Carlson :
H. Piacenza
RRRITO ooo
et 594
BPP MOROVEGEL«oo. 55 50222532
oweNce 539

223 . 205
215° 211
209
220
210

200

WALTER
The Tailor

ALTERATIONS
Men’‘s and Women's

The refrigerator without a moving part to wear or
get noisy.—just a small gas burner takes the place of
machinery in the amazingly simple Servel gas refrigerator.
No motor, valves, postons or pumps. Only servel brings.
you this different, simpler freezing system with no moving

Clothes
Without Delay
Suits Made to Order

Also Cleaning and Pressing

parts at all.
More than 2,000,000 happy owners are enjoying
this remarkable refrigerator. From coast to coast the

&amp;
Pick up Tuesday before
10:00 a.m. and Delivered
on Fridays
8 N. Second St.
H. P. 1712

trend is continually toward Servel.

Enthusiastic owners say, “Our Servel Gas refrigerator is
so silent we forget it’s there. We are amazed how little it
costs to operate. This beautiful Servel adds to the attractiveness of my kitchen.”
Mrs. J. Cross

S. Deere Park, Highland Park, Ill.

Winter is tough on lawns—exhausts grass, drains away its

“Even after 15 years of silent and efficient operation,
without a bit of trouble, I can say I’m certainly happy to
have chosen this long-lasting and economical refrigerator—
the Servel Gas Refrigerator.”
Mrs. J. Kiehl,
Llewellyn Ave., Highwood, Ill.

color. Now is the time to revive it with a hearty meal of
Scotts grassfood. It’s tops in
lawn feeding and economical—
50 Ibs. does the work of 150
Ibs. of ordinary fertilizer.

Scotts Turf Builder
(grassfood)
25 Ib., $2.25 feeds 2,500 sq. ft. (50x50)
q. ft. (100x50)
30 Ib. $3.75 feeds 5,
100 Ib. $6.50 feeds 10,000sq. ft.
100x100)
SCOTT SPREADER—Handy precision machine for quick seeding and
feeding. 25 lb. capacity $7.85; 50 Ib.
Rubber tired $14.85.

HUSENETTER HARDWARE
365 Roger Williams

|

Tel. H. P. 4387
-

\
Y

COLUMBIA HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE
305 WAUKEGAN AVE.

.

HIGHWOOD, ILL.°
PHONE H. P. 1533

,

ee

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page 40

Ws

AG

Engaged to
Chas

|

Vienber

KNOW YOUR SCHOOL
A series of informative talks by
the teachers of the Deerfield Grammar school, District 109, very briefly summarized, will be presented in
the Deerfield Review for the next
several months. These articles have
been condensed from their talks before the Deerfield board of education

Merny

McChesney

The engagement of Miss. Arline
Mentzer and Clair N. McChesney,
Chief Motor Machinist’s Mate, USN, given earlier in the school year..
is announced by her parents, Mr. and
Kindergarten
Mrs. Christ Mentzer of 660 Chestnut
street. No date has been set for the

wedding.

By Mrs. Darlene Hultgren
Kindergarten—this first step

“How Children’s Books Are Made”
was the subject of the talk given by
Mrs. Kenneth J. Weir of Rosemary
terrace for the Elgin P.T.A. last Tuesday evening. Mrs. Weir spoke on trade
beoks and Mrs. Elizabeth Crandall, of
Evanston, an editor of the Rowe Petersen Company, spoke on text books. The
exhibit which they took with them inin cluded manuscripts marked for the

the child’s introduction to the world

Miss Mentzer is an assistant cashier
at the Deerfield State bank. Her fi-

outside his home
and: family; 1s
TeOt es ctl agile a
guided play per-

ance, who has completed 20 years in
f&lt;1- the navy and is about to receive his
release, is stationed at Great Lakes.
He is a brother of Lawrence T. Mc-

iod.

The

learns,
ection,
werse,&gt;

Deerfield Author
Tells ““How Children’s
Books Are Made

child

with dirto
conwith*&lt;
a

aL Bening
Abii Eola
Margaret

Will
Bride

Hats

ples of both trade and text editions.
Mrs. Weir emphasized the use of
color for younger children and with
her own books showed interesting ef-

Flying here from Stourbridge, Worchestershire, England, on April 4,
Miss Margaret Harris is expected to
arrive April 6, coming from New
York by train. She will become the
bride of Dale Berning of Deerfield
on Saturday, April 12, in a ceremony
in St. Paul’s church with Rev. Hugo
Leinberger officiating.
It will be a very quiet wedding
with Miss June Berning, cousin of
the groom, as bridesmaid, and Robert

‘ects which may be obtained by two,

Page of Mt. Prospect, as best man...

inter, colored press sheets and sam-

Miss Harris, daughter of Mrs.
Fred Harris, was in the Woman’s
Land Army and met her future husgroup of his own
band while he was stationed in Engage, to find his
land for eight months. It will be two
way about in a
years this coming June since they
Mr. and Mrs. John Engstrom of
largte building,
have seen each other. Mr. Berning,
Endicott, N. Y., have named their
and to be happy Baptisms
son of Frank Berning of Albuquer‘son Lee George. "He was born March
although away
19 in Endicott. Mrs. Engstrom is
Glenn William Lusk Te oot OF que, N.. M., formerly of Deerfield, is
from his family.
the former Dorothy Utpadel of
Set. Major and Mrs. Lusk (Nora living at the home of his brother,
The child ad- Margaret Russell) -was baptized Karl Berning of Central avenue.
Wheeling, and her mother, Mrs.
“Charles Utpadel is now visiting at justs easily to the new situation if Sunday, March 16, by Rev. B. E.
their home in New York. The baby left alone with his age group and Vanderbeek in the Deerfield Presby- George Harder Honored
is the first grandchild of Mr. and teachers. Visiting parents in the first
| By St. Paul's Church
Mrs. George Engstrom of Central days tend to distract from his ability
: to quickly become a part of his group. ment of skills, new materials and
A surprise dinner party and testiavenue,
A typical day for the kindergarten learning to follow directions. The. monial were given Monday evening,
March 10, at Phil Johnsons restaurLinda Verne Rectenwald was born involves arrival at school, undress- children discuss and plan special proant
by St. Paul’s church council, to
ing
independently,
immediate
occupawant
they
and
what
find
Mr.
to
of
learn
child
jects,
March 14, the first
honor George Harder, who has
Mrs. Leonard Rectenwald (LaVerne tion with toy or picture book. Then without help, and begin writing their
served on the church board for 17
Goodman) of Osterman avenue. She comes the period of discussion by first names in manuscript. The latyears. They gave him a Bible, in
the
children
of
interesting
experter
begins
with
recognition
of
their
Mrs..
of
ild
grandch
_ is the third great
Waukegan iences and plans; handiwork; then a own names from those of others and token of their appreciation of his
Goodman of
George
services.
short ‘play ‘period. After a trip to copying it.
road. The other two are Bonnie Sue
On Monday evening, March 24,
the
wash
room,
and
rest,
they
have
At
this
time
they
also
begin
to
Mr.
of
r
daughte
months,
Scheskie, 7
Mr. and Mrs. George Harder were
and Mrs. Arthur Scheskie (Ruth music with their own teacher and count, using familiat objects, and
the day is ended.
then learn to write numbers from hosts.to the group at dinner at their
Jacobs) of Osterman avenue, and
Looking
always
toward
preparaone
to ten. They progress to the home on Chestnut street and each
of
r
daughte
months,
3
Jean,
Carol
tion
for
the
first
grade,
the
school
use
of
number concept cards which guest autographed the Bible.
ll
Kapschu
C.
“Mr. and Mrs. Charles
of Spruce street. year is tentatively broken up into match pictured objects with corresJr. (Jean Goodman)
specific growth goals. The first two ponding numerals. This is the child’s Successful Party
months are spent in orienting the introduction to arithmetic.
Mr. and Mrs. Angelo A. Sebbon, children to their new physical surMrs. George Beckman of WoodDuring the last months of school
ce
announ
avenue,
Oaks
Fair
1036
ward avenue gave a St. Patrick’s
roundings, use and ¢are of materials, there
is
more
concerted
effort
18
March
on
r
is the birth of a daughte
jlearning cooperation and sharing; toward preparing the children for party at her home last Monday evenat the Highland Park hospital. The stimulation of imaginative outlets.
a pleasant and confidant entry into ing. There were 16 tables of cards.
~Sebbon family moved here several
Assisting Mrs. Beckman were Mrs.
The
mid-months
bring
developfirst grade.
months ago from Glencoe.
john Anfruns and Mrs. Henry
Scheskie Sr. The potted tulips were
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams
awarded
to Mike Mendino and the
iis Blow) of Deerfield avenue,
fiower pot wall bracket, to Mrs. Wal-.
Highland Park, have named their
ter Clifford.
: son Steven Richard. Born March 13,
A gift of $100 was made by Mrs.
he is the first grandchild of Mr. and
Beckman to the new organ fund of
Mrs. John Blow of County Line
St. Paul’s church.
road.

Chesney of Greenwood avenue.

RECENT ARRIVALS

Robert Kittredge Varick is the
name of the first grandchild of Mrs.

Victor E. Carlson and the late Mr.

Carlson, of Stratford road. He was
porn February 21 to Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Varick (Lois. Carlson) in
Schenectady, N. Y. ©
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Belzer (Bessie
~ Ott) announce the birth of a daugh3 ter, Sandra Marie, on Monday,
eaten S7, at St: Prancis hospital,

three, or four colors. Mrs. Crandall
emphasized the fact that text book
publishers are attempting to make their
‘ceoks more attractive and interesting
ll as authentic.

“Mr. &amp; Mrs. Deerfield’

Mr. and Mrs.

Vs. “Mr. &amp; Mrs. McHenry”!
In Bowling Match Game

John A. Hoffman,

“The Seul Girls” team of theRolling
‘0’s bowling league held a match game

1003 Osterman

avenue

with five McHenry young women on

Saturday evening at the Deerfield
Bowling academy, with Deerfield defeating the visitors 2288 to 1919.
Husbands of both teams played at
the same time with Deerfield men
winning over McHenry husbands by

celebrated their
Golden Wedding
on March 15

- Evanston. Until their new home near

“ven pins.

galatiné is completed the Belzers
are living with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Ott Sr. of Oakley avenu-.
_ The Otts now have 11 grandchildren.

L

iN
terian church. The baby who was
-born November 6, 1946, is a grandson

of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Russell of
Rosemary terrace.
Jean Alice Ruter, daughter of Tee

/

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Allsbrow have

“named their third daughter Nancy
|

Migee.

=

and Mrs. Harm Ruter (Evelyn Ther-

Photo

James KTicoyne

COR
3
Soe

Lou. She arrived Friday, March 21,
at the Highland Park hospital. Her
sisters are Vera Lee ana Beverly.
ee Marolyn
Mrs. Allsbrow is are
: pees :

WEDDING ANNIVERSARY

‘

oux) of Greenwood avenue, was baptized Sunday, March 23, by Rev. B. |
E. Vanderbeek. Jean was bornOcto- aA
ber 7, 1946.
:

�Page

af

| Sjandran News
With Ds Young

eople_Ausiy_AS

ae

Air Squadron 51]
By Bill Winters
Squadron 51 to control tower. Tak- as

ing off!
son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond GoodThe meeting nights of the Deerman of Central avenue, received a
field Air Scouts have been officially —
delay en route just a year ago to see
changed from Wednesday nights to
his parents before going to Alaska and
Thursday nights at 7:30.
expects to be home in June, after 18
Thursday night, March 20, was the See s
months of army service,
~~
election of officers. John Mennenoh
was elected Squadron Pilot; Tom
Miss Mary Lee Seidner is on the Kerrihard, Assistant Squadron Pilot;
sister will be returning on furlough to second honor roll for the first semester, Bill Winters, Scribe; Bill Notz,
1946-47, of Lake Forest college. She is Flight Pilot No. 1, and Jim Diener,
‘he United States in 1948.
the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Leo Flight Pilot No. 2.
Seidner of 825 Forest avenue.
Flight No. 1 consists of Karl Hove’
Set, Richard Goodman, 19, received
Don Ubl, Ed Nichols, Gene Engelhardhis new advanced rating recently in the
Private first class Fred Grabo Jr. and Christ Soenksen. Flight No. 2 is
Aleutians, where heis stationed. “Dick”,
has finished his 20-week course at made of the following members;
Lowry Field, Denver, Colo., and hopes Jack Peters, Bob Spahr, Byron O'to be home Sunday for church services, Connor, and George Pope.
when his younger brother, Donald, is
Local Lads Plan
Bob Rainer reviewed the boys who
confirmed in St. Paul’s church. Pfc. have not passed their Agorentices
Grabo -is to be stationed at Chanute requirement.
A basketball tournament begins Field, Ill.
The squadron’s business discussion
k
Friday, Mardgh 28, (tomprrow) at
centered on the question of insurance
7:30 p.m. in the Deerfield Grammar
for the squadron as a group and the
school planned by two recreation
planning of the Mississippi trip.
directors, W. E. Sheehan and L. E.
If there is any committee member
Seavers, for the boys of 8th grade)
that would like to go on the trip
The Brownies of Troop 9 had an and can furnish transportation to
through high school.
Four captains have been chosen— | enrollment ceremony on Monday after- and from will he please notify Bob_
?
Jim McDermott, George Pope, Neil noon. Those receiving Brownie pins Newell
Bob Rainer and John Méensesoh
¢
Sheehan, and Jim Brown. These four were Laura Banfield, Catherine O’Conteams will have the first playoffs nor, Gladys Dardenne, Caryl’ Segert, debated the advisability of taking
on Friday evening, with the finals Darlene Lange, Joyce Ward, Patsy two-man tents or one big eight-man _
on the following Wednesday even- Rollman, Burian McLaughlin, Suzanne tent. It was finally agreed by the
ing. Girls will have a volleyball game Heupel, Alvina Sticken, Sharon Spriggs members to take the two man tents.
Barbara Allen, and Marilyn Clifford. Some of the boys will sleep in tenton the night of the finals.
For each year of being a Brownie hammocks.
es
The boys hope that everyone will
Seout pendants were given to JacqueAny boy fifteen or over whowishes
turn out to see the tournament.
line Frost, Dolores Ubl, Roberta Nolde, to join the Deerfield Air Scouts may —
Janet Vieregg, and Kathryn Kies.
do so and no previous scout experActter the ceremony the Brownies en- ience is necessary, and if he will ©
joved cookies andice cream. Co-leaders come to the Air Squadron Head-Mrs. Eric Banfield and Mrs. Charles guarters on Thursday night he will”
Tocelebrate his eighth birthday an- Yous were assisted by Mrs. George be welcomed.
Keep safe margin of air specd*es- i:
niversary, Robert Sievert was host to ‘Vard, committee member.
pecially in gusty air to avoid stalls, =“
a group ‘of his classmates on Friday,
(Pilot Safety Rule No. 3)
March 21, at the home of his parents, Kenosha AIll- Stars
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Sievert, 948 Oster- Defeat Bob-Mari Bowlers
April Fool Party
man avenue,
Don’t forget the April Fool’s fiat &lt; ‘
The Bob-Mari bowling team trav- lic at The Deerfield Grammar school|
Here, also, for the party were his
eled to Kenosha on Sunday to bowl on March 29, at 8 p.m. There will
erandmother, Mrs. R. G. Driver, and a match game with the Kenosha Allhis. godparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Stars, in which the Bob-Mari team be square dances, modern dances ~
Martin and two daughters, all from lost by 161 pins. The local team and plenty of refreshments.
The Social Committee has he
Chicago.
spokesman states that he has no decorations planned and will be put

asss Elizabeth Weir, the 19 year old
‘ehter of Dr. and Mrs. John Weir
Well fer the luvva Pete! I knew of Dera Dun, India, is attending the
there’d be a few awards passed out College of Wooster at Wooster, Ohio.
at that swell pack meeting and I. She will spend the Easter vacation at
fully expected a couple extra, but the home of her grandfather, Dr. Willook what happened—a big, snow fam F. Weir and Mrs. Weir of Deerneld road. Her parents and younger
storm on Monday night!
This list represents real work and
these are the fellows who won honors

during the past six weeks: to be
awarded at the postponed Pack meet.
Date to be announced later.

Bobeat pins—Robert Ramsay, Jr.,
Eddie Patton Jr., and Joe King. —
Rank of Wolf Cub—Billy Vogg, Pat
Carroll, Joe Kilcoyne, Bobby Rudolph, Russell Zartler, Dennis Carroll, Melville Steed, Billy Powell,
John Robertson, and Ronnie Kloepfer.

Geld Arrow—Billy Vogg, Bobby Rudolph, Russell Zartler, Dennis Carroll, Melville Steed, Billy Powell,
Ronnie Kloepfer, Louis George,
Bobby Giss, Randall Vanderbeek,
Bill Neill, Richard Loarie, Roger
Bates, Bobby Cole, and Bill Car-_

rolj III.
Silver Arrow—Billy Powell, Billy
Vogg, Bobby Rudolph, Bill Carroll,
Russell Zartler, Bill Neill, Paul
Dasso, Bobby Cole, and John
Price.
Rank of Bear Caleta

Bates.

—

Gold Arrow—Tommy Salyards.
_ Silver Arrow—Bobby Cole and Bill
Carroll.
Raffk of Lion Cub—Joe Kilcoyne
with both gold and silver arrow .
Now what do you think of that,
residents .. ? I knew you'd be surprized.
Den News
DEN 1—
This tribe. spent the entire day at
Billy Winter’s home last Friday. For
lunch they dove into a pack of hot
dogs ...an’, gee, was that fun!
Later on, Billy showed the fellows
pictures of birds from all over the
world.
Johnny Wolter, my reporter this
week, expects to sew on his bear

s

Basketball Tourney

Girl Scout News

Brownie. Troop 9

Robert Sievert Is.
Eight Years Old

whole den went over to inspect them

will be after April 1—when Bill Neill

ZANoP

excuse to offer for the trimming—
badge with two arrows very soon
“except the bad wood’. They will an. Nice going, Johnny!
cherries ... Boy! Ronajd Spahn nounce their next game later.
DEN 2—
had to miss out due to a bad cold.
Scores were:
Paul Dasso tells me that Mr. Herr‘Wow! look at this! There’s a bear
Kenosha All-Stank
mann’s two new calves made quite
208-208-175- 591
‘in with this pack of wolves—or there
. 171-1538-168- 492
a hit with these boys ...Yep, the

- 215-163-121- 499

up on Friday night and Saaeaere
morning. Get the tickets from the
Air Scouts or P.T.A. members. Air Meet

.

An air meet is planned on April 27
at 1 pm. at New Trier High school — &gt;

. 209-224-202- 635 for the entire North Shore Area.
celebrates his tenth
ey Happy
205-200-235- 640
last week.
;
Every member of the squadron will
birthday, Bill!
There’s a fathers and sons base"1008-948-901-2857 enter one to three planes. ;
Richard
Pagel
is
very
‘close
to
his
_ball game in the offing here... No
Bob-Mari, Half-Day
date, yet, but I’ll let you in on that gold arrow now... Come on, fel- Gail Meintzer
190-150-170- 511
|low!
George Moen
225-198-194- 617 ly in lectures and fours.
‘later.
Walt. Schmauss
147-130-156- 433
DEN
5—
Donning his uniform again as a
o 2en » Chief
ekecesy Armstrong’s
Marsh. Fredericks
177-169-189- 535
Gollee, another birthday! Bill Car- Bucky Walter
235-190-175- 600 chief warrant officer, while on tem- _
point system has these fellows real-|porary active duty, he studied shore —
ly working. So far, Billy Vogg, John roll reaches the ripe old age of eleven
975-837-884-2696
facilities at naval bases in Washing-.
Price, and Russell Zartler are hold- March 31, so the entire den will be
in on the celebration . . . Congratuton and Norfolk areas, the navy’sing the top spots.
lations, Bill!—but don’t start roaring
bureau of yards and docks, and the
ses 3
aircraft carrier, USS Midway.
i
Melville Steed’s mom is the new like a lion now... You haven’t the Returns from Seminar
During the war Chief Hurt ms
den mother for this bunch so she badge, yet!
stationed in Ireland, England, France, ©
Welcome back to Spruce.Street, In Washington, D.C.
attended the farewell meeting at
and Attu with the 67th, 97th, 29th,
Louis George’s home. There wasn’t gang!
Earl Hurt returned Friday from 28th, and 114th Construction battala single “absentee” since it was also
Washington, D. C., where he attended ions and with the 25th Naval Conthe farewell to several cubs ... No, Tri-County School Board
a two-weeks’ seminar for civil en- struction regiment, On being released
theyre not leaving town. They’re Meeting Tonight
gineer corps officers, to maintain his to active duty after 33 months, with
moving into Den 6!
ae of the Deerfield Grammar efficiency as an officer in the navy’s
20 months overseas, he returned to
DEN 4—
cheol board of education will attend Seabees.
.
his home, 920 Central avenue, Deer- “Awe
Bobby Giss’ mother wrote that a Tri-County School Board meeting|
The purpose of the course was to field, and his employment at Public
Indian skit for this group and what- th's afternoon and evening at the Mor- acquaint the 100 reserve civil enginService Co.
ta treat she had for the gang last rison hotel, Chicago. W. E. Sheehan ,|€er corps, all officers in the Seabees,
Chief Hurt is commander of the : :
en cep cakes with bananas and | ‘ueerintendent, will also attend.
with what the navy was doing, large- Deerfield post, American Legion.©
+

Commander Earl! Hurt

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page 42

AIR FILTERS
1” and 2” — All Sizes
Phone Winnetka 4166

372 Central

932 Linden Ave., Winnetka

fee
ea
“es
cn
2,
ras

H P. 64

For Real
OIL HEATING
COMFORT
Use Sinclair Super Flame Fuel Oil

CALL
TODAY

ECONOMICAL - - - TOO!
Gives maximum heat per gallon to
save you money.

GLENCOE 358

or. HIGHLAND PARK 359

Northshore Garden of Memories
A Surprise Awaits You IfYou Have Not Visited
THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN CEMETERY

Very Reasonable Prices
Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

High School Trades

(Continued from Page 13)

HILL &amp; STONE

Murphy and Miller, Inc.
“ff

Girl Scout

INSURANCE.

Phone Maj. 1067

tees serving were Mesdames C. S. with 99 lockers. Each locker room
Stunkel, R. C. Bennett, M. Singer, has ten showers and toilet facilities.
S. M. Schwartz, W. Ross, V. Wilkin- The building also has a coach’s office,
son, R. Bell, L. A. Nathan, A. How- locker and shower room, a five room
ard, C. B. Summers, G: A. Brace, caretaker’s apartment and public toiH.. C. Youngs, J. M. Maxwell, M. lets.
Kline, P. C. Biggert, R. S. Froelich
Start on Sandwick Hall
and T. F. Struve.
At this time a new era for the
Co-chairmen of the men’s committee were G. R. Parks and B. K. Per- Building Trades department was ushreault, assisted by E. P. Barnes, W. ered jn, as for many years they had
S. Holden, C. S. Sturtkel, M. Singer, been building homes for others, resiRS. rocliok&lt; 1: F* Struves Le Ay dences, class rooms . and the field
Nathan, A. J. Howard, T. Jardine house, while they themselves had no
place which they could call their
and J. Skidmore.
Mrs. R. A.. Foster was chairman own, and thus construction of their.
for the Elm Place-Green Bay party. own shop and class room building,
Her committee consisted of Misses Sandwick hall, began.
Clara Slack and Loretta Greenwald, - Sandwick hall has 12,000 square
and Mesdames C.. H. Guyot, J. GC. feet of floor area, and houses the five
Rayburn, F. W. Cherry, H. Blumen- different Building Trades areas: cabthal, M. Reading, H. L. Hubertz, G. inet shop, sheet metal shop, electrical
Bahr, W. H. Aaron, R. Metzenberg, shop, painting and decorating. It has
R. Carey, V. Glader, V. Weil and S. one of the finest brick work and conH. Lundstrom.
crete work shops of its kind.
Sidney Graham, chairman of the
The vocational department at
men’s committee, had the following Highland Park High school offers an
aides: C: H. Guyot, J. G. Rayburn, Apprentice Training course to veter€. E. Parker, V. A. Peterson, H. Lb. ans. Forty-seven students are enrolStein, W. A. Peterson, H. L. Hubertz, led in this course and meet for trainL. Cassel, J. F. Quigg and H. Blu- ing on Tuesday and Thursday evementhal.
Enthusiastic community nings. The class is in charge of Jossinging was led by, Mr. “X”.
eph Kral, a tradesman and superinMrs. Vernon Fox was narrator for tendent of construction of Lake
the skit, and Mrs. FE. C. Partlow, pi- county.
anist.

Coordinators for the West Ridge
gathering were Mrs. D. A. Burke Jr.
and Mrs. R. C. Whitney. Their committee was served by Miss Harriet
Kaiser, Miss Agnete Larsen ‘and
Mesdames A. C. Rooney, P. E. McFarland, W. J. Flynn and C. F. Chris-

Paving.
DRIVEWAYS — PARKING AREAS

(Continued from Page 38)

Mr. Durbahn, chairman of the Vocational department, is a graduate of
Stout institute and- received a bachelor of arts and master’s degrees from

Northwestern university.
structors

Other in-

in the vocational depart-

‘ment are Hal Carpenter who teaches

related

mathematics,

science

in

both

Auto

drawing.

and

Trades

and

Now is the time to get an estimate. Don’t wait until
the rush season is here.

Building Trades; and Harry Bolle,
instructor of Auto Mechanics and
Machine Shop.

Asphalt and Macadam Paving — Surface Treatment

tiansen.
:
Russell Whitney was guest speaker
of the evening, Thor Johnson chair-

SKOKIE VALLEY ASPHALT CO., Inc.
1228 Harding Ave., Des Plaines

man

© EXPERTROOFING
@ BRICK VENEER

SPECIMEN BALLOT

Now is the time to have a
new roof made of the finest
materials laid by experienced
roofers.

Town of West Deerfield

Deerfield Roofing Co.
Phone DEERFIELD 486
“WE HAVE WHAT YOU NEED”

ELECTION TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1947
Polls Open 6:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

Act, creating the “Illinois Municipal

NO.

@e

IRENE ROCKENBACH
Town Clerk
‘
~

Professional
e Amateur
@ Schools

Complete Stock:
@® Grumbacher
“@ DeVoe
@ Prang
@ Milton Bradley
e Favor Ruhl
Picture Framing

~Yssued by order of

e

committee,

and.

ing. The skit was narrated by Stanley Lynn, while Mrs. E. C, Partlow
was accompanist.

VOTE
In City Election

APRIL 15
FINE
FURNITURE
ART OBJECTS
Bought for Cash —

YES

_ Retirement Fund,” filed July 29, 1939,
as amended, now in force and effect?
-

men’s

Cement work.

4

included within the provisions of an

the

FREE ESTIMATES GIVEN

Lake County, Illinois

Shall the Town of West Deerfield be

of

Charles Rose led the community sing-

Phone Des Plaines 1165

;
:

Oriental Rugs — Carpets

Silverware —- China —
Porcelains — Jewelry —
Pianos — Libraries.
Expert Auctioneering
and Appraisal Service
WILLIAMS, BARKER

LARSEN &amp; PETERSEN

&amp; SEVERN COMPANY

PAINT CO.

Martha Mooney, Auctioneer
229 South Wabash Avenue
Chicago 4, Illinois
Harrison 3777 |

120 N. Genesee
Majestic 27
Waukegan

�Page 43

Thursday, March 27, 1 947

Highland Park

PUBLIC LIBRARY

The Story of Modern Art—Cheney
Masterpieces of Painting from the National Gallery of Art—U.S. National
Gallery of Art
American Primitive Painting—J. Lippman

The present exhibit at the library
represents the work done by one of the
amateur groups of Highland Park.
Paintings by members of Tom Wilder’s
art classes are on display in the show
cases.
The library sctiecang offers a number of helpful books to those who are
interested in drawing and painting.
Master Drawings—B. Holmes, ed. .
Willy Pogany’s Drawing Lessons—W.
Pogany
Be an Artist—M. Downes
Pastel Painting—G. R. Davis
How to Draw Hands—O. Senior
How to Draw Portraits—C. Woods
Anyone Can Draw Animals—A. Zaitdenberg

The American Artist and His Times—
H, Saint-Gaudens
Polish Painting—F. A. Sweet
French Impressionists and Their Contemporaries Represented in American
_ Collections—H. Gotlieb
Modern Masters from European and
American Collections
—
New York
Museum of Modern Art

The Materials of the Artist and Their

Use in Painting—M. Dorner
The Artist’s. Handbook

Ky

_ for EASTER

Order Your

and Techniques—R. Mayer
Makine the Brush Behave—E. O’Hara
The Technique of Oil Painting—L.
Richmond
Art of Color and Design—M. E.
Maitland
Golor, How to Use It—S. B. McDonald
For those who wish to gain an increased understanding and appreciation
of art some of the following books
would be of interest:

Flowers
Now!
Selection of
Lilies, Hydrangeas,

Corsages

Lake Forest Flower Farm
North on Skokie Hwy.
Phone

Lake

Forest 2764

|COME TO ZION
For Your

EASTER CANDIES
NATIONALLY FAMOUS

Zion
White Dove Chocolates
Luscious, creamy centers as well as nougats
and caramels coated with pure milk or semisweet chocolates.

Special Easter Pkg. $100 per Ib
ZION WHITE DOVE SUPER DELUXE
2-lb. Easter Box $225

ASSORTED HARD
CANDIES for EASTER

Beautiful Easter Baskets Made to Your Order
and filled with rich assortment of Zion Candies.

Priced from $1.00 to $12.50

is Always Plenty of bo hiee Space at Zion

ZION DEPT. STORE
Open Until 9:00 P.M. Saturday

PHONE 581 or ONTARIO 8055

This smart Cocktail Lounge opened fs
last week end and invites you to
SPRING GOES TO YOUR HEAD come in and get acquainted. Attrac_|tive setting, a clever Musical Trio
IT’S PLAY TIME
to entertain. In the very near future
Wanderlust overtakes us and we
the Dining Room will open, after
want to go places and do things.
being freshly decorated. American
Blue skies and golden sun light are
and Italian Dishes will be served at
inviting. The silver
on and twinkprices which appeal to the budget.
ling stars are alli Mig. A drive to
On Skokie, 300 ft. south Villa MoVilla Moderne, finished with a wonderne. Operated by Geo. C. Bartoli.
derful Lunch or Dinner is truly soul
satisfying. The same smart crowd, AND SUDDENLY IT’S SUMMER
beautiful background, and excellent
And you wish and wish that your
service give the pleasant atmosphere
house was new and fresh as all outof a smart country club: Henri Gendoors. Now is the time to select Fabdron’s Orchestra at the Dinner Hour
rics at Old Colony Home fashions
Dancing after Nine. Frank Hutchins
for making Slip Covers, Draperies,
welcomes you. Skokie at County Line.
or Upholstering. They have a very
large stock, all materials of the finTHE SMART HOSTESS
est quality and smartest colors and|
PLANS FOR SUMMER
designs.. Linnie N.. McComas, and
The woman who entertains cleverly her staff of Interior Decorators will :
knows there are many ways in which gladly advise in your selections.

119 Green Bay Rd. Wil. 6006.

ZION, ILLINOIS

—

and inviting. Grace Herbst, noted for
IN TIME FOR EASTER
distinctive Interior Furnishings, has
a wide variety of colorful Glassware, Very stunning Hand Wrought Silver
Pottery, and China with which to Jewelry has come in to Anderson’s —
make a meal facinating. Summer. Indian Arts, 622 Davis, Evanston.
Furniture to give comfort and enjoy- Ear-Rings, Pins, Bracelets, Rings.
ment to family and friends on the And Silver Mounted Coiffure Combs
porch or terrace—in the yard or and Barettes. Indian Pottery, Basgarden. Stop in and see her new kets, and Glass. Perfect for Easter.
Shop—563 Lincoln Ave. Winnetka.

DRESS UP YOUR WINDOWS
FOR EASTER

THE NEW AMSTERDAM ROOM
_ AT THE MORAINE HOTEL

Fresh new Curtains are effective in- —

This is a perfect spot for -entertaining private parties, large club groups,
or conventions. Who wouldn’t be delighted with the quiet atmosphere,
the beautiful Early American Background, and the view of wooded ravines and Lake Michigan. Drop in
‘for Breakfast, Lunch or Dinner. A
splendid place to spend a week end
vacation or to stay for the entire
summer. 801 Sheridan Rd. H. P. 4444.

doors and as seen from outside. Gives

your house a well kept look. The best
Curtain selection in town is found at —

Mildred Doyle’s Curtain Shop, 944
Linden—Hubbard Woods. Also Textron Shower and Curtain Sets (sold —
separately, too). Prettily flowered
Faille Bed Room Ensembles. Shag
Rugs in all the colors. Win. 3377.
WHEN YOU PLAN ANY MEAL
No other method of buying will bring
such gratifying results as TOWN

ADD GLAMOUR
WITH SILVER JEWELRY

AND COUNTRY FROZEN FOODS. _

At Chandler’s,
in Evanston, is to be Prompt, efficient Delivery to your —
found a wonderful selection of Ster- home of the finest Fozen Foods availling Silver Costume Jewelry. Remark- able Will bring Luxury to your table_
able Values including many smart with economy to your Budget. 65
pieces at One Dollar. At this low Green Bay Road, Hubbard Woods.
price are Chain Bracelets dangling Glencoe 411.
a half dozen small keys, Bow Knot
KOLYON FOAM
;
Ear-Rings, Chatelaine and Bracelet|
FOR LOUNGING COMFORT
to match each. Lapel Pins in Bows,
Spoons, Keys, sleek Lambsie Divey Combining the natural resilience of
~
and fat, cuddly Cupids. One Dollar Pure Latex with the bouyancy ofair
each. Sherman and Davis.
- Kolyon Foam Cushioning pro--

vides matchless comfort. Purchased

- HILDEGARDE
AT THE HAMMOND ORGAN

in flat sheets it can be sized and
shaped to fit any piece of furniture \y
where comfort and relaxation are ‘
important. Easily covered with upholstery material and very simple to _
use when you are doing your own ~
Upholstery job. Shown and demonstrated at Brauch’s Slumber Shop,
1119 Sherman, Evanston. Uni. 0121.

This popular artist, whom you know
so well, furnishes Dinner Music
throughout the Evening at Glenview
Country House. Specializing in
Steaks, Lobster Tails, Chops. Complete: Dinners served in the attractive

Also Zion Jelly Eggs

E Wet

Town Talk

to make the dining table look cool

Easter

of Materials

EL COMMADORE OPENS

| Dining Room. Old English Lounge
popular for gayety. Open at 4 p.m.
Daily. At 12 Noon Sat., Sun. and
Holidays. Owned and Operated by
Wm, Buzanis, 29 years Restaurant
Experience. Waukegan Rd. (north of
Lake St.) Glenview 1646.

SPRING VACATION AGAIN —
Soon the children will be out of
school for a week or so, and the
family have a yen to take a nice trip.©
Be sure to leave your Dog in the —
care of the Drs. Butterworth at their
modern Kennels. Now that Spring 1S.
here the Dogs will enjoy the large
sunny grounds for play. All the better, better families of the North
Shore prefer the Butterworth Kennels. Licensed Veterinarian always in

PLANNING A PARTY?
If you’re looking for a new entertainment thrill for your guests, why not

‘call on Jax Sound Service? They
will bring equipment to your home

to record your guests and their an-

tics in skits, interviews, etc. Your attendance. 2810 W. Park. H.P. 2967.
living room walls will resound with
rollicking laughter. Be the first hostess in yourcircle to try it. Telephone
Highland Park 75.

Ruth Wakefield ~

y Seago
Y

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otbine yX42

elgg AI

hoe

ot

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ia Pt

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yoenade

Sy

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BE Aad rsh

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2

2

�7

:

Thursday, March 27, 1947

WSCS to Continue Rummage
Sale Through Friday

DAN’S |
Painting &amp;
Decorating
Fully Insured

The Woman’s Society of Christian
Service of Wesley Methodist church

“

Residential and Commercial
Immediate Service
‘Phone Highland Park 6012

Indian cloak which according to legend
was converted into a beautiful cloth
with a vivid image of the Virgin. It
hangs over the main altar in a frame of

pure gold enclosed by
a solid silver
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Good, 334 railing. The courtyard and the church

will continue their rummage sale Fri-

Ramsay road, have returned from a six

day,

weeks’ motor trip to the southwest and thousands of pilgrims visit the shrine
Old Mexico.
vnnually, some well-dressed, and others
While in Mexico they remained in very poor.
Mexico City and from there took one
Sunday is the day to see the floating
to three day trips. Visiting to the flower gardens at Xochimilco, 14 miles
northeast the ancient Toltec Teotihua- from Mexico City, a truly Mexican
can pyramids of the Sun and Moon; Venice with its canals on which hunto the south, Cuernavaca, one of the dreds of flower-decked boats carry
most charming spots in Mexico with visitors. Words cannot adequately deits gaily tinted houses, pink, blue, and scribe the beauty of this scene with all
vellow, with their red-tiled roofs and of its color, motion, and gaiety.
brilliant flowers. Taxco, a village built
In the afternoon there is the Bullon the mountain side, changed little in fight.. When Mr. and Mrs. Good were
‘ce ‘since the days of Jose de there, six bulls were killed. They state
la Borda in 1716. Here silver is mined that while it is a sight one should not
and in the markets are many products miss,—it is also one that most of us
of native handicraft such as sarapes, would care to see only once.
tin candlesticks, mirrors, hand hamMr. and Mrs. Good visited Carlsbad
mered silver, and hand carved furni- caverns in New Mexico and they are
ture.
telling their friends that the vastness
To the southeast is Puebla, famous and beauty of these caverns was alone
for its Talevera tile and pottery and worth their trip.
onvx; the gaily colored straw mats
They stopped at Houston, Tex., and
and baskets of its native market. Oriz- at San Antonio for a two-weeks’ stay
aba, midway between the plateau and in the sunshine. They visited the beau-.
the hot country in the Maltrata, is one tiful Flying-L ranch of Colonel Lapof the most beautiful in Mexico, Cor- am at Bandera, 50 miles northwest of
dcba has tropical trees and flowers, San Antonio, which has its own airfield
ses and other brilliant tropical with hangars for those who come by
hirds. Here coffee raising is the lead- private plane to stay at the ranch.
ing industry.
Mr. and Mgs. Good took colored
Between Orizaba and Cordoba is El movies of their trip throughout Old
Fortin, famous for its gardenias, or- Mexico.
chids, camellias, and azaleas. Here is
the Hotel Ruis Galindo, with its swimRosenbaums Buy House
ming pool filled daily with floating
Dr. and Mrs. William H. Rosenrardenia blossoms.
baum have bought a house in the SherTo the southwest to Toluca the
wood Forest subdivision in Highland
scenery on this drive is probably the Park. At present they are staying at
most spectacular of any route out of
the Moraine hotel. Dr. Rosenbaum is
Mexico City. The road winds through opening an office in the Gsell building
pines close to 100 feet in height and up in Highland Park on April i
the Monte de las Cruces to an elevation of 10,433 feet. At Toluca is a
One Year Old
most interesting market with some of
The twin daughters, Jean and Joan,
the finest Indian hand woven baskets
of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dugo will be
and sarapes, and pottery.
one year old on Easter Sunday. The
Mexico City of over 2,000,000 people
Dugos live with her parents, Mr. and
is a city of beautiful buildings, monuMrs. John Ott Sr. of Oakley avenue.
ments everywhere commemorating their
national heroes. Homes vie with each
other in color and beauty. It is a busy Home from Denver
Irwin Plagge spent last week in Den~
city with numerous points of interest.
Colo., on a business trip, and rever,
Mexico abounds with ancient monas:
turned home Monday.

March

28,

since’

articles

left over from the last sale.

Interior and Exterior

An Account of the
Mexican Travels of
The Arthur P. Goods

who

have

were

Those

items to dispose of and

wish to contribute them to the sales
may do so by “leaving them at the
church,

North avenue and Lauretta

place, or call Mrs. Cameron, H.P.
1529 or Mrs. Ledlie, H.P. 1051.

Telephone Directory
Closing

'@ Your new telephone directory goes to press
very soon. In order to insure accuracy, we check
and recheck every name, address and telephone
number before printing. |

e If you have a telephone, please look at your
present listing in the directory to make sure it is
correct. If it is not, call our Business Office.

COMPANY

are always thronged with people, for

teries and the most sacred shrine is Our

Lady of Guadalupe directly outside
Hurt in Fall
\fexico City. Here hangs the cloth or A. J. Johnson
A. J. Johnson was hurt while standing in front of the Rommel house

Pick Up and Delivery

where he lives, watching the repairs

RADIO SERVICE

on the roof, which had been burned
in the recent fire. Mr. Johnson
stepped back and fell, cutting his
forehead, requiring four stitches to
close the wound. The accident occurred last Tuesday.’

Husenetter &amp; Cronkhite
365 Roger Williams Ave.
Ravinia, IIl.
H. P. 609

EXCAVATING
AND TRENCH WORK

BLACK DIRT

- FILLING DIRT
~

DRIVEWAYS
e

aa

eee

PT)

at

aae
ae

Be CLP aN

Sea

ek

BUILT

@

@

LOUIS TAZIOLI
DAY AND NIGHT PHONE H. P. 4662
“A Veteran of Foreign Wars”

igi

ea

4

ae

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Page 45

Alfred Hill Expires
After Short [lIness
Alfred Hill, 88, of 53 North Green
Bay road, died Tuesday morning at
his home following an illness of several days.

He was born in Sweden in 1859 and
came to this country April 28, 1882.

He moved first to Joliet and to Highland Park in 1894. His wife, Vendla,
died March 4, 1947.
German Services Maundy Thursday
The Rev. Hugo Leinberger announces
that he

will preach a German com-

munion service on Maundy Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at St. Paul’s church to which
the community jis invited.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank the American Legion
of Deerfield for all they so graciously
did for John Hittle. We will never forget
them. We also wish to thank the donors
of the lovely flowers for sending them.
John’s brothers and sisters:
Pearl, Mae, Faye, Bertha,
Harley and Matts

VEGETABLE JUICES

ee

V-8 Cocktail “cok 29¢
LIBBY'S TWICE-RICH
ea
Tomato Juice “97 25¢
PACKER’'S

LABEL ae

ss

Pictures Taken in Your Home

Deerfield 678

‘CARD OF THANKS

We wish to express our
thanks to relatives and friends
for their expression of sympathy in our recent bereavement.
Saulle Rossi &amp; Family

“can
15¢
ao

Minced Clams

i 19¢

LAKE SHORE

Prune Juice 07 25¢

STOKELY'S FANCY

46-02

GREEN BOW CUT

BROADCAST

16-02

Tomato Juice “597% 25¢

Redi-Meat
“can 36€
12-07
Treet or Prem "can 39¢
LUNCH MEAT, SPAM

DEL MONTE

.

pe

TomatoSauce2

£°2: 15¢

Niblets Corn 2 2°27 29¢
DEL MONTE DICED

S

ae

DicedCarrots 2 '0% 25¢
DEL MONTE CREAM STYLE

TEL. H. P. 4470

Spaghetti
PISMO

Temato Juice “97 23¢

FRESH CORN OFF THE aie

KILCOYNE, Photographer

VENICE MAID

GoldenCorn

‘9-2 15¢

eeccee

CORNED BEEF HASH

Gen

.

32-OZ.

Asparagus can 39€
FANCY SMALL
Whole Beets
'*°2 18¢
FANCY QUALITY
~~
Sliced Beets 2 '°07 25¢
NUGGET FANCY

can 20¢

Spinach

NO. 2!

FINE QUALITY

;

Tomatees
‘xn 19¢
LORD MOTT FRENCH STYLE

GreenBeans 2 8°:?37¢
2

AMERICAN HOME aes

Green Beans

oN 25¢

CHUN KING VEGETABLE

:

Silver Skillet '&lt;S7; 25¢

ChopSuey _“tkn 280

LARSEN'S

BRANDYWINE SLICED

Veg-All_..........
Scan 11¢

SUGAR PLUM

oe

Prune-Plums ‘°:242 25¢
LIBBY'S

De Luxe Plums “°:?2 27¢
oe

RED

RING

SOAKED

LimaBeans

‘“2210¢

‘Sit $00

Mushrooms an 36¢

BRANDYWINE BUTTON

Mushrooms can 39¢

BOUILLON CUBES

,

Herb-Ox Ske. 10¢
BLUE LABEL

Karo Syrup “mc 15¢

HALVES IN HEAyY SYR

OR GLASs. ee

NO. 214 can
OR GLASS

29&gt;

DROMEDARY

GRAPEFRU
HEARTS
WHOLE SEGMENTS As
9 No. 2 29:

NOTICE OF ELECTION
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that at the regular school election for
officers of Township High School District
Number 113, Lake County, Illinois, to be
held in and for said School District on
Saturday, the 12th day of April, 1947,
there will be submitted to the voters of
said School District the following proposition:
Shall the maximum tax rate for the
educational fund of Township High
School
District
Number
113,
Lake
County, Illinois, be established at .50 per
cent on full, fair cash value?
Said School District has been divided
into six election precincts for said election, the boundaries of which and the
polling place for each being as follows:
Precinct Number 1
All that part of said District lying
within the boundaries of Deerfield Township except that portion thereof within
the City of Highwood and the City of
Lake Forest.
The polling place of said
precinct will be at the High School building
in the City of Highland Park.
Precinct Number 2
All that portion of said territory within
the City of Lake Forest. The polling place’ of said precinct will be at the City hall
in the City of Lake Forest.
Frecinct Number 3
All that portion of said territory within
West Deerfield Township except that portion thereof within the City of Lake
Forest, and that portion thereof within the
Village of Bannockburn. The polling place
of said precinct will be in the grade school
in the Village of Deerfield.
Precinct Number 4
All that portion of said District lying
within the City of Highwood. The polling
Place of said precinct will be in the grade
school in the City of Highwood.
Precinct Number 5
All that portion of said District lying
within Shields Township north of the
City of Lake Forest.
The polling place
of said Precinct will be in the Village Hall
in the Village of Lake Bluff.
.
Precinct Number 6
All that portion of said District lying in
the Village of Bannockburn within West
Deerfield Township.
The polling place of
said precinct will be in the grade school
in the village of Bannockburn.
Voters will be required to vote in the
precinct in which they reside.
The polls at the election will be opened
at twelve o’clock Noon and will be closed
at seven o’clock P.M. on said day.
By order of the Board of Education of
Township High School District Number
118, Lake County, Illinois.
Dated this 21st day of March, 1947.
HAROLD W. NORMAN
President.
Attest:
LILLIAN C. TUCKER,
Secretary:
(Mar. 27)

U. S, Gov't Grade "Choice" and "Good"

POT ROAST
BEST BLADE
Ps
AND ARM a ;
CUTS — 18.

PEARS

STOKELY's
4
RA LIBBY's
RANDS

aw 39&gt;

NO,

21

SMALL LEAN

PORK BUTT ROASTS.. .. 47°

SHORT CUT

VEAL LEG or RUMP... . 39°
FOR STUFFING

SO. CUT SHOULDER

Veal Roast

ts. 39c| Veal Breast

U.S. GOY'T "CHOICE" &amp; "GOOD"

Rib Roast

ts 49c¢| SirloinSteak __ 12 99¢
POPULAR BRANDS

SMOKED HAMS
Ready to Eat

SLICED BAGON
69°

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63°

LAYER

LB.

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UNSWEETENED
46-07.

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ROSEFISH—ALL MEAT

Hamburger 1, 29° Perch Fillet. ,, 25°

9 CANS 33°
MUSSELMAN'¢ |

APPL

SA
UCE
TA
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NO. 2

|

CANS

—

FANCY FRESH CALIFORNIA

ASPARAGUS -----.---LARGE BUNCH

.

U.S. GOV'T "CHOICE" &amp; "GOOD"

COOKED OR

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1s. 25¢

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JUICIE”

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NO. 2

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�ant Ads

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REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(Highland Park)

REAL

@ Highland Park News
To Place Your Ads
@ Deerfield Review @ Lake Co. News
Phone: Highland Park 4500-01-02 |
@ Highwood News

@ Find It!

@ Buy It!
@ Sell It!

ESTATE FOR SALE
(Highland Park)

FOR SALE

(Improved)

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
(Highland Park—Improved)

HIGHLAND PARK

6 room modern bungalow, 2 car gar.
Six room English style home.
Located
5 room bungalow. 2 Partly finished rooms on % acre.
This is a real opportunity
upstairs. Extra lot.
for a country loving family. Occupancy in
2—5 room houses.
Also other good 380 days. Priced right for you at $12,500.
listings, investments.
Five room brick residence with 2 car
do not have what you want, will brick garage.
Hot water heat, full tile
try &amp; find it for you.
bath.
Walking distance to all Ravinia
Come in and talk it over with—
conveniences.
$15,000.
A fine brick home with grand sunny
rooms. Stone fireplace in living room, sunReal Estate Broker
room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms,
1008 Osterman Ave.
Deerfield, Ill.
and bath on first floor. One bedroom and
Tel. Deerfield 462-W
space for additions on second floor. Hot
water oil heat. Venetian blinds and metal
radiator covers included. One car garage.
Large lot. May ist occupancy, $20,000.
After painting &amp; decorating you can have
An excellent 10 room brick home. Engnice 6 rm home good loc.
$11,000. lish style architecture. Living room 28 by
Good substantial well built house in loc 18 feet with large fireplace...
Beautifully:
near stores West side H. P. ........ $12,500. landscaped grounds. Circle drive 107 feet
7 Rm Brk country home West H.P. $20,000 frontage on Green Bay Road. This is a
real opportunity for a proud home owner.

READY FOR DELIVERY
|

JOHN A. HOFFMAN

MODERATELY PRICED HOMES

APARTMENT BLDGS.

‘2story Apt Bldg, 2—5 rm Apts $20,000
2story Apt Bldg, 2—6 rm

Apts.... 18,000

COUNTRY ESTATE

15_ Acres lov country home on rolling
_ Ravine site 5 Bldgs, 20 mi. N..... $42,500.

E. T. SKIDMORE &amp; SON
832 N. St. Johns Ave.

Tel. H.P. 577

ENGLISH BRICK
This well constructed home, located in
one of the finest sections, has charming
Studio Living Room, attractive dining room
with bay window overlooking lovely garden, Den, Powder Rm. kitchen and large
screened porch on Ist floor; two
bedrooms, one of which is a master, and tiled
bath with shower on 2nd floor. House is
well insulated with resultant low heating
cost.
Priced to sell
$27,500.

REAL ESTATE SERVICE

541 Central Ave.

Tel. H.P. 2360

HIGHLAND PARK
$3,500 Down payment will buy 7 rm. fr.
H.W. stoker ht. 1 car gar. Nr. biz &amp;
trans. Home plus $200 per mo. income.
BUNGALOW type 7 rm. older home furnace ht. 1 car gar. Nr. shops &amp; trans.
$8,500.
HIGHWOOD
2 Flat br. 6 rms. ea. modern, 2 car gar.
SAG OLE) Webi Fe eis oe - $18,500.
GRAYS LAKE
.
FILL Station, 1
acre’
ground.
Bee a eee re ee ee)
ess oH $12,000.
PHONE H.P. 474.
MR. BENSON

~WILLIAMSBURG COLONIAL

Charming red brick with beautifully landscaped grounds, including
RED BRICK COLONIAL
fruit orchard, strawberry beds, perSituated in one of the best neighborhoods, this home consists of a generous renials, and large greenhouse.
hall, off one side of which is a spacious
Spacious living room with woodliving room with fireplace, also pleasant
sun room. A large dining room, workable burning fireplace, large sun room, atkitchen and powder room comprise first tractive dining room, wood-burning
:
;
floor.
fireplace and kitchen on the 1st floor.
There are 4 bedrooms, 2 baths on the
2nd fl. master bedroom having its own 2nd floor there are 3 lovely bedrooms
_ tile bath. The 8rd floor is floored and can and tile bath.
So into 2 additional rooms with
ath.
Steel construction throughout; heat H.
W. Oil.
Accessible to all conveniences.
Immediate possession. Offered at $35,000.

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; COMPANY
;

1551 S. St. Johns
Tel. H.P. 1484, 2855 or 1491

BEST BUY
Fine 8 rm, 3 bath brk home on over half
acre choicest property. 1 blk from school,
2 blks to station. Attract apt over garage. If you want a substantial home
priced right, then see this now. Mrs. Law

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

576 Lincoln Ave. Winn.

Win. 2700 Bri. 9001

_.

791 OAK GROVE. Most attractive English brick home with the desired bedrooms on the first floor. There is a very
nice studio living room with windows on
three sides, dining room with screened
porch adjoining, good kitchen, 2 bedrooms
and tiled bath on first floor.
Upstairs
_ there are 2 more bedrooms and bath, and
large store room. There is a dandy large
- wood panelled recreation room with fire_ place in the basement, also a full bath.
er moving away is offering property
at $33,000.
654 Onwentsia Ave. For some one who
loves to garden and who enjoys a large
yard with lovely trees and shrubs, we
recommend this older home overlooking
_ the Exmoor Club golf grounds. The property is 200x183. The house, though older,
is in good physical condition and available for immediate occupancy.
There are
four bedrooms, 1 bath and 2 beautiful
summer porches.
The ‘separate garage
building has 8 rooms &amp; bath apartment on
_the second floor. Reduced to $26,500 for
quick sale.
1900 S. Sheridan Rd.
These days so

many

homes

“New oil burner.

....

$15,850.

BRICK CONSTRUCTION — This
built house consists of large living room
with fireplace. Dining Room, Kitchen and
powder room on first floor. ‘There are 3
bedrooms and 1 bath on second floor.
Heat is H.W. Oil; fully insulated.

sists of a large combination Living Room
and Dining Room,
kitchen
streamlined
with ample cabinet space, powder room
on first floor. There are 2 bedrooms and
bath on second floor. Full basement, H.W.
Oil heat—fully insulated—1 car garage,
Offered at
$19

R. 5. HAMBLY &amp; COMPANY
1151 S. St. Johns
Tel. H.P. 1484, 2855 or 1491

HIGHLAND PARK
Move here this summer.
On edge of
ravine. Almost new 7 rm hse with all the
latest improvements. Streamlined kitchen.
2 car att garage. Mrs. Mueller

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

576 Lincoln Av. Winn. Winn. 2700 Bri. 9001
—_—_—_————_—_—_—_—
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)

Lake View
In full view of the Lake this perfect Colonial Cape Cod house is com-

plete in every detail. 1st floor contains central hall flanked by a large
living room and dining room with
modern kitchen and powder room at
rear. Four large sunny bedrooms and
three baths on the second floor make
this an extremely livable home. Mod-

erately priced at .

es. ABASO0;

Bannockburn
Located on over two-thirds acre of
well landscaped ground, this attractive
brick home has just been reduced for
quick sale and immediate occupancy.
On the first floor there is a large
living room, music room, dining room,
butlery &amp; kitchen, large bedroom-and
bath.’ On the second floor there are
3 bedrooms each with its own bath.
PEC he
il Red Sins Fo SS:Ht OOIUU

English Brick
Located in a heavily wooded section with a generous lot, this 6-yr.

tive dining room with southeast ex-

place, new wiring throughout, modern kit-

chen, new built-in radio cabinet and bar,
new floor in the basement, and many other
recently added details.
There are 4 de_lightful family bedrooms, 2 family baths
also maid’s room and bath all on the
second floor.

$68,500.
EARHART, LLOYD &amp; RINGER
_ 878 Central. oe

‘Tel. HP. 880

PAUL PHELPS, Inc.

387 Central Aves Highland Park 4580
BUSINESS LOT AND SMALL COTTAGE
FOR SALE. A 90x50 ft. lot at 146 S.
First St. with cottage. $8,500. See T.
H. Decker, 145 S. Second St. Tel. H.
Pee AU,
TWO houses on large lot, near schools,
town N. S. $300 income bargain.
Tel.

HAP. 2392.
552

YOUNG couple wish to rent 8 or 4 bedroom house for summer or year around
in desirable location; references. Write
Box A-85, c/o H. P. News.
COLONEL, regular army, and wife desire
2 or 8 bedroom furnished house or
apartment by April 80.
No children.
References furnished.
Write Box 74,
Ravinia, Illinois or Tel. H.P. 3957.
WANTED: 8 or 4 rm. unfurnished heated
apt. by refined middle age woman. Write
c/o H. P. News, Box A-15.
FIVE or six room house desired by small
family for two or three months during
summer. Tel. Lakeview 1803.
WANTED TO RENT: Apt. or house, 5 or
6 rms. for 2 adults. Have extra car for
sale at bargain price. Choice of (1) current popular model (2) 1942 Oldsmobile
(3) 1940 Studebaker.
Tel. Sheldrake ~
5975 (collect).

RELIABLE contractor will build to suit on
vacant lot, conveniently located in south
H. Pk. Write Box A-5, c/o H. P. News.

NAVAL officer requires two bedroom apt.
or house. Please Tel. Lt. Bing at Great
Lakes 2300, Ext. 834.

REAL ESTATE TO EXCHANGE

WANTED: Six room house, unfurnished.
Family of 4—daughter 12, son 9. Tel.
Mr. W. Olson, H.P. 5000, Ext. 871.

WILL exchange beautiful 6 room, 2 bath
apt. in Evanston for 4 room apt. in
Ravinia or along North Shore. Tel. H.
PD ALoss

ATTRACTIVE second floor offices at Park
Ave. and Green Bay Rd., Glencoe, with
excellent transportation &amp; parking. East
exposure.
Ideal for Physicians, Architects, Commercial Artists.
Photographers, Insurance Agencies, Chiropodists,
etc. Shown by appointment for May Ist.
occupancy. Tel. Randolph 4845 or seé
‘Janitor on premises.

WELL established Grad. Engineer with
—
wife and 4 yr. old daughter desire apt.
Veteran with best ref.
Tel. Lytle—
State 1846.

EX-NAVAL officer and Australian bride
desperately need small apartment, furnished or unfurnished.
Tel. Winnetka
38049.
:

HOUSE?

BORROW FROM KING
Auto Loans
Personal Loans
Furniture Loans

KING LOAN COMPANY
128 Madison St.

Tel. Ont. 5500

Just East of Genesee (1st Floor)

Open Friday Evening Until 8 p.m.
APT.

TO

RENT

(furnished)

THREE-ROOM apartment in exchange for
wife’s help in home. Tel. Deerfield 184
HOUSES &amp;' APARTMENTS WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)
RESPONSIBLE Montgomery Ward execui
Resident of
for 7 years
wants to rent a 8 or 4 bedroom house.
Will take excellent personal care of
property &amp; will furnish the best of ref.
Willing to make improvements &amp; long
lease. Please Tel. H:.P. 1061.
;
WANTED TO RENT: unfurnished house,
5 or more rooms.
Family of five.

Good references.

Lake Forest 2280.

WANTED: To rent furnished home for
summer months by responsible family.
Will furnish finest references.
Tel.
Central 5309.

as late as July 1. At least 2 years lease.
Wanted to rent by long resident adult
family.
Tel. H.P: 1794.
THOUGH married over 8 years we've
never had a home of our own. We have

a baby 2 months

old and she wants

to be on the North Shore this summer.
We want a furnished house with possession May ist or before. Will someone please favor us by answering this
ad. Tel. Whitehall 6800, Ext. 18-F.

APT.? or room

with

kitchen

privileges for responsible couple, desperately in need of quarters. Residence on
North Shore 20 years.
Please help us.
Tel. H.P. 6574.
:

MONEY LOANED

posure, library, powder room and
utility room containing heating plant
meédiate occupancy. Large airy rooms at- jand laundry. The second floor has
your furnished home while waiting for
tractively arranged. First floor has library three bedrooms and bath.
their own to be completed.
Excellent
and guest room combination and full bath,
As
the
owner
is
leaving
town
permcare, thoroughly responsible.
rumpus room in the basement, 4 bedae and 8 baths on the 2nd floor. $50,- anently, this property can be deliv-|. Tel. Greenleaf 4291 or Buckingham 8776.
Would rent now or later.
0
f
‘
850 N. Sheridan Rd. Two acres~ of ered for early occupancy. Price $27,500. MODERN 6 or 7 room house May lst or

beautiful ravine property well landscaped.
his red brick Colonial home has been
_ completely) modernized: several new fire-

FE. 800s

COUFLE would like to rent house for 2 or
8 months this summer. Can furnish excellent ref.
No children or pets.
If
interested please Tel. Greenleaf 0909.

VET., Northwestern student, wife urgently need furnished, unfurnished apt. or
SEVERAL LOTS IN RAVINIA, BRAEhouse. Will exchange ground caretakside and Sunset Subdivisions in Highing duties if necessary.- Ref.
W. Aisland Park at reasonable prices.
tony ¢. Tel, iP. .1886s7
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE AGENCY
16 N. Sheridan Rd.—H. Pk
HOUSE .wanted on North Shore for 8
Tel. H.P. 98—Res. 387
adults from June ist to Oct ist. Tel.
95-R-30-tf
B. L. Stein at Harrison 9100, apt. 1005.

This unusual prop- OFFICES, STORES &amp; STUDIOS TO RENT

erty is in central Highland Park near
schools and transportation. Immedfate “Occupancy &lt;0.
ee
ee $22,500.

old home is offered for the first time.
The Ist floor contains an entrance
require some remodelling, hall, good-sized living room, attrac-

some patching or at least a little modernizing.
Here is an exceptional one in perfeet condition.
You would not need to
spend a cent, and could move in tomorrow as it is vacant and ready for im-

BUNGALOW — Living room, has fireplace; Dining Room, Kitchen with cabinets; 2 bedrooms and bath.
Steel
beam
construction; H.W. Oil Heat, B &amp; G. System. Very attractive. Friced to sell at

HOUSES &amp; APARTMENTS WANTED
CHICAGO broker, wife &amp; baby desire to
rent furnished house on North Shore
June to Sept. or longer. Top rent. Payable in advance.
Best references. Tel.

' ROOMS TO RENT
NICELY FURNISHED ROOM.
ONLY. TEL. H.P. 405.

DOUBLE

ROOMS for transients near Central Ave.
&amp; Green Bay Rd., H. P.
FURNISHED bedroom,

light services.

Tel. H.P. 3990.

will exchange for

Also large bedroom with

some kitchen privileges, $12 a
20 Ravine Ter.
Tel. H.P. 5822,

week.

ROOM-&amp; bath.in exchange for staying with
children.
Tel. H.P. 6428.

DOUBLE furnished room for couple.
H.P .

2680.

Tel.

:

HELP WANTED

gas

(Clerical)

TELEPHONE __
OPERATORS
HIGH SALARIES
$29 per 5-day week ©
|

to start.

|

ie eae
ase

Frequent increases. —

4%

Apply To
'
Chief Operator
21 S. St. Johns Ave.

Des

Illinois Bell

a

Telephone Company
—
STENOGRAPHER
OR
BOOKKEEPER,
permanent position with a future propor-

tionate to your ability.
tional concern.

Growing na-

Stave age, exp., salary

desired. Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

MALE help wanted. Ticket taker. Elderly
person. Apply at Alcyon Theatre, after
7 p.m.
ee
ees

WANTED: Stenographer. ;

manent position. First N«

tional Bank, Highland Pa k.

f
‘

�a Shtyree

Thursday, March 27, 1947
HELP WANTED (Domestic)

MAID:
Experienced, white. Light cooking and first floor work.
Woman with
school-age child acceptable.
References
required. Lake Forest 8091.
SECOND MAID: Experienced, white. For
6 weeks or permanent, starting April 1st.
References required.
Mrs.
P. MeBrida, Lake Forest 36.
;

1594.

;

CLEANING woman one day or two half
days per week.
715 Blackstone Pl. in
Ravinia. Tel. H.P. 3830 after 8 p.m.

WASHING

SECOND
MAID:
white,
Experienced,
waitress and some upstairs work—about
April ist.
References required.
Mrs.
Burke Williamson. Lake Forest 146.

PRIVATE SALE in household furnishings,
Reasonably priced. Lamps, oriental rugs,
bedroom set, occasional chairs &amp; tables,
Duncan Phyfe mag. extension table,
and various other items. Tel. H.P. 5705.

MAN, WOMAN OR YOUNG
perienced in housecleaning.
per week—half davs.

WANTED:
Couple; houseman and wife.
Room, board and good pay. Biltmore
Country Club, Route 1, Barrington. Tel.
Barrington 789.
CLEANING woman or man for house —
:
weekly.
Close to transportation.
Tel.
MTGE OES hn
4
EXP. cook, light housework duties, 2 p.m.
until after dinner dishes.
Tel. H.P.
5073. &gt;

Y

,

PERMANENT help for general housework.
- Pleasant home &amp; surroundings.
Must
be fond of children. Good wages. Tel.
aioe. 022.
c
EMPLOYED widow with children 3 and 7
needs full time housekeeper. Must like
children. Pleasant family life for woman
needing a home. References. Write Box
A-45, c/o H. P. News.
.
COOKING &amp; care of first floor.
Adult
family.
Living quarters for employed
husband.
White; ref.
Tel. H.P. 1862
(collect).
‘
HOUSEKEEFER, white; for family of 3.
Period of month to six weeks. 514 room

house. Private room &amp; bath.
P. 4741.

Tel. H.

GENERAL HOUSEWORK, 5 DAY WEEK.
Come in late morning, stay through din-

_near Braeside station.

GIRL.
ExThree days

PORTER.
FOR GARAGE

Man about 45-50 years old to do
General Cleaning. Good wages.

DEERPATH GARAGE
191 E. Deerpath

Lake Bluff 10538.

Lake Forest 80

|

HELP

WANTED

(Miscellaneous)

SITUATIONS WANTED

ADV. I4ANAGER AND SALES CORREspondent for growing national firm. Unusual future for right man.
State age,
education, experience, references. salarv

expected.

WOMAN for maid work, small apt. building. Fart time. Good wages. Tel. H.P.
3025.
MAID for general housework &amp; cooking.
Own room &amp; bath. Near transportation.
Other help; ref.
Tel. H.P. 3868.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

MAN, WOMAN OR YOUNG GIRL:
Ex- NURSE: Experienced, white—to take care
perienced at house cleaning.
of two girls, ages 9 and 5. References
Comfortrequired, Lake Forest 3091.
able room, board and wages. No breakfast to be served.
No service required
Saturday or Sunday.
Lake Bluff 1053.

WHITE GIRL: cooking &amp; 1st floor work.
No heavy cleaning, no laundry.
‘Tel.
HP.

HELP WANTED (Miscel.)

HELP WANTED (Domestic)

DEERFIELD woman wanted as_ housekeeper; 6 hrs per day, 6 days per week.
No heavy laundry, no children.
Good
wages, permanent job. Tel. Deerfield 465

Duraclean

Co., Deerfield.

Jil.

WANTED
Highland Tran Pins
1389 N. Second St., H. P.
MAN with car for service or production
work. Must have good personality and
be capable of selling or making esti-

WANTED: Lathe operators &amp; other machine shop employees.
Modern Engineerine Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P
Tel. H.P. 1057.
a
YOUNG men or women in our shipping
dept. ‘Willing workers.
Good starting
‘salary and advancement.
Steady work
vear around. Ask for Mr. Fisher. Tel.
FEP 8711:
LUBRICATING man wanted. Good chance
for advancement.
Weekly guarantee.
Apply at North Shore Buick Co., 110 8.

First St., H.-P.

SALESWOMEN—Housewives turns spare
hours into extra dollars selling America’s most outstanding line of dresses and
lingerie.
Free outfit.
Write Mrs. G.
H. Russell, 1881 East 50th: St., Chicago
15, Illinois.
FIVE men wanted for landscaping and
gardening. Good pay. All work on ‘the
North Shore. Must be steadv and reliable. R. Kohlmaier, Dundee Rd., Northbrook. Tel. Northbrook 422.

WOMAN’S LINGFRT® &amp;
= SELCRE

ACCESSORIES

Desires sales helyn — full time.

Good wages. Tel.

GARDENER OR CHAUFFEUR: Experienced, white—married, wife will consider part-time day work. Living quarters. References furnished.
Write Box
_K-7, c/o Lake Forester.
ye

Good future. State age, exneri-

ence, references, salary desired. Address
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

TOWN SHOP

H.P. 4583.

SITUATION WANTED (Domestic)
RELIABLE girl wants light housework in
small house, 5 day week. Tel. Zion 921,

Men. part or full time at

mates.

(Clerical)

SECRETARY,
experienced.
Shorthand,
typing, bookkeeping, filing.
Excellent
Loop references.
Tel. H.P. 2781.

504 Central Ave.

:

SITUATIONS

WANTED

CATERING

G.I. wife would like any type of work for
six months.
Prefer office work.
Mrs.
Myrtus Eley, 504 Waukegan Ave., Highwood.
HEAD GARDENER—Wanted, permanent
position where ability, enterprise, and
experience will be appreciated. University trained; 10 years experience greenhouse, garden, flowers, and maintenance.
Age 36; married; living quarter necessary. Write, c/o H. P. News, Box A-25,.

Garpentry work. Tel. Deer-

field 611-J.

E. Keiser.

TWO EXPERIENCED gardeners desire
outside work by hour or monthly contract.
Tel. H.P. 6528.
:
ENTERTAIN at home—for six or more
persons; all food provided, served, and
‘dishes washed. Flaming sword dinners,
flaming desserts, luncheons, buffet, teas
and weddings. Franzen and Co., Superior 0491, Chicago and suburbs.
as
OREPaPRD

ig

aiOE ehh SE. heOETe EELER

NCR

CLOTHING FOR SALE

Highland Park

Universal,

with

Also

ae
f
22253
a

MAJESTIC electric refrigerator, 8 cu. ft.
In very good condition. 2 pr. eurtain
stretchers. Tel. Wilmette 2224,
THOR washing machine, excellent condition, $35; two blue shag rugs, very
beautiful, $12.50 each. Tel. H.P. 3599.

STAINLESS steel cabinet sink, 60 in. wide,
perfect condition;
Universal
washing ~
machine, just 6 mo. old; Capehart pianomuse combination radio &amp; phonograph,
has F.M., eautiful modern bleached
wood cabinet, like new. Tel. H.P. 3624.
MICELLANEOUS FOR SALE
ELECTRIC

house,

ee

500

chick

8xl0-ft.;

business.

&amp;

brooder:

odds

Tel.

&amp;

thickens

ends for

Deerfield

279- :

(Miscel.)

Weddings, teas, dinner parties, large or
small, Tel. Glencoe 1594. P. C. McCultough.

ODD: JOBS.

machine,

spinner dryer, perfect condition.

hot water heater,
30-gal.,
automatic
thermostatically controled, oil fired, ‘like
new.
Tel. H.P. 4284 Saturday.
‘

LATE model GE washing machine. Royal S
‘office typewriter; chair-side radio.
Tel.
HPs 4718;
a

ONE % horsepower air compressor, large
tank &amp; one 1937 Cervi Car. Cervi Har-ley-Davidson Shop, 552 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood.

SET OF THREE JIMMY THOMPSON _
GOLF CLUBS.
H.P. 4502.

GOOD CONDITION. Tel. —
;
on

PADDACK’S WOODWORKING CO.
2395 W. Park
ve,
:
Highland Park, Ill.
Solid walnut furniture &amp; wood products.
Custom-built cabinet work solicited,
Telephone Deerfield 7386 .
FOR SALE: Sofa, small wood cabinet, and
Sa lamb coat size.20.
Tel. H.P.
Ss

CONVERTING

to

gas

heat.

Will

sell —

American Radiator horizontal boiler, 611.

ft. &amp; stoker, all controls, good condition,
$100.
Delivery late spring.
961 Central Ave. Tel. Deerfield 185.
'

USED MERCHANDISE: Congoleum rug. —
wicker lounge, Frigidare, rocking chairs,
straight chairs, drop leaf table, double
beds, doll house, saxophone, guitar, 29
S. Second St., H
:

SPRING coat size 12, price $8; three silk
SALES OPPORTUNITIES
dresses, $5 each; men’s white shirts,
Bowman Dairy Co. has exceptional opsize 16, each $1; two men’s overcoats,
portunities to offer men in sales work.
$10 each.: Tel. H.P. 2086.
Salary $260 per month plus commission.
needs rear tire, otherwise excellent conNo exverience necessary. We will train FINEST Russian Lynx Coat, 36 inches
dition, $110. Tel. H.P. 4741..
GENERAL maid; other help. Small house.
‘.
you. Tel. Mr. Musser, H.P. 2700.
long, practically new, will sacrifice.
Two children; current wages. Own room,
| No dealers. Tel. after 6, Delaware 1798. PRIVATE party wishes to sell lady’s platibath, radio.
843 Lincoln Ave., H.
EXPERIENCED male grocery clerk wanted.
num 2 kt. diamond.
Must sacrifice.
Tel. H.P. 2842.
:
Rapp Brothers, 24 N. First St., H. P. EVENING DRESSES: Two identical peach
Tel. H.P. 5996 between 5:30 &amp; 7 p.m.
Tel.
H.P.
1676.
_ EXCELLENT position for capable white
colored net—fresh and pretty. Gowns
:
girl. 2nd work &amp; assist with 2 children. INFANT’S NURSE. Experienced. For three
worn only twice, $15 each, plus cost of NEW MERCHANDISE.
New Universal
vacuum cleaners, $25, allowance for your
this ad. Lake Forest 208.
Ref. req.
Tel. H.P. 445.
months starting May 1st. No other chilold cleaner, regardless of make or condi- —
dren. Other help. Tel. H.P. 5920.
tion. Fiber seat covers for sedan, $18.50.
COUPLE, compact home near transporta_
HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE
Haak’s Auto Supply.
tion; ref. Salary $250. Tel. H.P. 3868.
Us
renee
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Young woman, between the age of 21 and
3 COUPLE exp., white; ref. req.; 4 in famTrading Post. We sell furniture, bric-a- LARGE executive office desk of walnut
35 years to train for Soda Fountain and
with glass top, in excellent condition.
Tel. H.P. 2687
_
ily.
Highest salary.
brace &amp; clothing. 47S. St. Johns. Tel.|lunch counter management. WHE TEACH
_ Also secretary’s typewriter desk and
(collect).
3
HEP! 2744;
84-B120-In-tf
YOU fundamentals of cooking, baking,
chairs to match. To be seen at Iredale
buying and menu planning.
COOK, white. Other help employed. = Tel.
Storage, 874 Central Ave., H.. P.
Learn a staple, growing business. Pre- FILTER-TYPE vacuum cleaner like new.
#.P. 820 (collect).
Extra powerful, silent; variety of accesvious experience preferred, but not a resories.
Mr. Stevenson, 839 Waukegan PLAY PEN on rollers with pad, $8
quirement.
Uniforms and meals furpair of curtain stretchers, like new, $3
MAID, general housework. No laundry.
Rd., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 445.
nished.
Good
salary
while
learning.
No
coal stove, $25. Tel. H.P. 5994.
Own room, bath &amp; radio. Top wages.
Sunday or holiday work. Write, c/o H.
Tel. H.P. 2856 (collect).
IVORY colored leather davenport with
P. News, Box A-55.
rose damask cushions.
In good condi- EASTER bargains, size 12 and 14. Dresses,
COUPLE OR GENERAL MAID |
coats, suit; rose damask draperies; 90x
tion, $80. Tel. H.P. 596.
8 adults in family. Near transportation. WANTED: Experienced sewing women for
108 ruffled curtains. All cleaned. Tel.
custom drapery work.
C. Eklund, 875
Deerfield 439.
Own room, bath &amp; sitting room. Top
STERLING SILVER—Special clearance this
Park
Ave.,
Glencoe.
Tel.
Glencoe
33.
\
wages. Ideal perm. position.
Tel. H.
week while these new pieces last.
_ P. 8063.
‘
6%” Sterling compotes at $10; 7—5%4” CHICKEN HOUSE with full door, window,.
MAN wanted to help gardener maintain
run,
roosts.
Large
coop.
Tel.
H.P.
2555
heavy Sterling dishes at $8; 4—6%”
lawns, shrubbery and gardens on private
or see at 983 Ridgewood Dr., H. P.
|
a iy WANTED: Maid, hours 8 to 5. Family of
heavy: Sterling bon bon at $10; 6—6”
estate in Highland Park. $1.00 per hour,
2 adults. Small apt. Tel. H.P. 5665.
Sterling compotes at $9. Tax included.
44 hours per week. Work starts April
LAWN
&amp;
garden
supplies.
Rotary
tiller,
&amp;
Save
25
to
40%.
WHITE’S,
624
Grove,
Ist to late November. See Gardener,
lawn roller for hire. Borchardt Fuel Co., —
- WANTED:
Woman—cook. Room, board
Evanston.
725 Waverly Rd.
*
and good pay. Biltmore Country Club.
Tel. BP. 67.
ates
nea
Route 1, Barrington.
Tel. Barrington
SHERATON walnut dining room set, 6
WALNUT
dining
room
set,
$175;
two
men’s”
Cpe eBg.:
chairs, buffet, full size table with 3 exovercoats, medium. Tel. H.P. 1167."
tension leaves, $95; oak knee-hole desk
CLEANING woman, one day a week; ref.
FOR
5 drawers, $45.
Tel. Deerfield 637,
DIAPERS, new knit, never used. Soft &amp;
(PE IBC Tel. HP. 454;
after 6 p.m.
absorbent.
Manufactures. very slight
; DAY help through dinner. Full or part
second. $2 adoz. Richards, 2113 Kenil- |
Experienced, steady job and good wages.
LARGE size crib, well-known make, &amp; matworth
Ave.
Tel.
Wilmette 2318. Phone —
time, by day or week; 2 in family; small
tress, like new, less than half price,
or C.O.D. orders acceptable.
:
house. Tel. H.P. 5920.
$15. 961 Central Ave. Tel. Deerfield 185.
GENERAL housework, experienced. Two
grown children.
Two rooms, bath &amp;
- radio. Near transportation. No heavy
laundry. References. Tel. H.P. 6525.

wees

MOTOR SCOOTER, Cushman Kari Pack,

“ATTENDANT
SERVICE STATION

DEERPATH GARAGE

2

gc GENERAL housework.

New home.

room &amp; bath, $25 to $30.

191 E. Deerpath

Own

Tel. H.P. 2818

GENERAL, experienced, white—cook and
_ downstairs work. Family of four.
rent wages.
Lake Forest 1317.
_ SECOND maid, experienced, white.

adult family;

ences required.

GENERAL:

excellent.

wages;

Tel. L.F. 453.

Small

Family of four needs help

with every day chores.

CAB DRIVERS: —
Apply
3

Cur-

refer-

Lake Forest 80

LAKE FOREST YELLOW CAB
~TTON. Western Ave.

If you can cook

and want a home, with good wages: and NURSE: Experienced, white—care of three
_ near transportation.
Telephone Lake
children.
Preferably person, who can
_ Forest 649.
drive car. Lake Forest 464.

MAGIC CHEF, 4 burner stove, complete
with oven heat regulator and storage
space. Price $35.
Tel. H.P. 1996.
CONSOLE radio, six tubes, push button
tuning, standard broadcast, and short
wave. -Tel. H.P. 6150 or H.P. 4364.

UNIVERSAI

gas stove, 1 year old.

Tel.

H.P. 5264

FOR SALE: Studio couch and 4x6 blue
gray oval shag rug.
:

WANTED TO BUY

WANTED: 12 or 14 ft. boat; also apt. size —
electric stove and apt. size electric ice
box. Tel. H.P. 1218.
nn)

¢
eee

nD

ae
si
HeginsAk

i

seat
mene

s
«

ia

OS.

WHY NOT SELL THAT IDLE PIANO?
_A man for many years in thepianobusihess will buy or appraise without obligation on your part.
Tel. University
1561 (collect}. after 7 p.m. 130-G-31-In-tf

Tel. H.P. 6013.

G.E. RANGE. 44 PRAIRIE AVE., Highwood,

SNOW FENCE, 175 ft., used for 6 months
Useable for garden, back yard, etc., $25.
Tel. H.P. 3058, Sat. evenings or Sunday only.
Se

�Page 48

Thursday, March 27, 1947

“LOST AND FOUND

LOST: Full grown part angora, reddish
tan male cat, in Exmoor vicinity.
Answers to name of “Pinky.”
Reward.
Tel. BeP.

1175.

TREE TRIMMING &amp; LANDSCAPING
Removing Dead -Trees, Hauling Away
Cement Work
Light Hauling — Wood
ROBERT L. WHITE
1002 N. Elmwood, Waukegan
Telephone Ont. 7530

:

CRAFTSMAN FURNITURE REPAIR

USED AUTOMOBILES

“For

BARTLETT MOTOR SALES
966 Northwestern Ave.
brake Forest, Ill.
Tel. L.F. 606
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.
HUDSON 1938, four door sedan; radio &amp;
heater; good condition. Tel. H.P. 2986.

Tel.

$100: or best offer takes ’29 Model A, four
door Ford sedan now driving. Look bad,
runs good; 2 like new tires. See at 625
Laurel Ave, H. F. Tel. H.P. 1686.

i

CLUB coupe, 1941 Buick, 4 new tires,
radio, heater, defroster, seat covers, 3
foglights. Excellent condition. Will take
best offer.
Tel. H.P. 5468 between 12
and 8 p.m. any day of the week.

CHRYSLER 1939 Royal, 2 door, radio and
heater. Tel. after 6 p.m. H.P. 5085.

PLYMOUTH SEDAN, 1937 P-4. Good tires,
good condition.
589 Homewood Ave.,
Highland Park.
Tel. H.

_FORD, 1936, V-8, black coupe.
P. 676.
ae

PONTIAC Eight 1935, two-door sedan,
fair tires &amp; spare, heater. $225. Good
transportation, for long trip. Motor runs

good. Tel.

H.P

AUTOS WANTED

- WANTED FOR CASH

&gt;

Good ’37 to ’47 Used Cars.
A. G. McPHERSON, Ine.
387 E. Park Ave., H. P.
WANTED: By veteran, 1940-41 convertible coupe.
Good condition——Cadillac,
Buick or Plymouth preferred.
Cash.
Superior 7271, evenings.

ANTIQUES
LARGE QUANTITY OF AMERICAN

a

AND ENGLISH ANTIQUES.
Lamps, Silver, ete.
Wish to clear all merchandise before
going to England for the summer. No
yeasonable offer refused.
~
918

COURT ANTIQUE SHOP
Linden Ave., Hubbard Woods
Winnetka 4085

BUSINESS CHANCES

FULLY equipped Beauty
Wel HP. ist.

Shop

for rent.

BUSINESS SERVICE

PERCY. H. PRIOR, Jr.
Photographer

:

Specializing in Posed and Candid
pictures of your wedding.
Tel. T.P. 8199
Highland Park, Ill.
;

29-S-3-In-t#

MODERNE DECORATING
SERVICE

PAINTING
&amp;
PAPER HANGING
. Be Particular — It Costs No More
oe Vine
- Ave., eases Park
M. Pre
. O. Inman
Tel. ioe 5676
Tel. H. ‘P. 89
186-J-19-tf

FLAGSTONE, TOP SOIL, HUMUS, CINders, screenings, firewood.
Trees cut
down, power saw for hire; general haul_-ing and welding.
Tel. H.P. 83981 or
8785... John Tazioli.
SEWING MACHINE SERVICE
.Singer &amp; other makes repaired, bought &amp;
sold; also vacuum cleaners. Will call for

Teatbeckcaw Se % “1
_

PAINTING

ae
t

ee ht oe yn Fo
“

ee

Ree
ove
ewe
Aix
ey
So kly

3496

:

most

modern

equipment

to

serve

your

cars.
ness.

Stop in today. Now open for busiC. T. Bartlett.

TREE SPRAYING &amp; SURGERY
Landscaping

HANS BAHR
5338 Laurel Ave.
Veer. 1179

Services Holy Week

(Continued from page 40)

Each night of Holy week except
Monday, there will be worship: services
in Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church, with the Rev. Lester H.
Laubenstein, minister, preaching. Services will start at
8 p.m. and conclude
within an hour except Thursday night,
April 3, when the sacrament of the
Lord’s Supper will be administered and
irew members will be received. There
will be special music by the church
oe and by individual members there-

O

These. servicesare to be both informing and inspirational, One central
question will be considered in the serMANURE for hot beds and black dirt.
MENONI AND MOCOGNI. Tel. H. P. mon period: “Where Is Our Religious
518.

Authority ?”

EXPERT DRESSMAKING, suits &amp; skirts
a specialty.
Also’ alterations.
For appointment. Tel. H.P. 4576. Miss Carr,
9

to

10

a.m.

or 6 to

8 p.m.

PREPARE FOR SPRING! |
Storms removed, Screen cleaned, painted
&amp; hung.
Gutters cleaned &amp; painted.
Vet’s Maintenance.
Tel. Skokie 5071.
WINDOW WASHING
Storms and Screens

MARTIN VEHLOW
Telephone Grayslake 5414

PARKWAY CURTAIN
LAUNDRY
Ruffled curtains, panels, drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
i
Free Pick-up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N. Green Bay Rd., H. P’, Tel. H.P. 5084
BUILDING AND REPAIR
Cement work, basement &amp; garage floor,
walks, tuck pointing, repairing fireplace
&amp; porches.
D. Chiesa.
Tel. Wilmette
56
‘

LANDSCAPING
GARDENS — LAWNS
Hauling Dirt and Manure
Annual and Perennial Plants
Pansies

LAKE FOREST FLOWER FARM
North Skokie Highway
PAINTING

&amp;

Lake Forest 2764
DECORATING

The subjects to be presented will be
as follows:
Palm Sunday, March 30, “In the
Church.”
Tuesday, April 1 “Tn the Bible.”
Wednesday, ee 2, “In Personal
Experience.”
Thursday, April 3, “In the Sacraments.”
;
Good Friday, April 4, “In Jesus
Christ.”
These topics have significance for all
believers in Christendom and members
and friends of this church are urged to
avail themselves of the privilege of
pondering on these momentous subjects.

Palm Sunday morning, March 30, in
the worship service at 11 am. little
children will be presented by their parents for Holy Baptism. Easter Sunday
morning, April 6, the Lenten Banks
will be brought in and placed in the
large white cross at the front of the
church.

United Church Plans
Holy Week Services

-PAINTING and DECORATING
Inside and Outside.
Tel. H.P. 3452 or 3053
EH. R. Conger

TREE SURGERY
SKOKIE VALLEY TREE SERVICE
Treating, Fruning, Spraying
Dangerous Trees Removed
Also eabling and surgery. All property |
and men fully insured.
Earl Reynolds.
Tel. H.P. 26538.

INSTRUCTION
LAKEWOOD DAY SCHOOL
Boarding school &amp; Day school, children
4 t6, ADs
Pek: Deerfield 810.
MISCELLANEOUS
30,000 COMMON BRICK &amp; KINDLING
WOOD AVAILABLE FREE IF PARTY
HAULS.
JOB IS AT ELM PLACE
SCHOOL, ELM PL. &amp; SHERIDAN RD.,
H. P. SEE HANK, CARPENTER FOREMAN ON FREMISES.
POWER CONSTRUCTION CO., OAK PARK, ILL.

TOD LATE TO CLASSIFY

in

First

United

Evangelical

church on South Green Bay road and
Laurel avenue. The Rev. R. S. Wilson, pastor, will present a series of
special messages describing some of
the characters who are a part of the
story of the Crucifixion. Special music and congregational singing will
be led by Ed Sherry, the choir direcfor. “Phe public is welcome to these
‘services.
The series will open on Sunday evening when the pastor speaks on “The

Woman Who Annointed Jesus.” This
will be followed on Monday evening
with a character study of “Judas.”
On Tuesday evening the character
to
be sketched will be “Peter.” Wednesday evening will be ladies’ night with
“Pilate’s Wife” featured. Thursday,

“Barnabas” will be

discussed,

and

Friday evening, “Simon, the Cross
Bearer.” Holy Communion will be
observed on Good Friday evening.
A special service for boys and girls
is planned for Good Friday afternoon
at 2:15 p.m. This service will be open
to all children of the community, and
the service will be non-sectarian in

character.

Miss

Frances

at

REDEEMER EVAN. LUTHERAN CHURCH
587 West Central avenue
H. K. Platzer, Pastor
Tel. H.P. 950
PALM SUNDAY, March 30,
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.

10:45 Morning worship.
The text
is
Matthew 21.1-9; “Honor the King.”
115-a.n, Early: morning worship at
Lake Forest in the American Legion hall,
McKinley and Wisconsin Avenues.
TUESDAY, April 2,

The Dorcas Society will meet at the
home of Miss Ruth Rectenwald at 8 p.m.,
810 S. Ridge road.
THURSDAY, April 3, 7:45 p.m. "Maundy Thursday Holy, Week
a ase ee devotion.
p.m. Holy Communion.
FRIDAY, April 4,
7:45 p.m. Good Friday Holy Communion.
Announcements for both services may be
made at the parsonage on Wednesday, April 2 from 2 until 9 p.m.

EASTER SUNDAY, April 6,
8

a.m.

Matin

Service.

9:15 am. Lake Forest Morning service
in the American Legion hall, McKinley and
Wisconsin avenues.
3:30 p.m. The Sunday school Easter program.
WELCOME TO CHURCH
HIGHLAND PARK PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect avenues
Church Phone H.P. 263
Rev. Louis W. Sherwin, D.D., Minister
Miss Sallie‘Lee,
Director of Religious Education

SUNDAY, March 30,
9:30 a.m. Church ‘school, Beginners department, Primary department and Junior
.
department.
9:55 a.m. Choir rehearsal.
10:15 a.m. Session meeting in the Narthex to receive the new members.
11 am. Church
school.
The Intermediate department (7th and 8th Grades) .
meets in the church; the High school
groups in the Parish House.
a.m. Morning worship.
LOYALTY
SUNDAY. Welcome of new members into
the church.
The church as: always welcomes the visitor in our service.
Please
use the guest card in the pew pocket to
tells us about yourself.
5:30 p.m. Westminster Fellowship Council Supper meeting in-the Parish House.
7:15 p.m. Tuxis society will meet in
the Parish House.
The meeting is in
charge of the sophomores.
:
TUESDAY, April 1,
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 324 meen
in the Scout room.
WEDNESDAY, April 2,
7:15 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
8 p.m. Lenten service in the oheteee
Lenten meditation—"The Sacrament
of
Silence.”

Special Holy week services are announced for each evening at 7:45
p.m.

HENNING O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
Highest grade workmanship &amp; material
Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, IIl.
Tel. Longbeach 2404
Fully insured

ocr

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING
a

Zion

Refinishing.
Zion,

Hold Evening

Bennett,

noted children’s worker, will come
from Chicago to bring the story of
the Cross in a graphic way thatFOR SALE: lLady’s. all wool suits and ‘youth can comprehend. Miss Bennett
aesize 12. Perfect condition. Tel.
traveled a number of years with the
ics
:
Billy Sunday evangelistic party and is
EXPECTANT mother
&amp; vet husband des- noted for her arias in children’s
perately need small furnished apt. Tel.
a
H.P. 6009. —
oe
ea

Washed and Painted.
Best Frices
Tel. H.P. 2884

_ Exterior and Interior.
Hubert TOY
Tel. oe

Quality”

EXPERIENCED Jaundress wanted for

—
2

of

BARTLETT MOTOR SALES
966 Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel. L.F.
606.
Our service “department, has the

LA SALLE 1940 four door sedan, heater,
2 new tires. Excellent condition.
Tel.
H.P. 4831 before 10 a.m. &amp; after 6 p.m.
+

Work

Upholstering, Slipcovering,
3838rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.

Churches

|Bethany Church to

BUSINESS SERVICE

STRAYED from 853 Osterman Ave. Black
&amp; gray male tiger kitchen.
Tel. Deerfield 620.

THURSDAY, April 3,
10:80 a.m. Women’s Bible class eonducted by Mrs. Arthur F. Tylee at the
Highland Park Public Library. All womem
in the community are invited.
p.m. Lenten service in the church.
Lenten meditation—“The Sacrement off
Friendship.”’
:
FRIDAY, April 4,
5 p.m. Choir supper and rehearsal.
8 p.m. The Sacrament of the Lordfs:
supper.
.
—
SUNDAY, April 6, Easter Day,
a.m. EASTER
SUNDAY
SUNRISH
SERVICE held at the Central Avenue.
Beach, sponsored by Westminster Fellowship. All are invited.
9 and 11'a.m. Two church services, Ali
who can come to the early service please
cooperate by making it possible for the
—
parents of the little children to attend ae
later service.

A

TRINTY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
East Laurel avenue ~
The Rev. Charles U. Harris, Rector
Holy Week Services
PALM SUNDAY, March 30,
7:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. -The Church school.
11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon.
MONDAY, March 31,°
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
12 noon Meditation and prayers.

TUESDAY, April 1,

e

730 a.m. Holy Communion.
WEDNESDAY, April 2
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
MAUNDY. THURSDAY, April 3,
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
GOOD FRIDAY, April 4,
RtOU saves Anet-Communion.
12 noon to 3 p.m. The Three Hour Serve a
ice.
8 pm. The Crucifixion, sung by the :
Parish choir.
Ee
SATURDAY, Hastern Even, April 5,
©
Feed
4 p.m. Holy Baptism.
Parish Activities
MONDAY, March 31,
:
10 a.m. Trinity Guild and Woman's
Auxiliary meeting. Round table discussion |
on India.
8 p.m. Meeting of the Evening Riasale
of Trinity Guild. All women of the Pare—
ish who are unable to attend the day=
sessions of the Guild are cordially invited to become members of this. StOUR
SATURDAY, April 5,
10 am. Trinity Guild Bake Sale in the :
Parish house.

�Thursday, March 27, 1947

Amvets Auxiliary

i

News

:

|

The Amvets auxiliary met Thursday
evening in the Deerfield Grammar
school. Members and their guests witnessed a- demonstration by a brush
company representative.

Posters made by the seventh and
eighth grade students of the local
schools to announce a coming event——
the Amvets auxiliary box social and
dance on April 12— are to be judged

Be

4

x)

‘s

by the social chairman, Mrs. Harold

rai
‘

0

Root Jr., and her committee. Prizes will

Top

be awarded and the names will be an-

Every

|

NEW ORLEANS
WHIPPED CREAM

offers 4

Caramels

rices an

uality a

row Pp

X

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nounced next week. -

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No.2%

aye | Pancake Flour

Meeting in Lake Bluff

Deerfield Fire Chief Russell Batt,

with three fire department members,

P

Fred Grabo, Alfred Gastfield, and
;
Harm Ruter, attended the Lake!
‘
County Firemen’s meeting at Lake |-

Pl

ee

:

NEw YORK DRESSED

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SESUDICATION AND CLAIM. DAW
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FANCY SKINLESS
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SPECIALS!!

ADJUDICATION AND CLAIM DAY
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all

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ANNIE S. BLOMDAHL,
Executor,
(Mar, 27-Apr. 3-10)
Marvin Wallach, Attorney,
_ Highland Park, Ill.
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Monday of the next succeeding month at

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2'/2-3'/2-LB.

2 CANS 29C Cat Food eee

10 a.m. -:

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can 106 ff CoLDEN WHOLE KERNEL
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Highland Park 4304, (Mar. 20-27-Apr 3
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| CHICK CHICKAND PRESTO
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‘ FOR PIE GRUST
READY MIX

|

Haddock .... 15 29° } Sablefish,. 2 ,,; 45¢ 4

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©.

FANCY RED

1947, is the inti
dae i ah
isis “Of
JAMES VITI (also known as Vincenzo
Viti), Deceased, pending in the Probate
Court of Lake County, Illinois, and that
_¢tlaims may be filed against the said
estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. All claims filed against
said estate on or before said date and not
' contested, will be adjudicated on the first

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(Signed)
R. R. WIBLE, President.
(Signed) LESTER B. BALL, Secretary.
(Mar,

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Young Tender

Twelve

Attest:

—

Chi

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8 10:

Potato Chips

BEEF SHORT

Member—Three Years

succeeding month

DISINFECTS—DEODORIZES.

Hermox Bleach

FLAVORFU

o’clock Noon, and close at Seven o’clock
p.m., of the same day.
By order of the Board of Education of

next

;

)

Two Members of the Board of Education

D

CAN

~ ROUND 08 SWISS STEAK 18 59¢}—— anny

Stric

opened

NO. 2! f Oc

JEWEL QUALITY GUARANTEED

County of Lake and State of Illinois, for
the purpose of electing
ONE PRESIDENT and

be

Sauerkraut

TRIM

BEEF RIB ROAST . . . 18 55c

teaches Ce School. DintrictNon 108

will

FLAVORED

FRANK'S. OR MARY DUNBAR
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the Twelfth day of April, 1947,

Polls

=

JEWEL EXTRA VALUE TRIM—1st 5 RIBS

For Board of Education

The

:

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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on
Saturday,

For the Full ot

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Cc

BLUEBROOK CUT

ELECTION NOTICE

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16-OZ.

3

CHERRY VALLEY

|

In City Election

&amp;

|

NS

CE

They heard State Representative
Nick Keller of Waukegan speak on
two house bills concerning fires,
which he introduced in the 65th CG.
A.; and Capt. Fieldman of Chicago,
who told of the results and dangers.
of delayed fire alarms,—giving as
an example a Chicago hotel.

VOTE

a

BE

ORK

Bluff on Monday evening.

oon

4

BEBE Oe

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Sat

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oaths

�Thursday, March 27, 1947.

Board of Appeals

| ALCYON
Highland Park
Doors Open 6 p.m.
TELEPHONE H. P. 2400
SEY

Thu.,; Fri., Sat.

Mar. 27-28-29

Errol Flynn, Eleanor Parker

| “NEVER SAY GOODBYE”
SUN., MON., TUES., WED.

Typewriters Repaired
By Expert Repairmen
All Work Guaranteed

We
We
We
You can

Sell Them
Repair Them
Buy Them
depend on our 25

years experience in typewriter

March 30-31-Apr. 1-2

repairing.

Red Skelton, Marilyn Maxwell,
Marjorie Main, “Rochester”

CHANDLER'S

“THE SHOW-OFF”

525 Central Ave.

THURS., FRI., SAT.

April 3-4-5

Katharine Hepburn,
‘Robt. Taylor, Robt. Mitchum

“UNDERCURRENT”

BARTLETT
THEATRE
HIGHWOOD, ILLINOIS
THURS.

Deerpa th
LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS

March 27

Morgan Conway, Ann Jeffries

“Dick Tracy vs. Cue Ball”

William Gargan, Pat O’Brien

“RENDEZVOUS 24”
FRI. &amp; SAT.
Mar. 28-29
Ted Donaldson, John Litel

“RETURN OF RUSTY”

TEL. L. F. 2106

Robert Lowery, Helen Gilbert

Thu. Fri. Sat., Mar. 27- 28-29
Sat. Matinee 2 to 4

“THE SHOW OFF”
Red Skelton, Marilyn Maxwell

“GOD'S COUNTRY”
In Color

SUN., &amp; MON. |
Mar. 30-31
Edmund Lowe, Brenda Joyce

“The Enchanted

mounted on a crawler-type tractor is
attached to their petition for re-zoning.
Part of the property, not within
the building, would be used for the
storage of steel and other materials,
and finished products. A parking lot
for employees’ automobiles would be
built adjoining the building, as well
as an. entrance road off the County
Line road.
The nature of the business requires designing engineers, draftsmen,
welders, machine tool operators, and
mechanics. They state that they will
not use materials which produce offensive odors and will not operate
machinery which creates objectionable
noises.
The
manufacturing
story brick modern factory type build- operations consist of machine tools
ing on County Line road east of the operated by electric motors and weldrailroad tracks. The size would be ing equipment, also ee oper80 feet by 200 feet, so designed to ated.
permit future expansion of an addiThey would Cue with them about
tional 10,000 square feet.
15 key personnel and employ about 70
Some 3,000 square feet of the build-|
people. In some two years they proing would be used for offices and pose to increase the number to 150.
the engineering department. The
Company Officers
company states that they would inV.
M.
Dobeus
is president and was
stall an oil burning heating plant,
chief engineer in the tractor division
eliminating smoke.
The building would face south of Allis-Chalmers; Paul B. Cochran
about 150 feet from the road and the is vice president and treasurer, and
front grounds would be landscaped. was general manager of Buckeye
A railroad siding is necessary and at Traction Ditcher Co. in Findlay. He
present it is not known. how close is also a member of Kennedy-Coch:
they would be to the tracks. A Cy- ran Co., in Chicago.

(Continued from Page 3)
the Tractomotive Corporation of|
Findlay, O.
The second petition asks the rezoning of South Waukegan road lots
in the Percy Wilson subdivision from
residence to apartment building area
(across from St. Paul’s church) for
multiple dwelling units.
Parts of
lots 60 and 61 are involved. The
zoning map shows that lot 64, which
adjoins lot 61, still would be in Class
A residential, and is meee to the
golf course.
Modern Facies
The Tractomotive Corporation of
Findlay, O., proposes to erect a one-

clone fence, eight feet in height, will
Attend Bowling Proprietor
surround the entire property.
The business of this factory is the Meeting Friday in Waukegan
designing, manufacturing, and selling
John Meyers of the Highland Park
of construction machinery. The com- Ten Pin and Roger K. Dardenne of
pany is new-—-one and one-half years the Deerfield Bowling Academy atold—and at present is manufacturing tended a meeting of the Northwest
various attachments for Allis-Chal- Suburban Bowling Proprietors’ asso-.
mers industrial type tractors. An ciation held Friday, March 21, at
illustration of a “shovel attachment” “Hank’s” on Skokie highway, Wauke-

Forest”’

n Color

Also Short Subjects &amp; Latest News

Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed.,
_Mar. 30- 31-April 1-2
Sun. Cont. from 2 to 11: 30

"THE STRANGE WOMAN”

TUES., WED., THURS.
April 1-2-3
Paul Henreid, Bette Davis

KIWANIS CLUB OF HIGHLAND PARKINC,

“DECEPTION”

_— PRESENTS —

Also Selected Short Subjects

Hedy Lamarr
George Senaeks Louis Hayward

THU., FRL, SAT.,

Apr. 3-4-5

“TWO SMART PEOPLE”
Lucille Ball, John Hodiak

GLENCOE
Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun.,

GENESEE

Thu., Fri Sat. Mar. 27-28-29
“THE WESTERNER”
_ Gary Cooper

»

_ | Thu, Fri., Sat.

April 3-4-5

“HUMORESQUE”

Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, —
Joan Caulfield
\

Coming: “Show Off”

Friday Evening, April 11, 1947

|

AT 8:15 O'CLOCK
Coupons,

Exchangeoble for Reserved Seats on sale at:

7

Gsell’s (Rayinia &amp; Highland Park) and Garnett’s, |
or by mail.

Address Highland Park Kiwanis Club,

P. O. Box “A”, Highland Park, Ill.
Starts SUNDAY for 4 Days ©

JAMES STEWART
DONNA REED

ADMISSION $1.00 — Tax 20c, Total $1.20
ALL SEATS RESERVED . __

Pes
f

in Frank Capra’s
glowing love story

“BLUE SKIES”

Highland Park High School Auditorium

in Fannie Hurst’s

Starts at 1:59-4:32-7:04-9:35

Katharine Hepburn
Robert Taylor

at the

JOHN GARFIELD

Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed.
Mar. 30- 31-Apr. 1-2

“UNDERCURRENT”

Master Magician and Mentalist

Continuous from 1:30

JOAN CRAWFORD

1:30

\

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

NOW thru SATURDAY

Highland Park 605

~

The Great Tarbell

Your Best Entertainment .

IT'S A
WONDERFUL LIFE”

i

Coupons exchangeable now by mail. Address Kiwanis Club,
=
Box A, Highland Park, Ill., or in person at Highland Park _

News office, corner St. Johns and Laurel Avenues, Saturday, _
April 5, 9 am. to 5 p.m.

�At Lowest Prices on Easiest Kredit

We invite you to inspect our large and complete stocks of finest
quality diamonds and nationally known factory priced watches,
offered to you on easiest kredit.

Immediate delivery.

PERFECT DIAMONDS;

Wr

pag:
SHOCKPROOF

$99.75
75¢ Weekly
Gents’ accurate and dependable

shockproof 15-jewel Benrus
watch. 10-k natural rolled gold
' plate case. Ask for No. 92.

75¢ Weekly

PERFECT

17 jewel ladies’ or gents’ Bulova
watch. Small size 10-k natural
ee gold plate cases. Ask for
Osta.

$1.00 Weekly
Perfect center diamond with
two genuine side diamonds in
neatly engraved mounting of
ee or 14-k natural gold.
oO.
94.

Beautiful

large

perfect

10 DIAMOND

diam-

ond in one of our latest ring
creations of 18-k white or 14-k
es gold.

Ask for Perfect

SEE SPECIALS IN OUR WINDOWS
7 DIAMOND WEDDING RING

$16-75
50c Weekly

Seven genuine diamonds are in
this neatly engraved 18-k white
or 14-k natural gold wedding
ring.

Ask for No. 41.

| MATCHED BRIDA

$6.75 Weekly

Beautiful five genuine diamond
engagement ring with matching
five genuine diamond wedding
ring. 18-k white or 14-k natural

Artistic mounting of 18-k white

or 14-k natural gold with a beau-

vlful fiery perfect center diamond and six sparkling genuine
diamonds on the sides. Ask for
No. 350.

ps7

MS)

RLS
ROK
om hn
\ rpZ yy

J 0\\
UY

ey
"

gold. Ask for No. 901.

PERFECT

SS

———S

nth

Diamonds and mountings shown are
enlarged to bring out detail of design.
SS

:

F

XE

WATERPROOF

Diamond
Ring
for

Men

ANIM EY
TN WN KW

SHOCKPROOF WATCH

= 4 Wess

15
Jewels
$] 4. 9

For Both

$4

20

$1.00 Weekly

$3.00 Weekly
Here is one of our up-to-date
beautiful matched wedding
combinations. Five diamond engagement and five diamond
wedding ring in 18-k white or
14-k natural gold with fishtail
style settings. No. 941.

A beautiful combination — a
very low price—both the diamond engagement and the wedding ring can be had in 18-k

white or 14-k yellow gold. Richly
engraved and_ well-matched.
No. 74.

BUSCHS PRICES ALWAYS INCLUDE FEDERAL TAX
Open Monday and Thursday Evenings
£22 Weekly
tturdy, dependable sport watch

with sweep second hand and
easy-to-read night dial. Nonarnishable case. A serviceable
yatch and

an

Pepe, IO. 22.

excellent

°

time-

NO CARRYING CHARGE

Sparkling perfect diamond in
this heavy massive gents’ 14-k
natural gold ring. A ring every
man will be proud to wear. A
great value. Ask for gents’ Perfect “200.”

USCH
KREDIT JEWELERS — OPTICIANS
1624 Sherman Avenue, Evanston
Chicago Loop Store, 37 E. Madison St.
Also 4 Other Conveniently Located Stores

�CHECK the lighting in your home

ber of the family of adequate light. Make sure

today! You'll find maay little unthought-of

today that every socket in your home is filled

reasons for dad’s tired eyes .. . juniot’s

with the proper-sized bulb. A home filled with

distastefor homework ...and sister’s reluc-

warm, cheerful light makes the evening hours

taace to sew on that new dress she’s making.

—when the family is free to relax and enjey

Empty bites. wrong-sized and burned-out

leisure hours together—the most pleasant

bulbs play no favorites—they rob every mem-

part of the day.

SI TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR LIBERAL RENEWAL POLICY
To all customers on light bulb exchange service there is no charge for
replacing most sizes of standard, burned-out bulbs marked “PS of
NI” or “Renewal Service.”

PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS

�</text>
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                    <text>PLANNING THE RED CROSS DRIVE

Photos

At ‘a recent meeting of the Deerfield Woman’s Club executive
koard, Mrs. John Vieregg was appointed to head the annual Red
Cress Roil Call.
Pictured above are the following, left to right: Seated, Mrs. R.
it. Harvey, Mrs. Wendell Goodpasture, Mrs. Norma~ Hamilton. Mrs.

.
|
|
|

‘Icx Willman, and Mrs. James Collins. Standing: Mrs. R. L. John-

|

con, Mrs. Irving Brand, Mrs. F. C. Ritter, Mrs. F. W. Nolde, Mrs.

|

Thursday, March 20, 1947

by Ezra Smith

John Vieregg, Mrs. John Silence and Mrs. Ambrose Cox.
Above, first insert, Mrs. Albert Meyer, Mrs. John Stryker and
Mrs. F. 8S. Fuller; second insert, Mrs. R. L. Johnson and Mrs. C. E.
Piper; th: rd insert, Mrs. J. L. Bayard, Mrs. Ward Gauntlett, and Mrs.
Thomas Porter; fourth insert, Mrs. Leslie Christensen, Mrs. A. F.
Nosek, and Mrs. C. E. Bates, all faithful war-time workers.

5c per Copy

�A SELF-MADE MAN
AN EXPERIENCED EXECUTIVE

�_Deerfie

d Review

Volume 21 Number 51

Thursday, Merch 20, 1947

No Opposition Deerfield-Bannockburn
For Village
Red Cross Drive Ends
Ticket April 15
A very successful Red Cross drive

for funds has come to « close in the

Deerfield-Bannockburn area, which is
For the village election on Tuesday,
April 15, there will be two precincts
in Deerfield, with Deerfield road the
dividing line. Citizens living north of
Deerfield road will vote in the Town
Hall, precinct 1. Those living south
of Deerfield road will vote in the vil-

lage offices in the basement of the
Masonic Temple, precinct 2. |
There is only one ticket in the field,
with no opposition. Three trustees
and one police magistrate are to be
elected.
Candidates are Homer G. Cazel,
Eric Banfield, and Joseph King for
trustees;. and Dan Hunt for police
magistrate. Cazel and Hunt are seeking re-election.
Township Polling Places
The township election on Tuesday,

April 1, has its precincts set up entirely different. Voters are requested
to remember in which precinct they
live.

There are five polling places for the
township election:
Precinct 1: all township south of
Deerfield road, votes at basement
of Masonic Temple.
|
Precinct 2: township territory eorttbs
west of railroad, and block east of
railroad, bounded by Hazel avenue,
Waukegan road, and Deerfield road.
votes at Erskine Real Estate office.
Precinct 3: West Lake Forest votes
at Everett school.
Precinct 4: township territory northeast of railroad and north of Deerfield road, votes at Town Hall. (section of Highland Park included).
Precinct 5: Bannockburn and section
of Highland Park votes at Bannockburn school.

Weigle-Kelley Families
In Automobile Accident
A very unhappy ending for a pleasant month’s vacation for a Deerfield
family occurred just three miles from
their home, last Thursday evening on
Waukegan road in Northbrook, when
their car was “in a collision with a

truck.
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Kelley and their
little daughter, Faith, had been in
Texas. They had arrived in Chicago
on Thursday and were met by Mrs.
Kelley’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin

first in District 6 to report 100 per

cent of its quota. The local quota was
$1,500 and Mrs: John Vieregg, drive
chairman, reports that the quota has
been exceeded by almost 75 per cent THURSDAY, March 26—
with $2,633.84 now turned in and a few
12:15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
more tardy contributions still out.
1 p.m. Presbyterian Woman’s assoRed Cross work is a community af- ciation.
fair with Mrs. Ward Gauntlett as
8 p.m. Eastern Star.
general chairman. For the annual
8 p.m. Amvet auxiliar.
drive for funds, the Deerfield Woman’s FRIDAY, March 21—
club assumes responsibility for sup9 a.m. Rummage sale by O.E.S. in
plying a supervising chairman, with Masonic Temple.
women of the two villages of Ban- SATURDAY, March 22—_
nockburn and Deerfield and outlying
9 am. O.E.S. rummage sale in Matownship territory not includedin the sonic Temple.
cities of Lake Forest and Highland MONDAY, March 24—
Park.
8 p.m. AmericanLegion in Masonic
Today’s cover of the Review pic- Temple.
tures a recent meeting of the Deer- TUESDAY, March 25—
field Woman’s club board. in the
2 p.m. Woman’s Club in Deerfield
home of Mrs. John Silence. Inserts school gym.
show some of the war-time Red Cross THURSDAY, March 27—
9 am. Rummage sale in Bethlehem
workers, who knitted, sewed, and
;
made bandages. The Red Cross is es- church.
12s 15 p.m. Rotary luncheon.
sential, both in peace and in war.
7 p.m. Chamber of Commerce.
Volunteer Workers Listed
Workers in the Red Cross 1947 drive FRIDAY, March 28—
for funds were:
9 am. to 5 pm. Rummage salein
Business District—Mrs. Ambrose Cox, eaptain; Mrs. Lewis Stryker, -Mrs. Jane Bethlehem church.
Harwood.
SATURDAY, March 29—
Woodland Park—Mrs. William Hinchsliff,
8 p.m. April Fool Frolic at Deer-.
captain; Mrs. Victor BE. Carlson, Mrs. R
Ww. Nessler Jr., Mrs. Laurence ‘L. Peter-*| field school.
son, Mrs. Fred Friestedt.
SATURDAY, April. 12—
Bannockburn—Mrs. J. B. Cleaver, captain:
8 p.m. Amvets Auxiliary Box social.
E. L. Hall, Mrs. A. J. McMaster,
| Mrs.
Mrs. W. W. Sims, Mrs. B. F. Reinking,
Mrs. W. K. Denniston, Mrs. G. M. Harris.
;
Southeast—Mrs. Alex Willman, captain;
Mrs. Paul S. Brown, Mrs. George Stanger, Mrs. D. L. Dewey. Northeast—Mrs. Arthur Kaatz,
captain;
Mrs. Ralph
Peterson,
Mrs.
Clarence
Wilson, Mrs. James Russell, Mrs. .Irving Brand, Mrs. Russell Sugden, Mrs.
Charles S. Reed, Mrs. Arthur Pagel,
Mrs. John Benz, Mrs. Jane Harwood.
Southwest—Mrs. Norman Hamilton, captain; Mrs. Joseph Wachholder, Mrs.
Martin Olson, Mrs. John Stryker, Mrs.
Marshall Pottenger, Mrs. Joseph 0’Connor, Mrs. Charles Hirte, Mrs. William
Sheehan, Mrs. Anthony "Mercurio, ere.
James Mailfald, Mrs. John Bertrand.
Northwest—Mrs. James Tibbetts, aumtetin:
Mrs. Lewis Hayner, Mrs. C. RE. Morgan,
Mrs. James McGarvie, Mrs. B. E. Vanderbeek, Mrs. W. S. Porter, Mrs. Locke
Rogers, Mrs. Arthur Wolter, Mrs. Melvin Rugen, Mrs. L. T. McChesney, Mrs.
Gerald Clampitt, Mrs. Ernest Rugen,
Mrs. E. E. Cazel, Mrs. Helmuth Piepenbrok, Mrs. F. A. Tennis.
ed
oe
Saunders road—Mrs. Maurice Miller, captain.

Svend Jensen, 86, Dies
At Daughter’s Home

Svend Jensen, age 86, passed away
F. Weigle and were enroute to their
home, 1001 Deerfield road, when the Thursday, March 13, at the home of
|his daughter, Mrs. Beldin Hilliker, 825
accident occured,

The next car behind them was dics
by Conrad Uchtman, also of Deerfield,
who stopped. He and Mrs. Uchtman
took Mr. and Mrs. Kelley and Faith,
and Mrs. Weigle to the Highland Park
hospital. Mr. Weigle, who had a knee
injury remained at the scene of the accident.
Mrs. Weigle received a piloted nose
and cheek injury. Mrs. Kelley has a
broken foot and little Faith received
a deep forehead cut. Mr.Kelley has
several broken sti

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

Hazel avenue, Deerfield. Funeral
services were held Saturday at Bohlen and Blume funeral home in Phil-

lips, Wis., and burial was near that
city. Lauterberg and Oehler, Deerfield funeral directors, made the arrangements for sending the late Mr.
Jensen to Wisconsin.

Mr. Jensen had spent the past ten

Circulate
Petition For
Bus Route
Petitions are ‘being circulated

in

Deerfield this week to determine how -

many parents of high school age
children, and parents of future high
school students, want the proposed
busline to continue to Vine avenue in
Highland Park, so that the young
people will have transportation for
—
the extra-curricular activities.

The turning-around point would be
Green Bay road at Vine avenue, for
every hourly trip.
The petitions are in many ee the
stores, at the Deerfield school, and in

the Deerfield Review office.
These petitions will be presented to
the Illinois Commerce Commission at
the next hearing on Thursday, March

27, at 10 a.m. at 160 N. La Salle street,
Chicago,
Opposing this north-south route is
the North Shore Line. In order to appease this opposition, these petitions
state that the buses will not take on
passengers for the two blocks in
which the bus line runs parallel with
the electric tracks.
“The electric’ line is afraid they
~
will lose a few ten cent fares. We, ‘in
Deerfield, are having a growing resentment against this line’s opposition,

especially when so many local residents use the electric line going and
coming from Chicago, spending mu¢h
more than the few fares they would
collect of the north-south three-block
trip,” stated a particularly irked citizen.
Election Dates
‘“The North Shore electric wasoperating buses between Deerfield and
| Highland Parkin 1924,
. . which they
Civic minded citizens are reminded discontinued 17 years age. Are they
trying to prevent this new bus line
of.the following dates:
Tuesday, March 25 at 8:30 p.m. from operating, so that they can rePublic hearing of tentative budget sume their own buses? Why don’t
and appropriations ordinance of West they come out in the open with their ea
reasons?”’
Deerfield township at Town Hall.
Tuesday, April 1, at 6 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Township elections in 5 precincts for
road commissioner and 2 library directors; special proposition (see legal
notices elsewhere):
The Deerfield-Bannockburn volunTuesday, April 1, at 2 p.m. Annual teer fire department was
called to the
Town Meeting in Town Hall.
:
Charles Russell home, 905 Central aveSaturday, April 12, 12 noon to 7 p.m. nue, Sunday afternoon. A
chimney
High school elections, and all grade came off the hot water heater
and filled
school elections, with time set by vari- the basement with smoke. There
was no
ous boards; also election of town- fire damage.
ship school trustee..
Monday. afternoon the firemen went
Tuesday, April 15, 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. to the Marshall Pottenger home, 440
Deerfield and Bannockburn village Elm street, and put out a roof fire,
elections.
caused by the chimney. Fire and water
damage were small.
Fire Chief Russel Battcalled a meetIllinois Bonus Blanks
ing of the department last night to
Available in Deerfield | discus§ with the Amvets their joint eeig
participation in fa carnival this summer
Blanks for the Ilinois State bonus for and what steps are necessary to comply
veterans are available in Deerfield with village ordinances.
from the Deerfield American Legion
Lake County’s monthly firemen’s
Post. For details call Earl Hurt or
meeting will be held next Monday
Clarence Huhn.
evening in Lake Bluff.

To Remember

hmonths withhis son-in-law and Rummage Sales
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. B. L. HilliTwo rummage sales are planned for
ker. He is survived by one daughter, this month. Deerfield Chapter, Eastand a son of Racine, Wis.
ern Star, will have its sale this week-

Firemen Answer 2 Calls
Sunday and Monday

end, March 21 and 22, in the Masonic
Temple. Bethlehem Woman’s association’s sale will be March 27 and28
in their church basement.

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

INTRODUCING:

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

HAROLD MELING, INSURANCE

| DeerfieldForum

IN THE ARCADE BUILDING

“Thursday, March 20, 1947 Vol. 21,,No. 51]

What is the charm of a certain dear
lady
Who hands out the books as we

PUBLICATION OFFICE
745 Chestnut St., Deerfield, Illinois
:
Ruth Pettis, Editor
:
Phone Deerfield 485
Published — Weekly every Thursday

read more-and more?

Who gathers more books from the
most willing givers,
Who wins for our library treasure
galore!
:
She’s out at her post both early and

Lecal Subscription Rates — $2.00 per year
Domestic Rate — $3 00 per year.
Single Copies -— 5 cents. Foreign Rates on Application.
HIGHLAND FARK OFFICE
59 S. St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone H.P. 4500

late,

Is patient with all as a sister or

MEMBER
ce
National Editorial Association
Tllinois Press Association
‘Entered as second-class matter NovemDeerber 27, 1944, at the post office at

field,

Illinois,

brother,

Let’s keep her in office as long as

is
—Photo by Ezra Smith

Township Library

This week’s introduction is to Harold
Meling, an insurance man,with offices
in the Arcade buildiag, 813 Waukegan
road. He has been in the insurance
work for the past 12 years and prior to
that was in the automobile business.
Mr.- Meling was reared in Minne-sota. With his wife and three children,
his home for the past 11 years has
been on Saunders road, Cook county,
west and south of Deerfield. Mailing
and telephone are listed as Northbrook.
He has been a director of the Grove
grade school on Dundee road. Mr- Mel-

Has 1605 Borrowers
West Deerfield Township Public
-fibrary is housed in the west wing
of the Deerfield Grammar school.
Mrs. Chester Wolf is librarian, and
» het‘assistant in the juvenile depart-

ment is Mrs. Alice Brand Clark.

The library’s fiscal year is March
31. A tentative report of circulation
for the year, adult and juvenile, for
«fiction, non-fiction, and periodicals, is
“4°,000.
. Of the 485 new books added to the
ing is an active member in the Deerfield
3 shelves this past year, 186 were adult
Chamber of Commerce.
_ fiction, 203 were non-fiction, and 93
‘The Arcade*building, pictured above,
“were juvenile fiction.
has a central door and hall through
-. To date there are now 1,605 bor- the entire building from west to east.
rowers, with 118 new names added Qwned by ..Harry FE. Wing, it was

this past year.

-.

g

And if for a book we have to wait
She’s always so sorry and suggests
another.

under the Act of March

Le eae

A Tribute to Our Librarian
Mrs. Chester A. Wolf

On the reading tables are religious

John Armstrong

- “magazines, the gifts of Bethlehem
;
ae church,
Christian Science church,
Holy Cross Catholic church, and the
-- Presbyterian church.
Donations of good books, suitable
for library purposes, have been received from many local persons, in-

Opens Industrial
Advertising Agency ©

remodeled for offices and stores, after
the A-&amp;P. store moved out and was

ready for occupancy in September.
There are eight business concerns
in the Arcade building. To the left
of the doorway (north) is the Siffert
barber shop of Christ and August
Siffert. Here, also, is the Reliable
Laundry branch office.
;
To the right of the doorway (south)
is the Roy B. Moore jewelry store.
Contintiing east in the corridor are the
offices of Dr. Roy D. Moore, optometrist; Dr. E. F. Munro, dentist; Deerfield Construction Co.; James Cooney,
attorney; and Harold Meling insurance.
The second floor of the building
contains two apartments where the
Ralph Dunhams and Theodore Stickens live.
velopment engineer at the Western

Electric Co. prior to entering editorial
and advertising work in Chicago in
1929. During the war he served on

we can
For she’s built up our library to a
high degree.
We should each be sincer
trude Wolf fan.
eae
Give our time and our help as much
as does she!
_ Admiringly,

Ethel Mears Harvey

To the Gardeners of Deerfield:
The undersigned had the pleasure
of |
attending at the booth of the
Ameri-

can,

Rose

Society

Monday

at

the

Chicago Garden Show.
The society of rose and garden
lovers
is always an inspiration. It is probable
that a Deerfielder will be in attendance
also on Friday, the 21st.
The show as a whole impressed the

observer as one of the wonders of the
world, a crown of victory gardening;
and one which every hard working
gardener deserves. The experiences of
war time gardening have left the impression that gardening is one of the
activities most closely related to all.
that we are proud to call Americanism; and should be encouraged in
every way possible. This belief is
shared by the Department of Agricula who recommends it strongly to
all

the staff of the Coast Artillery School
at Fort Monroe, Va., and at present
John R. Armstrong, 1249 Stratford holds the rank of major in the coast
eluding Mrs. David Inman Sr., Mrs. road, Deerfield, who has been identi- artillery reserve. For work in devel-. Michael George, W. L. Clifford, E. fied with industrial advertising for
Respectfully,
A. Spahn, Dr. Harold J. Noyes, and the past 17 years, has opened an ofR. M. Harvey
others, this past year.
tee
|fice in Chicago under the name of
- The aimof the library board is to Armstrong Advertising Agency. This
‘keep abreast of the times in having announcement follows his recent
~ new books of fiction, biography, and resignation from the firm of Russell
science available for the patrons.
T. Gray, Inc., where he was employed
The library is open each Monday, before and after World War II as an
Norman L. Hess, 249 Kenmore avea Wednesday, and Friday, from
2 to 5 account executive and vice president.
nue, Deerfield, flew overseas on Monp.m., and 7 to 9 p.m.
day, March 17, for an orientation trip

Deerfield Man Flew _
To Europe Monday

Lived ‘Here 10 Years

There’s a Contest in
Library Board Election

|

Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong moved to
Deerfield 10 years ago. Mr. Armstrong was in the army from August,
1942, to November, 1945. They have
|four sons, Gregory, 13, Geoffrey, 11,
George, 8, and Philip, 2. Mr. Arm-

&amp; ‘Politics has no place in a public library, but in order to decide upon directors the law requires an election
for West Deerfield township public
‘strong was reared in Muncie, Ind., and
library, as it does in all organizations
Mrs. Armstrong (Clara Hanson) grew
receiving tax funds for its operations.
up in Julesberg, Colo.
On Tuesday, April 1, at the regular
. township ‘election, thére will be three _ Receives Army Commendation
candidates for library directors to fill
' Mr. Armstrong is a graduate of the
the expired terms of two members.
_. Mrs. Eleanor Torbet of Bannock- mechanical engineering school of Purdue University and worked as a deburn is a candidate for re-election.

- She fepresents the northern part’ of
_ the township, and has held the direc_torship for 2 years, succeeding another

district sales manager for American
Airlines in Chicago.
According to Mr. Hess, he will explore the potentialities and possibilities of tourist and first class travelers who wish to see the world in a
few days. He’ll spend two weeks touring the cities serviced by American
Overseas Airlines, which include Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Ireland and

England.

.

During the sojourn, at which time
he will be the guest of the various
John R. Armstrong
governments, he will be assigned inoping an emergency method of artil- terpreters to facilitate the purpose of
and up for election for the first time. lery fire control at the school, he was the trip.. Mr. Hess joined American
He is also well qualified, has worked recently awarded the Army Commen- Airlines in June, 1935, and held exe;
cutive positions in the- company’s
in the Evanston library and taken dation Ribbon.

former Bannockburn resident, Richard Farmer. s
or eae See
journalism at Northwestern univer‘Fred J. Labahn, an officer of the sity. Mr. Kelley is associated in busi- Deerfield bank, the Building &amp; Loan ness with his father-in-law, Edwin F.
association, and the National Brick Weigle of Deerfield road.
_Co., is a candidate for re-election. He
All three candidates are well qualihas served for 8 years. |
fied for the office. It is up to the voters to decide.
es

New in the field is Hubert Kelley
pete 3
fi RES

of his company’s routes and opera-

tional and sales offices. Mr. Hess is

cf

In the industrial advertising field, Cleveland, Indianapolis, Buffalo and

Mr. Armstrong has been active in | Rochester offices.
handling well-known midwest electric
He and his wife, Virginia and fammeter, gear, boiler, stoker, steam ily, James W., 4, and Martha, 2, live
trap, sewing machine, steel storage at 249 Kenmore Avenue, Deerfield. —
tank, automatic valve, and machine He is the son of Mrs. Edwin M. Fay, ©
tool accounts.
p
729 W. WaterSt., Elmira, New York. —

�aee

Page 5

March 20, 1947

290 Study Industrial Arts Coursesat High School
used in the home. Such items as bell
circuits, light circuits, replacing switch-

The Old
d Manual
Training Course
Has New Wings

es and

By T. Lomse Anneaux
(Part Il of a Series)
Two hundred and fifty two students
are enrolledin the Industrial Arts department at Highland Park High

car by proper maintenance, through
minor repairs and adjustments, and its

school, which offers one of the most
complete courses of this kind in the
country.

Known originally as. the ‘Manual!
Training” course, the department was
introduced at the local school in 1901
under the direction of the late L. G.
Scrugham. A small room in the basement of Shields hall, where the present
book store is now located, was given
over to the new course that has in the
intervening years, developed into a complete industrial department offering instruction in mechanical drawing, woodwork, electrical work and auto mechanics.
Classrooms and shops of Industrial
Arts at the high school are located in
a fine new building, erected just north
of the main school building in 1934.
Rooms in the building which is known
as Sandwick hall, named in honor of
R. L. Sandwick, former principal of
the school who is now retired, include
auto and machine shop, lecture room
for visual education where movies and
slides are shown, a mechanical drawing
room, trade drawing and mathematics

fixtures are included in the

course. Electrical theory and the allimportant safety measures involved in
these home appliances are stressed. The
electric shop, located in the main building, is equipped with all testing equip_| ment, small. meters, wiring systems,
grinders and drill.
;
Auto Mechanics teaches the student
to obtain the greatest service from his

Photos by Percy H.

Prior, Jr.

Students above are photographed ‘at work at their drawing
boards in the mechanical drawing course conducted by Mr. Pertz.
At right Alan Jester and Joe
Greco demonstrate the development of a blue print from a finished draftsman’s drawing.
Mechanical drawing is taught
under the Industrial Arts program
at Highland Park High school.
emphasizes the basic principles of drawing projection, geometrical constructions, standard symbols and convention
used,s use

and

care

of

instruments,

sketching, dimensioning and various
methods of presenting working drawings.- In this course, 16 plates, six
room, locker and wash rooms. Building sketches and a sketch and plan of the
Trades classrooms are also housed in first floor of the student’s home are
three weeks of work on wood projects
the building.
required.
that involve the common hand__ tools
Problems of Home
The Mechanical Drawing room, loHarry Bolle,.chairman of the Indus- cated on the second floor of the buila- found in all home workshops, and six
trial Arts department, said, “We feel ing, has large windows admitting plenty weeks’ work on projects that involve
that it is a part of man’s normal educa- of light for the drawing boards that power tools. As many shop practices
tion to know a few facts about elec- are arranged to accommodate 30 stu- as possible are presented either through
tricity and wood, something about the dents. Other equipment in the room in- demonstration or student participation.
automobile he drives and what makes it cludes four large lay-out tables, a five Students bring items of furniture from
tick, and also we think it necessary he foot one half cylinder blue printing ma- home that need repairs. The woodworkknow a few facts about the planning of chine, individual locker space for stor- ing room is located in the main school
his home, know and understand how a ing drawing supplies, library containing building and is eqttipped with 24 work
house is put together, and the materials all the latest books on machine and benches, one for each boy, .a planer,
used in it. With these problems in mind, building trades. Each student has. his joiner, band saws, two table saws, four
wood turning lathes, mortiser, tennor,
we plan and operate our courses.”
own drawing supplies which he rents
grinder, tool. bits ete.
;
The freshman Industrial Arts course from the school for a small fee.
Electrical work consist of practical
at Highland Park consists of nine
Repair Furniture
experience in the repair and installation
weeks of study of each of the above
The woodworking course consists of of some of the simple electrical devices
named subjects. Mechanical Drawing

proper care. Rules, laws, and safe driving practices are also studied. Students
of this department work on cars belonging to members of the class and
their parents, and other equipment.
They get first-hand experience in a
completely equipped garage located on
the ground floor of Sandwick hall.
They work with electric welders, ox-y
welder, floor jacks, and all types of
testing equipment for cars. The shop’s
equipment includes a hoist, grease rack,
all types of valve and cylinder holdings,
an air compressor set-up for spray
painting, and a wash rack.
Industrial Arts also offers a short
course in printing. A small press and
all styles of type, are a part of the
equipment.
‘Learn About Cars

A course in straight Auto Mechanics
is offered sophomore, junior and senior
year students which presents instruction
in all the basic principles of. the. automobile. Each unit of the car is studied
and the student is taught to make repairs and to care properly for an automobile. He receives training in the use
of metal working tools and machines,

motor analyzer, testing equipment, as

well as the.various methods of welding
all of which are related to the automobile. A course in Machine shop is
also offered those who wish to continue
study in this department.
Six different phases of Mechanical
Drawing are also offered students who
have completed Freshman Industrial
Arts. They are sheet metal drafting,
elementary machine drawing, elementary architectural drawing, advanced
machine drawing, special machine
drawing and advanced architectural
drawing. An advanced wood shop
course is also available to upperclassmen.
oe
(Continued on page 27)

Photos by Percy H. Prior, Jr, —

These Highland Park High school students are at work in the| tical, every day skill of changing a tire.
auto shop, one of the major divisions of the excellent Industrial
Checking spark plugs under the hood of a jeep in the center
Arts program at the school.
scene are Sam Rexford and Stanley Grace.
Ed Tead is applying a coat of paint to the auto body at right.
John Snodgrass and Chris Soenkson, left, are learning the prac\

�Page

6

zhursday, March 20, 1947

With—

FRED ona RED
The Robert brothers of Princeton
Ave. are doing all right for themselves
in the way of athletics at the New
Mexico Military Institute ... Noel
is the school’s back stroke champion
while Daniel is on the cage team.

Post 501 Will
Initiate 24 New
Members Tuesday

Llewellyn, Bob Turelli, Pete Castelli,
‘| Ernie Gearelli, LaVerne Cioni, Arthur

A large number of new members
will be initiated by Highwood American Legion Post 501 Tuesday, March
25, at the Highwood city hall, starting at 8 p.m.
Among those to be initiated” are
Herman Lenzini, Scabby Silverstrini,
Ziggy Zanotti, Roget Albert, Guido
Castellani, John Pelicrini, James Rene

Doug Francis has joined the cloth
cutting staff of Hart, Schaffner and
Marx... Another Highland Park
alumnus, Max Hart, is the H.S &amp; M
Personnel Director.

Oliver Innocenzi, Fred Bertucci, Dominic Cantagallo, Robert Tondi, Leo
Contri, Guido Contri, Geanetto Lenzini, Gene Nicciolli, Roy Paganelli,
Albert Pigati and Rollman Reber.
It is hoped that the newly elected
members will be initiated by the 40
and 8 initiating team from Waukegan.
| Post officers anticipate a large turnout at this meeting, at which refreshments will be served following the
ceremony.

Prayer That Heals
You can learn at no cost to yourself what

Illinois’ Navy Pier school.

prayer can do for you. Christian Science

Billy Roush has left Bell &amp; Howell
to accept a. position with a Chicago

reveals the power of this healing prayer.

advertising firm . . . Howie Will has
also gone into advertising and will

Through it, countless thousands have

begin working in the city April 1.

been healed of all manner of discord and

It is rumored that Bernard (Pie)
Brennan—“The World’s Finest Cab
‘Driver’—has offered his softball serv-

disease. The BIBLE, the CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE textbook and periodicals con-

ices to a city just north of here.

taining testimonies of healing may be read,
borrowed or purchased at
_*

The CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM
43 North Sheridan Road
OPEN DAILY- - YOU ARE WELCOME

Navy veteran iMcCaffrey is
taking an executives training program
with. the Illinois Bell Telephone Company ...Jerry is a Lake Forest
College ‘leasaaicy and a former Highland Park High athlete.

MOTHERS! ... We havejust received a special ‘Tot of blue jeans
for children in sizes 4-12... They
sell at $1.95 and we are prepared to
deliver whatever quantity you need
. For quick store to door. service
ee
on "dhis item call 362 and they’ll be
sent to you mens
FLASH! FLASH!. . Just arrived
.. + Washable robes. . . Seer Suckers and Terry Cloths.. . $10.95. and
$8.95
.
. Now you can go to. Florida

in style.

A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs.

Arthur

Holsinger,

312

Midlo.

thian avenue, at Highland Park hospital on Tuesday, March 11.

A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Gherardini, 11 Walker
avenue, Highwood, at Highland Park
hospital, Saturday, March 15.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis -Giannasi, 115 Prairie avenue,
Highwood, at the hospital on Monday, March 17.
A son, Harold Allen, was born to

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Johnson at
Evanston hospital on Saturday, March
1. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Reginald C. Johnson, 245 Lakewood place, Highland Park, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Borror of Grove
City, Ohio, are maternal grandparents of the new arrival.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Skidmore of
Waukegan are parents of a son, born
March 10 at Victory Memorial hos- »
pital, Waukegan. Mrs. Skidmore is
of Mrs. Henrietta. Becnen of 16
Webster avenue, Highwood.

Highland Park High’s golf team
which is paced by Dom “Mouse” Ori,
Dick Flynn, Richie Sheridan, Dan
Coleman and Amedeo Minorini is
expected to be one of the best in
the state ... Speaking of golf reminds us that Sunset Valley’s Secre‘tary Roy Millen is now accepting

. Edna Edwards, our children’s store
Manager, has announced that a lovely
and smart looking collection of cloth-.
ing has been assembled to make your
youngsters look tops in the Easter
_. parade.

are

the former June Peschman, daughter

_you is $1.75.

“proaching season.

Highwood,

the parents of a son, born at Highland Park hospital, Tuesday, March
11.

Mr. and Mrs, Charles Williams, 723
Deerfield avenue, are the parents of
a son born at is passa Thursday, March 13.

Bill Laing is majoring in Mechani-

_ membership cards for the fast ap-

Mr. and Mrs. William Andrini, 314
Washington. street,

=

‘cal Engineering at the University of

We are now in position to resume
our hat renovating service to our
customers ... Our factory which has
handled our renovating work in the
past has announced improved methods
to rejuvinate your chapeau... All
greases, oils and disease carrying
germs are removed and the texture
of the body of the hat compares with’
that of the original manufacturers
finish . . . Our cost of renovating to|

ele, WE =

Deckelman Sr., Arthur Deckelman Jr.,

Swing Club Dance Saturday
The
dance
at the
Music

by Cliff Astergren and his orchestra.

Attractive assortment of Easter Candles

Arrangements are in charge of the

(especially for your Easter Table decoration) tulip, rabbit, duck, chicken and —
from 50c
floating lily designs —

finance committee of the Women’s

club. of which Mrs. Archibald Aber-_
cromby is chairman. Dancing will be
from 9 p.m. until midnight.

High Grade Glassware—Highball, Old

YWCA Calendar

Fashion, Cocktail and Pilsner styles.
(Geese and wheat designs) An ideal
gift for any home. Sold in sets of 6-8-12.
Each from
50c &amp;

|SATURDAY, March 22,
8 p.m. Saturday Evening club dance.
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
8 p.m. Discussion. group No, 5.
| THURSDAY, March 27,
10: a.m. Creative writers.
7:30 p.m. Painting class.

(Orders taken for monogram glasses)
Gift Stationery
Eaton’s, Crane’s, Montae’s: and White o.
-Wyckoff. Attractively boxed from $1.00
Hand Forged Aluminum Ware
Buckets, Trays and Salad Bowls.
Priced from.

Swing club will hold. a formal
Saturday evening, March 22,
Highland Park Woman’s club.
for dancing will be furnished

oe

Ash Trays,

as ois. Ice

A very popular giftitem.
$1.00

Please drop in and see our beautiful showing of Spring Gane,
We know you will be delighted.

Select Your Easter Cards Now

While. Our Assortment IsComplete
(We carry greeting cards for every occasion.)

~~

FINE WATCH-JEWELRYSTM
=DANN2d 2d eA S Ne
SPECIAL ORDER WORK
DIAMOND. RESETTING
Complete optical service for glasses.

We ‘dre in a position to give you
excellent. service with our staff of
watchmakers, jewelers and opticians.
Across from the bank

}

Same

Location

6 |oo
Tel. 3100

525 Central

Highland Park

35

Years.

eed

Tel. Highland Park 630

�Page 7

Thursday, March 20, 1947

- Tarbell to Bring Along His
Invisible Friend from Tibet

Semi-dirndl, inverted
pleat.

Dr. Tericll Demonstiates Ovenial Thumb Fic
“Meet my friend Parshattum, the in- by the hand and gently, but by one of
visible man from Tibet!” says Dr. the most: perfect crescendos ever deHarlan Tarbell, world famous magi- vised by human deviltry, discloses step
cian, who is appearing at the auditor- by step the appalling extent of your
ium of Highland Park High school mental incompetence.”
Friday evening, April 11, under ausLowell Thomas said, “For real myspices of the local Kiwanis club.
tery I could sit at Dr. Tarbell’s feet
You may not be able to see his friend all night.”
Recently Edgar Bergen came down
from Tibet, but you will know he is
there, for he reads your mind, and and introduced Tarbell from the Los
writes a strange language on previously Angeles Philharmonic auditorium stage
blank slates. And Dr. Tarbell has prom- because as he said, “My friend Dr.
ised to have him on his program here. Tarbell not only leaves Charley McAn invisible man is only one of the Carthy speechless, but I want you to
(Continued on page 34)
strange mysteries that Tarbell brings
from ever baffling Tibet, India, China,
and Egypt, mysteries that begin where
the modern magician leaves off.
Dramatic critics across the country

call it Miracle Magic. Objects that one
knows there is no magic in, suddenly
become endowed with strange seemingly
impossible powers.
Albert Goldberg, Chicago Tribune
dramatic critic, in reviewing Tarbell’s
recent Orchestra hall program said, “If
ever the normal human intelligence felt
thwarted, frustrated and wholly infantile in scope, it is at one of Tarbell’s
fantastic seances. Dr. Tarbell takes you

ILLINOIS
VETERANS
GET YOUR

PHOTOSTATS
MADE NOW
For

STATE BONUS
QUICK SERVICE

The New Secretary
317 Central Ave._Room 12

Tel. H. P. 1553

Draped front

Vitamins to
Supplement Your
Regular Diet

By Earl W. Gsell
You may be careful to obtain
balanced meals, get rest and
recreation in due proportion to
satisfying. work. Yet you are.
conscious of a lag in your energy, an unusual lack of eagerness to begin your daily routine.
This may mean that for some
reason you are not properly assimilating the food that you
eat, that you are really suffering from lack of sufficient
nourishment.
By all means, consult your
doctor and if he advises Vitamins. follow his prescription
exactly. He will know what particular Vitamin is lacking and
in what form and how often
you should supplement your
present diet.
Parke Davis &amp; Company,
Squibb’s and Upjohn Companies are famous and reliable
Their
pharmaceutical firms.
products are dependable.

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.
—Pharmacists—

Highland Park
Phone 2600

Ravinia
Phone 2300

Skirts—
for Laster and Always—
Lovely black crepes, in semi-dirndl or
draped styles. Wear them for parties
—and afternoons with dressy blouses,
or combine them with your tailored
blouses for éveryday

Garnett« Co.

$5.95

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

Deerfield Exhibits

Lake Counky F edoration To:
Be Guests of Deerfield Club

~ In National Flower
And Garden Show

Now in progress, March 16 through
The Lake County Federation of
Garden Woman’s clubs is to meet in Deerfield
ee 23, is the National Flower and
show being held in the International on Tuesday, March 25, at the Deer- Amphitheater in Chicago. Thousands field Grammar. school.

Officers of

of speetators, including many from this group are to be entertained at
Deerfield, have been visitors at the luncheon in the home of Mrs. Wenshow, where more than a million dol- dell Goodpasture, president of the
Deerfield Woman’s club.
:
~ Jars worth of flowers and gardens are
Following the luncheon, there will
on display to compete for honors and
be a Lake County executive board
yes. 3
a
at 1:30 p.m. in the Deerfield
Pe oud the exhibitors are F. D. meeting
school.
Clavey’s Ravinia Nurseries and The
The visiting group will be guests at
;
‘Deerfield Woman’s club.
the regular meeting of the Deerfield
-s- The Claveys’ Ravinia Nurseries cre- Woman’s club at _2 p.m. in the school
ated a rainbow fountain garden, fea- gymnasium. A travelog will be the
turing a rainbow of lights and flow- entertainment of the afternoon and
ers with a shimmering fountain and
the program is announced as “Pica formal juniper hedge in the back- tures by the Hubbells.”
.
_ ground
&lt;

Mrs. John.Silerice, representing the

{April Fool Frolic
Is Community Dance.
Saturday, March 29

Spring Lambs Are
One Year Older

will be held Saturday, March 29, at 8

p.m. in the Deerfield Grammar school
last Tuesday. Four neighbor young gymnasium.
ladies were her dinner guests and her
There will be popular dancing and
mother, Mrs. John Silence, took them barn dances, Rankins’ orchestra of
to the movies that evening.
Lake Forest will provide the music
Linda Nelson, daughter of the E: and Dudley L. Dewey of County Line
F. Nelsons of North avenue, cele- road, will call the barn dances.
brated her seventh birthday anniverPlanning the party with the PTA:
sary, last Wednesday.
recreation committee, of which Mrs.
George Armstrong, son of the John Frank Frable is chairman, are the Air
Armstrongs of Stratford road, had his Scouts headed by Robert Rainer and
eighth birthday anniversary last Tues- Robert Newell. Air Scouts who are
day.
decorating the gym are Karl Hout,
Libby Wolfe, daughter of the R. R. Bill Winters, Jerry Juhrend, Don Ubl,
Wolfes of Portwine road, celebrated Bill Notz, and Chris Soenksen.
Susan Silence was eight years old

her seventh birthday anniversary last

Silver Wedding
Monday.
Deerfield Woman’s club entered the Anniversary
Today Joanna Huff is “Queen for a
One
ents.
arrangem
- divisions of floral
Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Anderson’s Day” for this is her seventh birthday
entry is a Victorian arrangement in
an oval frame, 48 inches by 28 inches 25th wedding anniversary was Tues- anniversary. She is a daughter of the

Bill Winters has printed the tickets
and Karl Hout will assist Mr. and
Mrs. A. F. Sturm in selling tickets at
the door.

and the other is a miniature floral day, March 25. Due to Mrs. Ander- E. E. Huffs of Bannockburn.
on’s recent illness, it was a quiet fam-|
_ exhibit.

The coke bar will have Jerry Juhrend and Don Ubl aiding Robert O.
Clark.

Mrs. R. N. Gauger Heads
_ Flower Show Committee

Jonise Red Cross

ily observance at their home, 1152
North Chestnut street on Sunday.
Dorothy
oaks
They have two sons, Howard of
Peoria, and Jack of Deerfield, and a
he Bannockburn Garden club will daughter, Mary Frances of Deerfield,
‘be represented by an outside window and one grandson, sonof the Howard
_ planting, a still life picture, and an Andersons.
entry in the class “Dramatic ArrangeMiss Dorothy Crooks and Robert
ment in a Glass Container,” at the Move Next Door |
;
C. Otto will be married ‘Sunday,
fifth “Fashions in Flowers” to be
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brandwein (Edstaged by the Garden Club of Illinois na Johnson) have moved into the March 23, in the chapel of St. Luke’s
Episcopal church at Long Beach,
during the next two weeks.
house at 845 Central avenue, which
The show will be staged on the 9th had: been-leased for the past several Calif.
Miss Crooks, daughter of Mrs. Nelfloor galleries of Marshall Field &amp; years to Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Nichols
lie R. Crooks of Waukegan, taught
company from March 24 to April 5. of the Deerfield Bakery. Mr. and
Mrs. W. L. Keady is president, of Mrs. Brandwein had been living with the second grade. in the Deerfield
- the club. Mrs. R. N. Gauger of Wil- Mrs. Brandwein’s mother, Mrs. Jul- Grammar school, last year, and this
mot road is chairman of the exhibit ius Johnson at°849 Central avenue. year has been teaching in California.
Miss Crooks is a graduate of North—
committee and is being assisted by The Nichols bought the home of the
western university.
_ Mrs. A: J. McMaster, Mrs. B.S. late Mr. and Mrs. George Stanger at
Mr. Otto, whose home is in SpoWegener, Mrs. L. R. Gage, Mrs. W. 834 Forest avenue.
kane, Wash., served for six years
in
=: ae and Mrs. E. L. Hall.
the navy and is now attending the
American School of Watchmaking in
Glendale, Calif.

has

WH B Bide (6),
Bibel COn

Amvets Auxiliary
Dance &amp; Box Social
Planned for April 12

alyeg WeChesne 1
| Party

oo

_ Forher 12th birthday anniversary,
_

The April Fool Frolic for all Deerfield school children from seventh
grade through high school, and adults,

Sally McChesney, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. L. T. McChesney of Green-

woodavenue, entertained at a lunch-

The Amvets auxiliary will hold an
old fashion box social and dance on
Saturday, April 12, at 8 p.m. in the
Deerfield Grammar school gymnasium. The public is invited and there
will be no admission charge. ©
Girls and ladies are asked to each
bring a gayly decorated box lunch for
two people, which will be sold by a
local auctioneer to the highest bidding
gentleman. Coffee and other refresh-

eon and theater party on Saturday,
March 15. Her guests were Maurita
_ Morgan, Marita Frank, Donna Ludlow, Emily Hart, Audrey Allen, and
Z Mildred Batt.
Here, also, for the birthday party ments will be
served by the auxiliary
and to spend the weekend were Sally’s members.
:
_ grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Keg
Samples
of
decorated
boxes
are to
of Chicago.
be shown in the local shops to give
new ideas for the very interesting old
: “Moved to Kentucky
fashioned evening of fun. Posters are
Mr. and Mrs, Philip Tennis and to be made by children of the 7th and
their two little sons, Philip and Ste- 8th grades of the local schools.
phen, moved to Murray, Ky., on Sat-urday. Mrs. Tennis is. the former House Guests _
Mrs, Friedel S. Fuller of Deerfield
Frances Hoffmann and Mr. Tennis is
a son of Mr. and Mrs. P. Allen Ten- road has had as her house guests this
nis of Forest avenue. They had been past week her nephew, Samuel Huebliving at the Matthias Hoffmann scher of the H-R ranch, Springview,
home since their return from Seattle, Neb., and his fiancee, Miss Gladyce
Krutch of Neillsville, Wis. Mr. Hueb:Wash.
scher was recently released from the
navy. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. G.
Spring Vacation
A. Huebscher, are now living in Den_ Spring vacation for the local schools ver, Colo., and he is in charge of thefr
will be April 4 through April 13, which ranch. His bride-to-be is the daughincludes Good Friday and the week ter of Mrs. Lydia Krutch of Neills-

following Easter.

‘

NEWCOMERS
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Halvorsen
are the new owners of the house at
1206 West. Deerfield road, formerly
the home of the Robert Carberrys
who moved to New York, and are
now at home to their neighbors.

Contributes $54.37
The Junior Red Cross fund drive
has been completed at the four schools.
Mrs. James Sreet Jr. of Rosemary
terrace,

chairman

of

the

roll

call,

makes the following report:
Holy Cross school, Sister Stephana,
chairman,
:
Wilmot school, Mrs. Delbert Meyer,
chairman,
af
$11.05
Bannockburn school, Mrs. R. F. Hamill, ~

chairman,

Total Junior Red Cross collections ....
John Huhn Called to Tucson
Because of Son’s Illness

John Huhn and his elder son, Andrew, left Friday for Tucson, Ariz.,
where his younger son, Harold, is

critically ill. They made the trip by
automobile and arrived on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Huhn and their
three children went to Tucson last
year because of his health. Several

Mr. and Mrs, Paul K. Haines have months ago he contracted typhoid
moved into their new home at 1123 fever. He is now back in St. Mary’s,
from George T. Scott. Mr. Haines following a relapse.
is manager of ‘the Higland Park
Matt Hoffmann in Hospital
Walgreen store.
The three new houses on West
Deerfield road have been completed
by Deerfield Construction Co. and
are now occupied. We find Mr. and
Mrs. Michael George at 1142; Mr.
and Mrs. Carl J. Bloom at 1146; and
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stuart at 1152.
Village trustee George T. Scott is
making his home with his son-in-law

Matthias

Hoffmann,

local barber,

748 Waukegan road, was taken to the
Presbyterian hospital, Chicago, Saturday, and underwent a major operation on Monday.
Police Magistrate ill

Dan Hunt, Deerfield police magi-~
strate, has been confined to his home
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, Michael for two weeks because of the flu.
George at 1142.
The new home at the corner of
Woodbine court and North avenue
will. be ready for occupancy in a
week or so. Fred Schleicher appeared
before the village council last Tuesday
evening with a request that North
avenue be repaired so that he could

Attend Reception
Mr. and Mrs. William Tennermann
of Oakley avenue attended a reception
last Sunday at the home of Mr. and

Mrs. Max Zimmermann in Elmwood
Park to meet their son and his Bel-

gian bride, Lt. and Mrs. Theodore

get his automobile in and outof his Zimmermann. Lt. Zimmermann is to
garage.

be stationed at Fort Sheridan.

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Thursday, March 20, 1947
'| Miss Walters Is Candidate for
Queen Titles at Iowa State
Miss Winifred Wolters, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wolters of
1303 Judson avenue, has been chosen
by Delta Zeta sorority sas. pledge
Telephone H.P. 4500
for pledge Panhellenic
| candidate
queen at Iowa State college, Ames,
Iowa. Miss Wolters, a freshman stu“Bob” Cooksy Is Initiated
dent this year, also has been named
Into Sigma Phi at Bradley
candidate from Roberts hall for
a
Addison Robert Cooksy of 635 Vine
Varsity “I” queen.
avenue recently was initiated into
Sigma Phi fraternity at Bradley uniArthur Vyse Is Initiated into
versity, Peoria, Ill. A freshman studySigma Kappa at Illinois
ing business administration, he was Phi
Arthur Vyse, son of Mr. and Mrs.
one of 27 pledges who became active
F. Vyse Jr. of Chicago and|
members of the fraternity in formal Arthur
Highland Park, was recently initiated
ceremonies held at the chapter house.
into Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity in

APPENINGS OF
IGHLAND PARKERS...
Highland Park News

‘Liquor: SERVICE CO.:

DAILY FREE DELIVERY |
PHONE H. P. 1500

¢

Robert F. Walker Returns
From Visit in California

Robert F. Walker of 234 Cary avenue
returned yesterday from a three weeks’
vacation in Glendora, Cal., where he
‘and Mrs. Walker have been visiting at
the home of their daughter, Mrs. J. A.
Wilcox, and enjoying their two grandchildren. Mrs. Walker is remaining in
Glendora for an extended visit.
Serves Aboard Carrier Leyte
William Fleischmann, aviation machinist’s mate, third class, is serving
aboard the aircraft carrier USS Leyte,
a report received from Ninth Naval
District headquarters at Great. Lakes
stated this week. The Leyte is a
part of the Second Task fleet, now
on Atlantic fleet maneuvers. These

formal ceremonies

at

the

Mrs. Frank G. Gardner, 218 North
Sheridan road, a Highland Park resident for 30 years, left this week for

/Upland, Cal., where she will make her
home with her daughter, Mrs. Dorothy

Name Robert Warner to Dean’s

Gardner, and the latter’s son, Page
Thibodeaux.
Mrs. Gardner arrived in
and
to
enroute
maneuvers took place

Fleischmann

Mrs. Marie Fleischmann, of 815 Ridge joined for a week-end visit by the senior
Mrs. Gardner’s son, John Hoyt Gardner
of Detroit.
Mrs. Gardner was born in Kenwood
Receives Promotion
Word was received here of the pro- on 47th street and has been a life-long
motion of F. R. Meyer, 727 Wauke- resident of the Chicago area. She was
gan road, to the rank of staff ser- active in the guild of Trinity church,
geant assitenied to the supply office of which she is a member.
of the Purdue Military band.- Announcement was made by Professor Recovering from Influenza
P. S. Emrick, director of the organiMrs. Avery Rudolph of 625 Onzation. Meyer is in his fifth semester wentsia avenue is recovering after
at the school.
being confined to her home for the
past week with influenza.
Mrs. Capitani and Sons

avenue, Highland Park.

South Sheridan road, has been named
to the dean’s honor list for outstanding academic work during the fall semester at Hobart college, Geneva,
N.Y. He was graduated from. Highland Park High school in 1943.
&gt;

QUICK SERVICE
On All Watch and Jewelry
Repairing

POLK’S JEWELRY
Tel. H. P. 2028

2 N. Sheridan Road

were away seven weeks, and visited

in Hibbing, Minn., and Rochester.

COMMUNITY CAMERA
EXCHANGE
Highland Park 206

6 North Sheridan Road

Miss Bolle Elected President
Of Gamma Phi’s at Illinois .

in other

organizations

at the school, is also junior business
manager of Illio, the university year |
book. She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry E. Bolle, 626 St.
~Johns avenue, Highland Park.

- VOKAR
CAMERA

VOKAR
CAMERA

F 2.8 Lens
Coated

Coupled
Range
Finder

$7950

$7950
ALSO IN STOCK

Walker's Imperial
—
Fifth $ 3 39

MILLER’S HIGH LIFE $350
BEER Case of 24

| ATLAS PRAGER BEER $275
Case of 24

pe eecceeccoserweoacncces

PABST BLUE RIBBON $363

$370 |

Case of 24

Widmer's
FINEST
NEW YORK
WINES

~The Tailor é

ALTERATIONS.

Revere 8 mm Projector

Clothes

re

Also Cleaning and Pressing
@
Pick up Tuesday before
10:00 a.m. and Delivered
on Fridays

H. P. 1712
‘

VERYPALE &amp;DRY

Burgundy,
_ Sauterne

oeequsee
aneCameOF

Richness
irre CtsLan

oth $] 39

$125 |

Special Case Lot Price
on Your Favorite

Whiskey

Keystone 16mm Camera

JOHNNY. WALKER BLACK
LABEL SCOTCH

35mm Camera Kodak F3.5 Lens
Voightlander 21/4x3 Y4 F4.5 lens

Tei GobLato

rd

$Q85 S

Leica Standard F3.5 Elmar Lens

Without Delay
Suits Made to Order

WIDMER

Italy Full

ee

Revere 8 mm Turret Camera

Men‘s andWomen’s

5th $] 66

| os
from $2935
WINE
CHIANTI Qua
rt

- Bell and Howell 8 mm Filmo
Revere 8mm F2.5 Lens

Muscatel

IT’S “MAY WINE”
TIME 5th

Bell and Howell 8mm Projector

WALTER

8 N. Second St.

P. M.
5th $3.45.

Port, Sherry,

Miss Lois Bolle, member of the
junior class at University of Illinois,
has been elected president of Gamma
Phi Beta sorority at the school. Miss
Bolle, active

SEAGRAM’S
7-CROWN
5th $3.94

BEER Case of 24
BUDWEISER EEE

Return from Minnesota

Mrs. Eugene Capitani of Deerfield
road returned Wednesday of last}
week from a visit with her mother,
Mrs. Mary Koski. The two youngest
Capitani boys, Charles and Eugene,
accompanied their mother. They

PAUL JONES
“5th $3.45

Honor List at Hobart College

Robert C. Warner, son of Mr. and:
Highland Park last week to assist her
in the Caribbean sea area, the report
Raymond C. Warner of 735
Mrs.
mother
with
the
moving.
They
were
is the son of
stated.

BELLOW’S
PARTNER'S
CHOICE
5th $3.99

chapter

house on the campus of University of
Illinois. A navy veteran and a 1944
graduate of Highland | Park High
school, Arthur is studying architecture in the college of fine and applied
arts.

Mrs. Frank G. Gardner
Moves to California

FLEISCHMAN'S PREFERRED
5th $378

ee
‘
7

Uniflash Camera Complete with Flash

WATCH FOR OUR PHOTO
CONTEST MONTHLY PRIZES

Liquor SERVICE CO.
337 Waukegan Ave.

Highwood ee Phone H. P. 1500

DAILY FREE DELIVERY

�Be

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Pat
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Thursday, March 20, 1947

POST 145 TO ASSIST WITH BONUS APPLICATIONS

PACKARD
SEVEN PASSENGER
SEDAN
Side Mounts |
This has been a family car and
mileage is under 28,000.

On display at

:

Highland Park Post 145 of the American Legion, 21 North
Sheridan road, will be open every afternoon from 1:30 until 5 o’clock, and every evening from 7:30 until 9 o’clock, to assist all veterans in making out their Illinois bonus applications.
Forms may also be obtained at the Legion office by navy veterans who must send to Washington, D.G. for their service records.
_ All veterans must have lar ge size photostatic copies of their
discharge papers to accompany bonus applications.

Purchase at April 15 Election

a referendum on the purchase of the

Highland Park Post No. 145,

22 So. Ist St.

USO property for a community center are slated in Highwood for April
15:
Ten petitions for candidacy for the
four ward jobs were filed by the
March 12 deadline, as follows:
First ward: William Saielli, Fidel
Mrs. Beatrice Steinman, leader of
Brownie Troop No. 4, Ravina school, Ghini (seeking re-election) and Oli-:
recently received the following letter ver Zanarini.
of thanks for a ‘Thinking Day’ box
Second ward: Guido Serafini (for

Highland Park, Ill.

American Legion

Girl Scout Doirigs

SCOTTS BEAUTY TREATMENT
MAKES LAWNS SPARKLE
‘Here is the famous Scott Lawn prescription
per 1000 sq. ft.: 10 Ibs. Turf Builder; 3 Ibs.

Scotts Seed.

To Hold Referendum on USO

An election of four aldermen and

DeWitt J. Manasse
Service Officer

RAVINIA MOTORS

10 Candidates
For 4 Alderman
Post in Highwood

Apply easily and economically

sent to Velt, Holland.-

re-election), Ossian Carlson and Louis
Dear Mrs. Steinman:
_ Brownies and Girl Guides from Velt Baruffi.
Third ward: John Lenzini and had your lovely presents divided among
them on February 22. It was a wonder- Americo Ladurini who is seeking reful surprise and many loud cheers for election.
your troop sounded in our troop house.
Fourth ward: Geno Fiocchi and
_ They want to thank you for your John Frantonius.
kind thoughts and lovely parcel.
Last week a citizen’s USO commit
P. Monnan, Guider
tee, headed by Edgar Benson, was
Mrs. H. F. B’Sinter, leader of formed for the purpose of voicing
Troop No. 24, Braeside, took her the citizen’s support of the proposed
troop to Turnbill Woods for practice purchase of former USO quarters,
in outdoor cooking Tuesday, March following a set-back to the measure
18.
in a city council meeting where only

with the new Scott Spreader.

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For full sun,

AFs

light shade. Triple clean, 99.91% weedfree.
1 Ib. - $1.25;
5 Ibs. - $6.25;
25 Ibs. - $29.85.
SCOTTS FOR DENSE SHADE—
1 Ib. - $1.25; 3 Ibs. - $3.75; 5 Ibs. - $6.25
SCOTTS TURF BUILDER (grassfood)
—Keeps grass healthy and green.
25 Ibs. $2.25; 50 Ibs. $3.75; 100 Ibs. $6.50
SCOTT SPREADERS— Precision machines. 25 lb. capacity $7.85; 50 lbs.,
rubber tired, $14.85.
SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Quickly
destroys Dandelions, Buckhorn, all
broad leaved weeds without harm to
grass. $1.25 and $3.85.

Hah i)
coSAS
sot. F y
nt

|
SHERONY HARDWARE
314 RAILWAY AVE.
|
HIGHWOOD,
3
Tel. H. P. 2041

Private Sale
Sunday March 23rd 1947

~ from 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.

Lincoln PTA Plans Semi-formal
Dance at School Saturday Night

ILL.

A semi-formal dance is being sponsored by the Lincoln School Parent
Teacher association in the school auditorium Saturday evening, March 22,
from 9 until 12 o’clock.
Roger Morrison and his orchestra
| will furnish the music. There will be
surprise entertainment andplenty’ of
good food.
Tickets for the dance may be procured from Mrs. W. H. Pagenkopf,
812 Waverly road, H.P. 5391.

INSURANCE
HILL &amp; STONE
372 Central

H P. 64

three

aldermen

approved

the pur-

chase.
Serving on the committee are Otto
Fisher, Dr. N. C. Risjord, the Rev.
James Gleeson, Mrs. Sam Somenzi,
Joe Talzia, John Fiorre, Battista Pasquesi, Ernest Santi and Mrs. Sam
Corso.

This group will attend the council
meeting scheduled for tomorrow
night, and will act with the councilmen in matters relating to the USO
question.
;

Firemen Extinguish Blaze
Firemen were called to the home of
C. Merrick, 380 Brierwood lane, early
Tuesday morning to extinguish a
blaze caused by a defective electrical
control on an oil burner. Damage was
slight,
it was reported.

[peta aoestnors cops
at the residence of

. Spring’s Coming

KENNETH ANDERSON
274 LAUREL AVENUE |
Highland Park, Ill.

‘Sale Conducted By

J, P. HUNGNESS
of the Dealers of Highland Park
32-34 N. FIRST ST.

Avoid Rush

Send Clothes Now

DUFFY &amp; DUFFY
‘CLEANERS

HIGHLAND PARK

WINNETKA

�Page 11

|

Thursday, March 20, 1947

.
———=
Pupils Enact Illinois History atEln Phel————
‘Free Delivery
Phone 4579
ae
THE

STORE OF FRIENDLY SERVICE

335 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood

FOUR ROSES
95.5 Proof, 40%
$ 425
Straight Whiskey, 5th

Photo by Percy H. Prior, Jr.

e
Staged At Assemblies

All of the children of Miss Cruick-| cities and other points of interest.

The performance ended on the
shank’s, Miss Fallstad’s and Mrs.|
:
fourth
has made
Fields’
Bact note that today science
‘ Mrs.4 Win: and
a egrades
e
peoples of the
the
all
-of
neighbors
1
an
ourth
combine
stows:
grade gave a program at the regular earth. It emphasized that this good

assembly of Elm Place school on way of life, so painstakingly created

William

?

Penn
:
ME
es
sales

IMMACULATE

'
Nee
eee Oe
is point, an enlarged map o
Illinois was used to locate major

Tableaux and Skits

ee

NATION”

ILLUSTRATE “‘CROSSROADS OF A

ELM PLACE CHILDREN

CONCEPTION CHURCH

Traditionally

Oe gieen Poke

a fine, mellow
of
whisky
body
light
Sid fall

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrisoa,
Skoner, M.A., 8.T.1u
Rev. Edmund J,pen
Rev. John P. O’Connell, M.A., S.T.v.

flavor.

MASSE

35% Straight

eeae APG760,.9200, 10:00, 11 :6u

30
Friday, March 7. Enjoying the event by our forefathers, can be kept only|] weekdays—6:
-8:15
aa

the students, teachers of grades

cc gra resented again March,10 sp tobe good wort cizens

five through eight, and

ea

they meet each day, and thereby grow

garten through grade tnree) of both
eT a kg and Green Bay Road

Ha doe svrend Tio pan || 5th $341

Saturdays

eves.

of

First Fridays

TRIMMED, NAILS CUT,

able degree of understanding of the
world in which they live. Using a
six foot cardboard “globe” they
demonstrated their knowledge of the
zones of the earth and the position

s
eee
EARS CLEANED, ele. 628 30

Blend of Straight
Whiskies, 5th ............

TH =

WAGT Al L

6 No. Sheridan Rd.

.

Tlinois: as a: Jarge stake it 3s really[Wee

only a small part of the total surface
of the earth, Also, it was made clear
that natural waterways had been a

Ree

Bg a

reea

A

SOY

LITTLE

Sh)PRUE| Sgectenc someonespnincin ones

when

BONDED
6 years old

ge So

date with a present-day state fair
as the grand finale. A “train’’ laden
with the rich produce of Illinois was

s to us tor
cleaning, they’ll
really be cleaned

the white man, and brought up to

:

Carefully
ok

ope

You,
on

GIN
SEAGRAM'S

$358

Dry Sherry, Tawny Port, Sauee

Burgundy

CRESTA BLANCA ee
Sherry, Port,
$149
e whe
mik

etre.

ROMA ESTATE
Port, Muscatel, Sherry
5

&lt;

STATE

—

INC
ERMINEOTTOCLEANERS,
F. FISHER, Pres.

ee

Tes Zagalia’s gasoline!! The gift

they wanted most was a quick
401 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

eaefoliage ceepheineslahSee tee meas

ere

7
WINES
TAYLOR’S NEW YORK

Too

is

MEMBER
‘Jbaional ssocialion of })yersand(leaners

~ Zagalia’s Service Station

$335

eensestensescnnes anos
wenovennnaseat
FLEISCHMANN S GIN $319
GILBEY'SGIN ETRE $318

Promptly

Qo

ee on their honeymoon!”

BEAM
$675

GORDON’S GIN

Experily

me

—

SEB. on eeeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeceees

you

that

é

§$274

Old Underoof, 93 Proo
3
cd Vek ADA cca ghatian chat eCwR opera
$337
IMPERIAL

to let you know

folded. The audience was carried back

pr

ni

IO ec

ee PR

to the days before the coming of

Se

Sy

«GYOER crctrrccrrrrcrct Co
$= #$§ #$$$/PEEB EDPAA FIO
US ee
FROM
PEEP

big factor in making Illinois the|f¥
“crossroads” of a nation.
By narration woven through skits,
Indian tom-toms, and pioneer dancing the history of Illinois was un-

Hy-Way Hank

eecchacad Pees $ 378
SEAGRAM’ $7 CROWN$394

ae

JUST

$389

CALVERT RESERVE

Tel. H. P. 206

Highland Park

$2387

“VERT RESERVE |

SH OP

:

:

The object of this procedure was

to point out graphically that although

a

$ 422

SCHENLEY RESERVE

Illinois in the western

i

PRIVILEGE

.00

Si

WE WILL PICK ee AND DELIVER FREE!

and size of North America, the United

hemisphere,

Ss $40.92

D

ject. The children showed a remark-||

States, and

Pint $215
is
_ case

A

The social studies curriculum of the
fourth grade was the core of the pro-

ane

e

S Ly

W

D O G S

Whisky,

86 Proof

CONFESSIONS

e

it children are kind to all the people

ALL PHONES — HIGHLAND PARK 3710

ORY fe
s

3

$] 17

anae

Phone 4579 for

|

FREE DELIVERY

�ostly

/

fey

*

IOF

Women

. Works of Two Artists Are

| Wiss Hane

Exhibited at Woman’s Club
—

=

Yhe March art exhibit at the Highland Park Woman’s club is of unusual interest—in fact, is two exhibits
in_one.
In the auditorium and lounge are
- hung seventeen oils and water-colors,
the work of Esther Jarrard of Winnetka.

Sydney

Music Club Members
To Hear Unusual!

Program March 26
An unusual and interesting program

is

being prepared

for

the

March

meeting of the Highland Park Music
club, to be held at the home of Mrs.

one, for this collection includes portraits, landscapes and still-life. The
outstanding
characteristic
of her

avenue,
Wednesday,
March
26,
promptly at 2 p.m. Interpreting the

in this exhibit would appear to be’
= the vase of tulips, which fairly glows

with perfectly natural color.
Esther Jarrard is a graduate

of

_Ft. Wayne Art school, and completed

the second year of the’ Normal course |
at the Art

institute.

She has

also

George M. Lyman, 910 South Linden

talk on “The Song Festival of the
Romantic Years”, given by Madame
Daniel Harmon Brush of Glencoe,
Mrs. Ruth Goodkind, soprano, accompanied by Mrs. Ellen J. Kempner,

will sing Schumann and Brahms
songs.

lyric

Madame Brush comes from the
Touraine, the chateau country in
France, and is head of the French

studied with Kuniyoshi and Dumond

department

at the Art Students’ League of New

school. She has

York, with Archipanko at Ecole D’Art, New York, with Francis Chapin

go and on the North Shore on musical]

and Michael Ursulescu at the North

subjects.

_ Shore Art league classes, and with
_ George Buehr at Saugatuck Summer

school.

pe r

ts

She has had a one-man showing of
her work at the Fort Wayne Art
(Continued on page 26)

“Who Is Hattie?” Is
Infant Welfarers’

$64 Question

Wy

CLL Yous

Weddings -

Curtain at 8 O'clock
For ‘’Ravinia Revue”

ovvis,

Tomorrow Night

Whod to

The family album will fly open and

Mrs. Jarrard’s talent is a versatile

painting seems to be the skill and
restraint with which she uses clear,
vibrant colors. The general favorite

ok

at

Lake

‘Forest

spoken

Day

frequently

both in French and English in ChicaShe was

a

pupil

of

Jean

Hure, professor in the Paris conser-.
vatoire, and her charm and knowledge

of the romantic period of music will
make the coming meeting a memorable one. Mrs. Goodkind and Mts.
Kempner are well-known members of

the club whose performances ate always welcomed.

ds. Maivied in

une

.

from its pages will step the demure

young
Mr. and Mrs. William West Mor-

ris, 2217 Keyes avenue, Madison,
Wisconsin, are announcing the engagementof their daughter, Jane, to
Sydney Makepeace Wood Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. Wood of Lake Bluff.
Miss Morris is a graduate of University of Wisconsin where she was
a member of Sigma Epsilon

Sigma

ladies

and

gentlemen of the
morrow
school

at

8

when

p.m.
the

gallant

Gay
at

young

Nineties
the

Ravinia

to-

Ravinia
Woman’s

club presents its “Ravinia Revue.”
Authentic costumes and properties of the period have been collected for
the

characters

of the six

skits

ar-

ranged for an evening of fun.by the
arts

committtee

of

the

club

under

and Pi Lambda Theta. She “is at
Mrs: Gordon Parks, chairman, and
present employed by Abbott laboraMrs. Wyatt Jacobs, co-chairman.
tories and is making her home with
The songs of the Gay Nineties will
her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
be featured by such indispensable
Sidney Morris, 268 Laurel avenue, groups of the period as the barbershop quartet and the Floradora girls.
Highland Park.
One is even likely to encounter Daisy
Mr. Wood is attending University
and her boy friend on their bicycle
of Illinois where he is affiliated with
built for two.
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Members of the club and their husThe wedding will take place in
bands. are encouraged to wear Gay
June.
Nineties costumes if they like. Follow-

Fortnightly Holds Fourth Dance
The North Shore Fortnightly held
its fourth dance of the season at the
Michigan Shores club, Wilmette, Saturday evening. Former members of
‘the executive committee were special

guests. Music was provided by John
Marlowe and his orchestra.

Aladdin Has Lost His Lamp

ing the revue, food will be served by
a committee under Mrs. E. N. Johnson,
The script for the revue was writ-

ten by a committee including Mes-—
dames J. M. Watkins, A. C. Heimerdinger,, Wyatt Jacobs, J. C. Ewell,
Edward F. Kapalka and GR. Barks

Chairman of the costumes committee is Mrs. Theodore L. Osborn and
of

the- properties,

Mrs.

E,

B.

Bil-

more. The music for the production
will be furnished by Mrs. George
Straub at the piano.

7

Who is Hattie? Each and every
Infant Welfarer is pondering this
‘question. She is more than pondering;
she is calling upon any latent “Dache”
qualities she may possess in an effort

Wiss A Csalics

Willbs June Bride

to refurbish her old hats with cos-

tume jewelry and flowers. These
onfections she will take with her
to the meeting of the Highland ParkRavinia center of Infant Welfare at
the home of Mfrs. Philip Sparling,

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lewis Er-—
skine of Highland Park are announcing the engagement of their daughter,
Eleanor, ‘to Lt. Cmdr. dha. Po Gabe
bons, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John

756 Oak .Grove avenue on Monday,

J. Gibbons of Chicago.
Miss Erskine was graduated from
Rosary college, Chicago, and
L¢,
Cmdr. Gibbons did undergradu
ate

March 24,

:
_At this time the member judged
to
have brought the most cleverly
de-_
corated hats will be crowned “Hatt
ie”
with a beautiful spring hat donat
ed
by Marshall Field &amp; Co. of Lake
For» €st for this gala occasion. Last
year
Mrs. Robert Bussard, president
of the
group, won the hat

work at St. Mary’s college
in Minne-

sota and received his law degre
e at

De Paul university,
:
The couple plans to be matri
ed in
June.
a
—

Welfare Wing Group

At Pfister. Home -

_ After the members have been given
N opportunity to express their
ad-

miration

The Highland Park-Ravinig
Infant

and to buy one another’s.

hats the remaining collection will be

Welfare Wings group met

day meeting will be Mrs. John Kies,

Mrs. E. N. Johnson,’ Mrs. Walter
Holden, Mrs. Herbert Carlson, Mrs.
Robert Heck, and Mrs. F. O. Dicus.

The luncheon, which will be served
from a table decorated with gay

miniature hats, will be planned by

Mrs. Francis J. Nosek and her committee.

Monday

evening at the home of Miss
Shirley
Pfister, 2322 Indian Tree drive,
when
plans were discussed for the dance

turned over to the Thrift shop in time

for its pre-Easter sale.
_ Assisting Mrs. Sparling at the all-

to be sponsored by the group some-

THE PRINCESS IS HORRIFIED to see her husband’s magic lamp

in the possession of the wicked magician.

But the evil one does not

retain his hold upon the lamp for long, as will be seen by a large

Highland Park juvenile audience Saturday, March 22, when the play,
“Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp,” is presented at the Elm Place
eo
auditorium by the Clare Tree Major Children’s theatre of New
York. |
,
ec

time in June.
A feature of the evening was ‘a
surprise program including play reading by members of the club. Refreshments were served.
:
Co-hostesses with Miss Pfister were
Mrs. Lee Gatewood and Mrs, Harold
Pfister, Jr.
See

_

�_

Thursday, March 20, LOaT

Page
I3 oo

Garden Clubs Here to Exhibit
In 1947 “Fashions in Flowers”

Visit With Parents

Mrs. Arthur C. Barr and daughter,
Norma of Madison, Wis., are visitents,

Club of Illinois during the next two'|

Mrs.
Burchell

Mr.

and

Mrs. August

Meyer,

494 Sheridan place.

will be represented by many fine ex| ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT
ers,” to be staged by the Garden |

Specializing in natural
unposed

Tel. H. P. 3199

Field

&amp;

Company,

chairman, Mrs. C. Vigo Nichols, the)
Ravinia

Garden

club

Highiand Park, Iil.

LeRoy

Harza,

your,

Siooor Aubiey WE
Wad Sally Hon

has entered a'|

major exhibit entitled “Outside Window Planting.” Working on this
project are Mrs. Bertram Weber,
Mrs.. Kenneth

Kraft and Mrs. John Wilbor. Mrs.
Arthur Baldauf will do “A Flower
Arrangement in a Copper Container.”
Matinee Table

The Garden Guild of Highland Park
will exhibit a special occasion luncheon table, “Luncheon before Matinee, Lute Song,” and, a flower arrangement of spring branches. Mrs.’
W. O. Heath is chairman of the com‘mittee in charge. Working on the
table are Mrs. C. J. Hinkle, Mrs. J;
D. Pickett and Mrs. Ed Keogh. Mrs.
Francis F. Patton will have charge of
the arrangement of spring branches.
The North Shore Garden club also
will exhibit in the popular but diffi-

cult class, “Special Occasion Buffet

Table.” The table will be named
“Before the Opera.” The club will
enter another exhibit in the still life
class, featuring “Wash of the Sea.”
Mrs. Edwin Rand is chairman of the
committee in charge, which includes
|
Mrs. Ralph Arnheim, Mrs. Max

Ideas for Garden:

the

engagement

Hixon,

daughter

of

of

Miss

Sally

late

Mrs.

the

Erank Monroe of Coronado, Cal., and
Frank P. Hixon of Seattle, Wash.
to

Stever Aubrey,

son of

Mr.

and

Mrs. James T. Aubrey of Highland.
Park. Miss Hixon is studying at the
Art Students league in New York)

and her fiance, who was graduated
from Princeton tniversity and served
overseas with the army, is in busi-

ness in New York. The wedding will
take place in the early summer.
Wedgewood room during the show as
follows:
\

March 26, 10:45 a.m., Marc Leeds,
“Flower

Arrangements;”

same

day,

arrangements, will offer a wealth of

for the garden and for the
One class of’flower arrange-

ments, “Arrangement in Color,’ will
be changed every second day, Monday, Wednesday and Friday. These
will be completely new arrangements,
by different clubs, and will be judged
the morning they are placed. This
will allow for a much larger number
of entries in this popular class.”
Free lectures will be given in the

RAVINIA PAINTING
STUDIO

Have you ever surveyed the cleaning you now get?

Does

it meet all the requirements of modern cleaning today? If
not it’s time to change to a cleaner that will give you all
‘the advantages that modern cleaning affords you. Reliable’s

cleaning speaks for itself. Try it today.

RELIABLE LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING CO.
618 N. GREEN BAY RD.

TEL. H. P. 177

Highland Park |

HIGHLAND PARK

Every Saturday, 10 to 12
at Ravinia Nursery School
Call
BETTY MOORE
H. P. 5659
or.

HORTENSE STEINER

H. P. 3723

108 N. First St.

High Grade Body Repair
DONE ON ANY MAKE OF CAR

:

EASTER PORTRAITS |
Make This A Memorable EASTER

With An ALDEN

~ Lincoln - Mercury, Ine.

Painting Classes for

-Youngsters, ages 7 to 14

HARRIS Portrait

CALL NOW OR COME IN

FENDERS REPAIRED AND
REFINISHED LIKE NEW
@

@

reat

CARS COMPLETELY REPAINTED
6

8

e

Experts on Tune-up and
Overhaul Work.

FOR APPOINTMENT

ALDEN HARRIS
7 So. St. Johns Ave.

7

CLEANING 4

Homes

Mrs. L. Thorpe Warren, chairman
_ of the show, says, “The cleverly de~ signed gardens, the tables, the flower

PHOTOGRAPHY

|

Announcement was made recently

of

1:30 p.m., Mrs. Robert R. Kearfoot
of Mamaroneck, N. Y., “Obtaining
Color Harmony in Flower Arrangements;” March 31, 10:45 a.m., Mrs.
Laura H. Weber of Freeport, Ill,
same
Becker, Mrs. Harold D’Ancona, Mrs. “Distinctive Arrangements;”
Jules Ladany and Mrs. Harold Kra- day, 1:30 p.m.,. John Ott Jr. of Winnetka, “Flowers in Action.”
MOT.

home.

}

SURVEY

yet

Under direction of its flower show |chosen a wedding date.

ideas

your

Why not

Chicago, | sen, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Theck,

opens Monday, March 24, and will} 47 Prairie avenue, Highwood. _
continue through April 5.
The young couple has not

»

of

793
Catherine Principali of aL,
avenue, Highwood, an-

in the ninth floor galleries of Mar| tér, ‘latira&lt;-Soprani "to Paul Svend-

Mrs.

pictures

party, wedding or reception

The show, which. will be held
| nounce the engagement of her daugh-

weeks:
shall

Photographer

ing at the home of Mrs. Barr’s par-

The garden clubs of Highland Park)
hibits at the fifth “Fashions in Flow- |

PERCY H. PRIOR, Jr.

PHONE H. P. 1777
Ask for Mr. Everet :

a

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

gee Page 14

Camp North Woods—for Girls 7 to 17

of Northern Wiscon- {gga
sin, altitude 1750 ft.

@afSas

a
real
camp
life.
Canoeing, Horseback
riding, Adventuresome
trips,
nature
lore, health and character building, fine
staff, Posture correction.
Write
J.
A
Mors, 228 N. La Salle
St., Chicago 1, til.

@
@
§
%&amp;
@
4
;

above sea level offers /@ge:

|

Freshman Group Sponsors Meet
The freshman group of the Tuxis
society of Highland Park Presbyterian church will sponsor a meeting Sunday evening at the home of
Miss Barbara Tuerk, 2744 South
Deere Park drive. The session will
be part. social and part instructive.
Movies will be shown. The Tuxis
group will meet at 7:15 p.m.

Nestled in the pines

*

New Horizon Room

Legion Auxiliary to

DAR Women Attend
State Conference At

Send Representatives

Drake Hotel Today

To Patriotic Meeting

Six representatives of the North
Mrs. Edwin Gilroy, president of the
Shore chapter of the Daughters of Highland Park unit of the American:
the American Revolution will attend | Legion auxiliary, will join representathe annual state conference of the tives of more than 700 units in Illinois
organization to be held at the Drake at the annual patriotic conference
hotel in Chicago today and tomorrow, sponsored by the Illinois department
of the American -Legion auxiliary.
March 20 and 21.
Mrs. Frederick A. Sapp, state re- An all-day meeting will be held at
gent, will preside at all sessions which the Palmer house, Chicago, starting
start at 9:30 each morning. These ses- at 9:30 a.m. March 24.
sions will attract a large number of
Other representatives from Highdelegates from chapters -all over the land Park include Mrs. Joseph Riddle,

For Ideal Sunday Evening Entertaining and Dinner. Open at 4, Dancing
from 6. Excellent Cuisinein a Spactous and Beautifully Appointed Room!
Paakion Parade and Dansant
Each Saturday at 2:30.
Reservations Advised!

WHltehall 4100

State of Illinois.
Mrs. Leslie McCaffrey, Mrs. Phillip
Of special interest on Friday mor- Cole and Mrs. Henry Eitner.
ning, will be the drawing of the name
Each department conference held
for the Good Citizenship pilgrimage. throughout the United States is patThe girl whose name is drawn by Mts. terned after the National Patriotic
Sapp will be given a trip to Washing- conference held recently in Washington. The names of Janice Schick of ton, sponsored by more than 30 patHighland Park and Hester Atteridge riotic women’s organizations and atof Lake Forest, chosen by the North tended by Illinois officers of the auxShore Chapter, will be sent in as iliary.
contestants to compete for this prize.
The Chicago conference will be adRepresenting the N.S. chapter will dressed by army and navy officers,
be the regent, Mrs. George O. Streck- political and civic figures and leaders
er, Mrs. Jared Johnson, Mrs. Norman of the Legion and auxiliary. A conLenington, Mrs. Jerry C. Leaming, ference luncheon will be held in the
Mrs. F. G. Waggett and Mrs. James grand ballroom of the Palmer house
Duffy, niece of the state regent, Mrs. at noon, when representatives will
be addressed by Mrs. Norman L,
Sapp.
All members of the DAR are wel- Sheehe of Rockford, uational vice
come to attend the state conference. president of the auxiliary, and Mark
Love,

noted radio artist and opera

star, as well as other nationally
known speakers.
Following the patriotic conference,
the board of directors of the Illinois
The Highland Park-Ravinia Infant department will convene at 8 p.m. and
Welfare senior group will hold its continue the following day, March 25.

Senior Welfare Group

Meets at Kerber Home

monthly meeting on Monday, March

24, at the home of Mrs. Herbert E.
Kerber, 903 South Linden avenue.
Assisting Mrs. Kerber will be Mrs.
D. Dean McCormick, Mrs. Spencer
R. Keare, Mrs. Richard Allenby, and
Mrs. Bowen Schumacher. Luncheon

RIGID FRE

eepREEZERI—*
“F000 SERVICE

nol? FREep,
=

Group Tomorrow

arrangements are in charge of Mrs.

Weel” pay
;

v

=

53

OT

A

i

VAC

a

TT Ral NYS, tf N ue P
,

ND PARK, NORTHBROOK,
VER
INHIGHLA
WE DELI
/
WEST LAKE FOREST — DEERFIELD ~
PHONE DEERFIELD 860 — ENTERPRISE 1215
- We specialize in processing whole, half or quarter Beef, Veal
or Lamb. Cut, wrapped and frozen for your freezer. Call for
price. We will cut your meat, or sell you the meat in wholesale cuts.

STOCK UP NOW ON THESE BARGAINS
Ready to Cook — No Waste

Ib. 59e¢
CHICKENS FOR FRICASSEE
CHICKENS, Roasting, Lge., Plump Birds ready to cook,
Ib. 59e
Eviscerated

WOODS BON TON

Rabbi Judah Goldin, associate proFE. M. Knox, members of her commit- fessor of religion at the University of
tee including Mrs. Bernard Newman, Iowa will conduct the services durMrs. Donald B. Robinson and Mrs.
ing a meeting tomorrow at 8:30 p.m.
Lindall Peterson,
of the North Suburban Synagogue
Beth El, newly organized Jewish Conservative synagogue.
Royal Neighbors to
Dr. Goldin will use as his sermon
topic: “When the Foundations Have
Highland Park Camp No. 5126, Crumbled”. He is a member of the
Royal Neighbors of America, will American academy of Jewish Responsor a games, party on Wednes- search; Society of Biblical Literature;
day, March 26, at the Masonic temple. Jewish Publication Society of AmerIn addition to the game awards, ica and Hillel Classis. He has written
door gifts will be given. Refreshments a number of monographs and his
“The Period of the Talmud” is being:
published. He received his Rabbinical
degree in 1938 and Doctor of Hebrew
Literature, 1943, Jewish Theological
Seminary of America.
The meeting will be held at the

Have Games Party

Winnetka Women’s club at the southeast corner of Oak and Maple streets,
Winnetka.
pet

FRENCH COFFEE CAKE Frozen, Ready to Bake, each 40c
65¢
DUTCH APPLE PIE, Frozen, Ready to Bake, each
PARKER HOUSE ROLLS, Frozen, ready to Bake, Doz. ....
MUFFINS, Ass’t. Date etc, Ready to Bake, Box of 6

TWO FOR ONE SALE
CREAMED SALMON, Ready to Use, 16-o0z. 57¢
8-0z. 49c_
_ FISH TREATS, Ready to Use,
Doe
ROCK FISH FILLETS
. 69c
LEMON JUICE, Pure
. 39¢
CHERRIES, Pitted for Pie
16-0z. 35c 2p
PINEAPPLE CRUSHED
HORSE MEAT, Canned

Iowa Professor to
Address New Jewish

20-0z. 30c

For dogs or cats
S &amp; H CHOP SUEY with Noodles .... 32-0z. 79c

Typewriters Repaired
By Expert Repairmen
_ All Work Guaranteed

2 cans 30c

.
2 qts. 79c

WE NOW CAN TAKE CARE OF YOUR NEEDS IN
HOME FREEEZERS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

FREEZE-FROZEN-FOOD CENTER
| FRIGID
_. Dfld. 860 or Enterprise 1215.
724 Deerfield Rd.
ey
ah

will be served in charge of Henrika
Peterson, assisted by Mildred Lyle
and Edith Mazey. The public is invited.

:
RatsBa

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CHANDLER'S
525 Central Ave.
5

Ae

&lt;

TT) | oa aa]

Wane
ONLY
Oh. BEER"

City WEY
rr

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

Will Hold School

Victor Movies at

Township Trustee
Election April 12

Sunset Terrace Meet

Three years ago, through the
columns of this newspaper, the HighPolitics and Alaska will be comland Park Public library earnestly
requested a gift of Fortune maga- bined for a program at the regular
Lautmann to Retire; Trustees
zine, asking that some local sub- meeting of the Sunset Terrace assoMay Recommend Candidate
scriber volunteer to pass on the cur- ciation tomorrow night starting at
8:30 o’clock at the community center,
A School Township 43 election will rent copy of the magazine to the when special guests will be Robert
,
be held Saturday, April 12, to fill a library after reading it.
|F. Walker and Robert Ferry Patton,
As a result of this plea, a faithful the candidates for mayor of Highland
school township trustee vacancy. Herbert Lautmann of Highland Park, friend has unfailingly supplied the Park, and Martin Victor Jr. will show
movies of his Alaskan journeys.
whose term expires this year, is not publication, sending it to the library
Mrs. Francis Nosek is chairman of
even
after
moving
from
the
city.
a candidate for re-election, and at
the
refreshments committee, with
This kind action no longer is posthis writing Mr. Lautmann and the
Mesdames Clayton Lundquist, Carl
sible,
and
this
week
Miss
Mary
other two trustees, Henry Siljestrom
Arens, E. A. Belmont, Eugene DierkEgan, librarian, has asked that some- ing and George A. Rose assisting as
of 266 North St. Johns avenue and
one else volunteer to turn the curRalph Peterson of Deerfield, have rent copy of Fortune over to the co-hostesses.
Mr. Victor’s film is scheduled to
not recommended a candidate for Highland Park library after family
start shortly after 9 o’clock, so that
and
friends
have
read
it.
election to the vacant office. They
those members who are taking part
are expected to do so late this week.
How About It?
in the Elm Place variety show the
School Township 43 includes Dissame evening will have time to reach
tricts 106 through 113. Trustees serve district. Mr. Siljestrom resides in Dis- the community center to see the
a term of six years, and handle funds trict 107 and Mr. Peterson in District movies.
for every grade and high school in 109; therefore, any candidate for the
the township, including Highland third trusteeship must be a resident Sponsor Benefit at Witten Hall
Park High school, Lake Forest High of one of the other districts.
A benefit games and card party
school, and all grade schools in HighPolling places for this election will
land Park, Deerfield, Highwood and be announced soon. The ballot, Mr. will be sponsored by the Scandinavian Fraternity of America at Witten
Ravinia.
Hart said, will be an informal one
According to Martin Hart, treasur- with full opportunity to write in can- hall on Thursday, March 27. Games
will start at 8 p.m. in the charge of
er of the trustees, each trustee must
didates.

be a resident of a.

NO CHANCE
TO x
EAT THAT CHAIRXQ

Mayor Candidates,

Library Embarks Upon a
Fortune’ Hunt This Week

U. S. Government report:
“Moths are present in practically EV ERY household.”

|

but you don’t worry after your
home furnishings are Duraproofed.
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department stores recommend
Duracleaning for SAFE cleaning.

Ragnar Johnson, chairman.

different school |

Deerfield 444
Chicago .. . AMBassador 3222

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Division of
HOME SERVICE Co,

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aTAES
APPROVED SERVICE
106 S. FIRST STREET
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FACTORY ENGINEERED PARTS
FINE ReeELL
a
vol

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ity

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Wiiviet bo)

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|
GOLDEN MOTORS
Highland Park 2500

e

�Page 10

y

/

S

Thursday, March 20, 1947

Track Antics

Practice Meet at |

Little Giants to
Face Northbrook
On Local Field

Oak Park High
For Track Team
Teams Prepare for Oak Park
Relays to Be Held on March 29

Suburban League Schedule
Begins April 14 at New Trier

Highland Park High school’s track
team will travel to Oak Park on Saturday to compete in a practice track

baseball

The Highland Park High

Oak Park relays on Saturday, March
29:
Oak Park High school has another
fine track team this year and they

Saturday, April

DERVISH,

WHO

WOUND UP FOR
THE DISCUS THROW
AND FORGOT
TO LET GO

This year Highland Park seems to
be particularly strong in the dashes
NOT ENOUGH
while in the middle distance they are
lacking ability. If time trials indicate
pe
rg
anything then Don Ryan, Bill Miller
and Steve Behr are all outstanding
men in the dashes. The four lap relay
team consisting of Bill Miller, Don New Trier and Oak Park for example,
Ryan, Dave MHutchenson, and Ted have the advantage over Highland
Yeager show promise while in the Park because of the fact that they
hurdles Pete Haupt seems to be lead- have been practicing since early Januing all contenders. Steve Behr, a ary while Highland Park nas only had
sophomore, shows outstanding ability
in the dashes and-the hurdles. The the benefit of four weeks of practice.
Mr. Panther, varsity coach, is urg_ frosh-soph also boasts Jim Knowlton
and Dug Deaver in the dashes, John ing all boys who are interested in
McKenna in the middle distance, and track and have the ability to report
Jim Heap and Tom Pinkerton in the out as soon as possible. Remaining
pole vault.
indoor meets are:
_ Highland Park is hampered by the
Sat... March 22—Dual Meet with
_fact that they have poor facilities for
Oak Park at Oak Park.
the indoor season. Other teams, like
Tues., March 25—Dual meet with
Maine at Maines
°c."
Sat.,
March
29,
Oak
Park Relays
fo» Member .
at Oak Park.
These are the only meets scheduled.
Others will be
es later.

Waiting for Spring
As soon as the gruund becomes

hard

enough,

Give to the

-

1947 Fund Drive

Dependable Service
We have become members of the A.M.A. Approved Funeral Service,
which, in itself, is ade+
quate assurance that we
render dependable, efficient service at reason-

SEGUIN FUNERAL
-HOME
_ 52 North Second Street
Highland Park, III.

Highland Park 3878

RED CROSS

~ SERVEL
Refrigerators for
Immediate Delivery
-

See the Modern

Launderall
It Washes - Rinses - Damp
Dries Automatically

Radio and Washer
Repairs Done by Factory
Trained Men

the

team

will

of the team, but if the boys who
are

school baseball team.
Baseball Schedule

(Non-League)
Sat., April 5 ..... Northbrook (Here
) |

Tues, Apr &lt;&lt;"

Announce Golf
Schedule for

Niles (There)

Sat. April 12 .. Northbrook (Ther
e)
(Suburban League)

Mon., April 14 .. New Trier (There)-

Highland Park

Fri.,. April 18
Evanston (Here)
Lies Apa
. Waukegan (There)
Sat., Apr. 26, Proviso (Here, 2 games)

By Steve Herz

Highiaha Park High school’s Suburban

Niles (Here)

Thurs., April 10

League Champion Golf team,

Sat., May 3, Morton (Here, 2 games)
Tues., May 6 ..... Evanston (There)

Sat., May 10, O. Pk. (There, 2 games)
Tues., May 13 .... Waukegan (Here)
defense of it’s crown on Wednesday, Sat., May 17 Thornton (H, 2 games
)
April 30, against Thornton High Tuesday, May 20 .. New Trier (Here)
school at Sunset Valley Golf Course
May 19 to 24 District Baseball
in Highland Park.
May. 26 to 31 Sectional Baseball
The Suburban League Golf TournaJune 5.to 6 State Finals
aent in which all league schools
coached

by

Harry Bolle,

will open

participate will be held in Highland

Park at Sunset Valley on Saturday,
May 31.
Highland Park High school’s golf
team has scheduled three practice
matches for the month of April and
will begin practice witlin the next
few weeks for the coming season.
Coached by Mr. Bolle, last year’s

lcok good this year and Highland

golf team was one of the best in the

Ori, Danny

area.

Winning all

of

Park has a very good chance to enter

the State Meet.” This year’s team is
bolstered by the fact that they have
nine lettermen returning to the squad..

The

boys

who

won

letters

on last

year’s squad are Richard Sheridan
(who shot a hole in one), “Mouse”
Coleman, Amedeo Min-

its league norini, Deno Melchiorre, Dick Flynn,

matches the team captured the Suburban League crown.

Mr. Bolle, who has been coaching

Dick Peterson, Larry Larson, and Ben

Evaglisti. |
Opening

the

up

season

the golf

golf at the local high school for over team will meet three teams for more
fifteen years now said, “the prospects

(Continued on page 17)

Siecloaft
Cruisers

Guaranteed Washer

announce a appointment

and Radio Repairs

Wilson Marine Service

COLUMBIA HOUSEHOLD
APPLIANCES
305 Waukegan Ave.
Phone Highland

Highwood, Illinois:
Park 1533

begin

outdoor practice. The pitching department seems to be the weak. spot

UMPR

eral ethics and procedure.

non-league

cut for that department shape
into
form it would make a great difference in the 1947 Highland Park High

tion.

who adhere strictly to fhe
highest standards of fun-

5 in a

against. Niles.

THE WHIRLING

secutive time. While the outcome of
the meet is expected to be fairly one
sided Highland Park will participate
in the meet from more of a standpoint of practice than actual competi-

tional organization, selects only those firms

George

April 8, the Parkers will play their
second home game of the season

pions this year for the second con-

The Affiliated Morticians of America, a na-

school

by

game with Northbrook. On Tuesday,

are Suburban League indoor cham-

able cost.

coached

Grover, will open the 1947 season on

BUT NEITHER
WIDE NoR
HANDSOME

meet in preparation for the coming

team,

oO

Clayton and Harbor Place,
;
Waukegan

As Lake County Steelcraft
2
ASONG:
MARINE SUPPLIES AND
_
ACCESSORIES

�Thursday, March POST 947°

Cooperation Keynote

H. Stambach to

See The

Of Discipline, Doctor

Coach Sophomore

National Prize Winner

Tells Study Group

Baseball at HPHS

He is the world’s famous

SHOE REBUILDER

and.
child as the keynote of discipline, was
team this season. He will replace Les- stressed by Dr. Lester Kirkendall in
lie Bishop who is now at Evanston his address to members of the North
High ‘school. Mr. Stambach joined the Shore Study group at their meeting
faculty at Highland Park this year, Monday eyening at the home of Mr.
Harold Stambach has been named
to coach the Sophomore © baseball

between

parents

Having just been discharged from the
army service, he will welcome all his
old customers with the highest work-.,

manship and service.
Shoe Shining Available Saturday Only

and Mrs. Lewis Goldman, 1620 Dean

and is a math instructor.

Sophomore Baseball Schedule
Tuacadoe

Cooperation

Suburban League
: 20: Perens
Abeit

street.

“Discipline isan educative process,”

stated Dr. Kirkendall,
hs
1
1 Chee | | state

Announce Golf

LET US SEND YOU

NOW

IN

THE WAGTAIL SHOP
6 No. Sheridan Rd.

(Here)

PACKARD
OWNERS
CALL
H. P. 1854

CARL WISE
Service Manager
New Modern

Tel. H. P. 206

HOW ARE YOUR SCREENS?
If in need of rewiring, let us replace them
with Eagle-Picher. All aluminum combination screen and storm sash.

CALL

Tuesday, May 13—Waukegan (There)
19—Evanston

Highland Park

8
é
@
Or if you prefer we will rewire your present
screens with bronze or galvanized wire.

Wed., April 30 — Thornton (Here)
Friday, May 2-— Morton (Here)
Wed., May 7 — New Trier (There)

May

y

A Kan A
CANS...., Love

Dr. Kirkendall is director of the
Assosiation for Family Living of

Golf Schedule

Monday,

SS

PARD

gent parents.”

Others will be announced latter.

Tuesday, May 20 — Proviso (There)
May 23-24 STATE MEET

HEART ==

. 00 Dp

( S

ve

in the state. The practice schedule is Chicago.
as follows:
Wed., April 23
McHenry here. Monday, May 26—Oak Park (There)
BE eh er et
a Tait here Saturday, May 31 — SUBURBAN
Sat., April 26
La Grange here.
LEAGUE TOURNAMENT AT
These are the only meets scheduled.
HIGHLAND PARK ©

Saturday, May 17—DISTRICT

Joe Giallanza

“and not mere2

ly one of punishment: when a child
Friday, May 2 — Waukegan (Here). has done the wrong thing.”
Friday, May 9 — Thornton (Here)
The speaker also emphasized the
Tuesday, May 13—Morton (There) need for understanding the child’s
Friday, May 16—New Trier (There) desire for reasonable explanation of
Friday, May 23 — Proviso (There) why certain things must be done.
Thursday, May 29—Oak Park (Here)
Citing examples from his experience as school principal, Dr. Kirkendall advocated that parents anticipate
their child’s reactions so that conflict
(Continued from page 16)
may be avoided.
of a practice nature than actual com- |. “The pre-school period is the most
petion. Among these teams will be vital one in a person’s life,’ Dr.
Taft of Chicago who have been city Kirkendall explained, “and therefore
champs for four years in a row now. calls for the best efforts of intelliAlso included will be La Grange who
has a fine golf team and in previous
years has been one of the top teams

NATIONAL PRIZE WINNER SHOE REBUILDER
24 N. Second Street

FOR

ESTIMATE

HH. N. GAMLIN

Raspberry

eit Sh ye OTs

150 S. First St.

Royale |

H. P. 5102
Deerfield 416

ICE CREAM

Get Set NOW for the Busy
Tennis Season Ahead

Tasty swirls of ripe raspberries in
smooth, creamy Sealtest. Look for
the red emblem of quality.

Nowits-Seabtast time!

Pick out the frame whose weight and balance

Equipment

suits you best and have it strung with

Factory Trained

STAR TENNIS GUT

Mechanics

RAVINIA MOTORS INC.
22 So. First St.

ICE CREAM

Venus $10.00
Mars $9.50

=

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EXCAVATING
AND TRENCH WORK

BLACK DIRT .- FILLING DIRT
DRIVEWAYS BUILT

LOUIS TAZIOLI

AMERICA’S FINEST STRINGS
|

oe

a

|

Visit NEILD’S SPORT SHOP Goods

Store and Place Your Order Now.
r

&amp;

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STAR TENNIS GUT DIVISION.

DAY AND NIGHT PHONE H. P. 4662

OPPENHEIMER CASING CO.

“A Veteran of Foreign Wars”

CHICAGO - SAN FRANCISCO - NEW YORK

�t
Be eae
é
27

age 18

Thursday, March 20, 1947

Mrs. Lewis De Manzeville of Hollywood, Calif., is the house guest of
_ her niece, Mrs. Elmer L. Clavey of
_
Clavey road, Highland Park. She is
also visiting her other nieces, Mrs.

Deerfield

Activities |

avenue underwent a major operation
in Chicago last week. She will not be .
| serving on precinct 1 election board

anMestestesMestesteatestestestesteatesteatenteatentesteatenteateaMeate shesMeahes%ea%eahaM Fes%e Fe5% oF Me Fe Mese Fe GeHH HH, HH, 0 0%
MAMAMUON
ON OVNNNAMMANNANANAANAAAASAISHIHARA APOHtct Stetied NetdeePeete eee

Alexander Willman of Waukegan the McGuires, stayed at Nassau and Mrs. Henry M. Thullen of 166 DeerFla.
By
pre-arrangement field road.
road and Mrs. Robert Greenslade Miami,
~ of Hazel avenue, both in Deerfield, they met to return north on the same
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Ramsay of
and other relatives in this vicinity. train, reaching home Saturday. Mr.
McGuire made the trip both ways Ramsay road and two sons, Robert
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Baum have in the automobile, so they would be Jr., age 9; and Roderick, age 7, are
returned to their home on Hazel ave- able to use the car during their stay leaving Thursday for a two weeks’
trip in the South. They will spend the
nue after a three weeks’ vacation at in Florida.
greater part of the time at Biloxi,
Miami, Fla.
Mrs, Friedel S. Fuller of Deer- Miss., and will stop at New Orleans
field road and Mrs. Anna Haag, mo- on the way home. During their abBack from six weeks of sunshine
ther of Mrs. Harry Williams of Ce- sence, Mrs. Ramsay’s parents, Mr.
and rest in Florida are Mr. and Mrs.
dar street, attended a meeting ot the and Mrs. William Oldfield of Edison
Fred Siljestrom of Windsor roa
Swiss club in Chicago ‘last Sunday. Park, will remain in Deerfield to be
_ Highland Park. During their absence,
Colored movies of their native lind with the youngest grandson, Douglas.
the high school science instructor,
CaterermE

Harold McMullen and family, occu_ pied the Siljestrom home. The McMullens have moved to the Varner
house on Second street, Highland
Park, where they can stay until May.
Before going to Santiago, Chile, last
year, the McMullens lived on North
_ Chestnut street.

were shown, in addition entertainment including a bazaar and dance
and Swiss foods.

Sunday guests at the William D.
Johnston home on Fair Oaks avenue
were Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Brown and

Mr. H. T. Riedeman’s parents. are two sons, and Mr. and Mrs. Porter
here from Iowa, staying at his home Green, all from Chicago.
on Osterman avenue with Roger, 12,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell and
and Diane, age 8, while Mrs. Riedeman is in the Highland Park hospit- children are moving to LaGrange.
Last Tuesday evening the Masons and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McGuire al. She underwent, a major operEastern Stax members gave a farehave returned to their home after a ation three weeks ago and is. still well party for the Mitchells at the
very ill.
month’s stay at Sunrise Inn, near
Masonic Temple. The Mitchells have
Port Sewall, Fla. Their neighbors
Mrs. Albert Thullen has returned been living at 1050 Waukegan road.
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Nolde of Mead-owbrook lane, who went south with to her home in Youngstown, Ohio, afMrs. Harold Nelson of Osterman
ter a visit at the home of Mr. and

Phone Deerfield 250

Deerfield Bowling Academy

Res. Phone, Highland Park 5869

704Waukegan Rd.—Deerfield

RELIABLE GARAGE

Tel. Deerfield 90

708 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Ill.

Open bowling every afternoon,
3-5 pm., All day Sat: &amp; Sun.

J. &amp; W. POKORNY

GILLWEVE BEAUTY SALON
Miss Dorothy,

Mr. Gillen,

Mr. Weve

Permanent Waving Our Specialty
Expert Styling and Shaping
Free Consultation —
762 Waukegan Rd.

Deerfield 884

on Tuesday, April 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Harland Wingert of

Bonfield, Ill, were weekend guests at
the Arthur Nickelsen home on Chestnut street. The Wingerts, who were
matried the preceding Saturday, were
ei route home from a honeymoon trip

in Kentucky. Mrs. Wingert and Mrs.
Nickelsen are sisters.
Lawrence E. Tracy is very ill at
his home, 740 Central avenue.
Mrs.
James Mailfald returned
Thursday from a week’s visit at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Ernest
Sandstrom in Red Wing, Minn.
St. Paul’s Circle 1 will meet Thursday, April 10, at the home of Mrs.
Robert Herrmann of Wilmot road.
Hostess for today’s sewing society
all day meeting at St. Paul’s church
is Mrs. Louis Soefker of County Line
road.

POWDER BOX BEAUTY
SHOP
623 Deerfield Road
Telephone 391
Mr. Frank and daughter, Julia
Expert Permanent Wavers
Try our Circlette Wave
that is sprayed into your hair.

DEERFIELD NEWS AGENCY
NEWSPAPERS
MAGAZINES
Home Delivery Service

POCKET (PENGUIN-DELL) BOOKS
CIGARS CIGARETTES SOFT DRINKS
758 Waukegan Rd.

| MILDRED WALLDREN

VANT &amp; SELIG
Established 1925
REALTORS |
;
Real Estate—Loans
764 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, fl.Edward H. Selig
Haroid R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

Women’s Apparel
635 Deerfield Road
Tel. Deerfield 806
—

We invite Charge Accounts

| Franklin Grimes &amp; Company
MILLWORK
;
Sash - Doors - Interior Finish
- Wood Products - Cabinet Makers 641 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Ill.
Telephone Deerfield 33

THE GEORGIAN SHOP
DRY GOODS and GIFTS
816

Waukeran

Road,

Deerfield

Tel. 95

W. R. MITCHELL
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
634 Deerfield Road

Deerfield, Ill.
: Always. Available

Deerfield 29

LUCIUS ERSKINE
REALTOR

BUSINESS DIRECTORY
FROST‘S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES
Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We repair all makes of appliances
760 Waukegan Road - Tel. Deerfield 122

,

Deerfield 175

Tel. Deerfield 552—Eric Banfield, Prop.

ERIC’S D-X
SERVICE STATION
Lubricating, Washing, Simonizing
Tires and Accessories
714 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

806 Waukegan Road
Ph. Deerfield 74

DEERFIELD BAKE SHOP

DR. G. C. PARKNEN, O.D.

808 Waukegan Road
CAKES - PIES
- PASTRY
FRESH DAILY

OPTOMETRIST &amp; OPTICIAN
857 Rosemary Terrace
Phone 674—Deerfield
Office Hours Evenings
by appointment

Mercer Lumber Companies

KNAAK’S PHARMACY

Deerfield

‘Lumber - Building Materials - Coal

THEO J. KNAAK, R. Ph.

612 Railroad Ave.
Deerfield, Illinois

Est.

Tel. Deerfield 2.

Phone

1884

1

Deerfield,

Il.

a

DR. R. D. MOORE

M. A. FRANTZ
;
Ste

Sanitary and Heating Engineers
BETTER PLUMBING
FOR BETTER HOMES

158 Deerfield Road

Tel. 419

OPTOMETRIST
Eyes Examined — Glasses Fitted
813 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield 880

WISCONSIN CHEESE AND
SAUSAGE MARKET
Telephone

Deerfield

Deerfield and Waukegan

577
Roads

DEERFIELD HARDWARE
&amp; PAINT CO.
Glass -

Varnish - Glassware - Tools

Houseware -

Cutlery - Sporting

756 Waukegan Road

Goods

Deerfield, In,

Telephore 295
4

_VANT &amp; SELIG
'
sh,

_

EST. 1925
INSURANCE
in

all

its

branches

764 Waukegan Road - Deerfield
Tel. Deerfield 155

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES, Inc.
Established 1885
Office and Nursery:
Deerfield 35 and 36

West Deerfield Road, Deerfield
a

_ DEERFIELD TAXI SERVICE

ROYAL BLUE STORE

TELEPHONE DEERFIELD 81
Day and Night Service

722 Deerfield Road—Tel. 707
“Best Quality Always”

Reasonable Rates
Courteous Drivers

Drfld. &amp; Waukegan Rds., Deerfield

GROCERIES —.MEATS
FRESH FRUITS

&amp;

VEGETAPLES

�Page 19

Thursday, March 20, 1947
Carl Bingham Jr.

Highland Park

Turns Author in

PUBLIC LIBRARY

MOVING AND PACKING OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS

April Esquire

A highly entertaining treatise upon
the foibles of woman when she travCHILDREN’S DEPARTMENT
els with man on a vacation or for any
“Tick-tock,” says the old Wonder reason has been penned by Carl G.

AGENT ALLIED VAN LINES

Clock in Time’s garret, “it is Satur-

STORAGE

Bingham Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
day morning; it is 10:30, time for the Carl Bingham of Prospect avenue,
Story Hour in the Library.” And and under the title, “And Points

while the old clock ticks on, eager West”, appears in the April issue of
children gather to listen to the stories Esquire magazine.
which are told every Saturday mornMr. Bingham the younger, who was
ing in the Library auditorium.
graduated from Lincoln school before
“How old is story telling,” you ask,
attending Phillips Exeter academy
“as old as Time’s Grandmother,” is
and Harvard, has called himself
the answer; “but,” you ask again,
“Geary Bingham” for purposes of
“how old is Time’s Grandmother?”
authorship in order to eliminate the
To get the answer to that, Howard
Pyle says, “you will have to climb
After outlining at hilarious length
to the top of the church steeple,

374 Central Ave., Highland Park

ith,

H. P. 181

Gallet ssnetay

VGA.

and ask the wind as he sits upon the evils of the traveling wife, Mr.
the weathercock, humming the tune Bingham concludes his story with a

of the Over-yonder song to himself.”
Perhaps it began as a simple chant,
in first person, relating something
of a day’s doings. Slowly, however,
it developed into an art, with the
story teller as an important person,
preserving the history of a tribe, its
wars and its life in peace.

&amp;Co.
to Wilson
Food Consultant

less obstreperous companion, having
only to be taken off the train at each
stop!

eoeeeeseneeeeeneeeeee eens eneee eee ee

Make a Reputation with
Good Brown Gravy Every Time
It’s easy as anything to make yourself a reputation as a good cook by making good brown gravy

Kappa Delta Mothers Meet

The Mother’s club of Kappa Delta
During the Middle Ages the story
teller became the bringer of news, sorority at Northwestern university
the historian as well as the poet. He will meet in the’chapter house this
related the events and the happenings of the time, and in his own
poetic way he wove into his tales
customs, traditions and religious beliefs. Thus he laid the foundations for
culture and literature of the nations
and preserved and kept alive the

heclon

By

delicate implication that for the average husband a dog might make a

every time; but, even so, many otherwise good

Pama

afternoon at 2 o’clock. Plans will be
discussed for the annual dessert
bridge to be held April 17. The business session will be followed by tea.
'
Mrs. Elizabeth Davidson of Evanston
is hostess.
|

cooks do have difficulty in making this simple but very important dish tasty.
In order to have rich brown gravy, it used to be necessary to have plenty of
meat to furnish browned
drippings. Not so, today!
You can now give gravy
that delicious browned meat
flavor by adding Wilson’s
true meat extract, B-V.

|

Good Old ‘‘Bread
_and B-V Gravy”’

the love to make’ use of it.
So—while the old Wonder Clock
|
After the invention of the printing, when story tellers were no ticks on, come the tales in the Ex |
longer necessary for the adults, story brary, Saturday mornings; Folktales
telling continued in the homes, for and fairy tales of long ago, stories
children. A great deal of culture was of science and history, poetry, old
handed down this way, in our own and new, the best we can find in
country. For even a hundred years literature.
“Tick-tock,” says the old Wonder
ago, there was many an American
family who owned not a-book for a clock, “it is time for Story telling.”
child, but there was always an old
grandmother or a member of the
family who recalled the stories of
long ago, may they have been the old
Bible stories, folktales from Europe

folkart of a ‘people.

or Indian myths and legends, handed

down from the early settlers, and
they were told again and again on
dark,

stormy

winter

nights

2 tbsp. fat or drippings*
2 tbsp. flour
;
1 cup milk, water or
vegetable water
1 tsp. Wilson’s B-V

Melt fat, add flour, and

blend well. Add liquid and stir
until smooth. When hot, add
B-V which has been dissolved
in a small amount of the hot
mixture and cook until thickened sufficiently. Makes 1 cup
gravy. Serves 3 or 4.
‘
*If meat drippings are used,
decrease B-V to suit taste.
sarenen* Clip Recipe Here ~-:---~"
You’ll smack your lips over
this gravy, it’s that
Remember, too, that enriched
bread and gravy is nutritious
as well as satisfying.

BRAND'S
Portraits
Picture Frames
_ Photo-Copies

around

a warm friendly fire.
With the modern times came story
telling in the Public Libraries, and

369 Central Ave.

in the schools as a vital part of the

school curriculum, with a wealth of
printed material at our disposal, if
we only have the imagination and

(It’s the rich brown gravy that
puts the meal over)
‘

Next to Aleyon Theatre

PHONE
256

Salome Brand Roeber
Robert J. Roeber

FURTH &amp; COMPANY |
:

ae wt)

Advisers
and

Directors

AS
ae

IRE

936 E. 47th
;

a

Street
Chicago

All Phones Kenwood 0700

. IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

|

We offer complete and highly adequate facilities
right near you on the North Shore using the well known
Furth staff of directors.

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
36 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

It’s a good idea to keep your jar of

Good old bread and gravy! I can
still remember enjoying it as a child.
Even in those days, Mother added a
vegetable or two, our
favorites being buttered
MARCH IS
carrots and cole slaw.
And, of course, she had
to have a meat that
would furnish good
brown drippings for the gravy, such as pork

Funeral

After Thoughts

Mother’s Standby

B-V right near the stove so it will be
as handy as your salt and pepper when
making gravies, soups, and stews.

Remember Mor. . . ChineseStyle? ie
It’s a grand one-dish meal for either
lunch or dinner. Saute 1 cup each of |
slivered celery andonion and 34 cup
green or red pepper.in }4 cupWilson’s

Bake-Rite, about 3 min. Add 1lcan

gett

Mor, diced or slivered, 4 cups cooked
rice (1 cup before cooking) and 3 tsp.
B-V dissolved in %4 cup hot water.
low
cook over
Mix well, cover and all
ow flavors to _ ;

chops or beef steak, both of which
were plentiful. Today, you can serve
deliciously flavored Mor, meat loaf or
scrambled eggs for the main dish and
;
~
still serve rich, brown gravy.

Delicious Gravy from Meat Loaf—
Use Wilson’s Bake-Rite or the
drippings from the meat loaf, in the —
amount needed, in the gravy recipe
above ... and add B-V to suit your
taste. I might almost say, add B-V to
suit your sight, because when you
have added B-V to make the gravy
brown enough, it is just right in
flavor, too.

to
heat about 10 min.
mingle. Serves 4.

:

:
made
"Add a fruit salad, hot rolls
ied Mar- —

extra delicious with Certif

‘garine, and tea, with almond macaroons for dessert and you have a dif-

ferent dinner your family will go for i:
in a big way.
Yours for tasty variety,

AN AN
Tee
AR hed Biced GA
|
Vino \/

George Rector

�Thursday, March 20, 1 947

Ravinia Parents, Tedchers to
Immaculate Conception Mothers
Meet at Village House Tuesday To Hear Talk on TB Tests Today
BY AIR
Several

Flights

Daily from

California

Fare $350.00 Round Trip
BY STEAMER

Regular Sailings from California

Fare $230.00 and up First Class
HOTELS
$2.50 a Day and Up

H. and R. ANSPACH
TRAVEL BUREAU
370% CENTRAL AVENUE
George L. Lundberg, Manager
PHONE: HIGHLAND PARK 1211

BOOK EARLY AND AVOID
DISAPPOINTMENT

Parents and teachers of the Ravinia
The Mother’s guild ot Immaculate
school will meet on Tuesday evening, Conception schoo] will hold its reguMarch 25, at 8 p.m. in the village lar meeting this afternoon at 2:30
house for a short business meeting o’clock in the rectory basement. A
before the annual open house, repre- talk by Miss Orpha White, executive
sentatives of the organization an- secretary of the Lake County Tubernounced. After the business meeting, culosis association, on “The Advanparents are invited to visit their chil- tages of the TB Tests in Grade
dren’s classrooms to see exhibits of Schools”, will be followed by sound
some of the work they do from day movies explaining the facts of tuberto day and to meet their teachers.
culosis.
:

Scientists Try to
Raise Healthy Flies
For Experiments
Colonel John N. Gage, commanding
officer of the Chicago Quartermaster
depot, recently announced that scientists

at Rutgers university, working on a
research project for the Army Quartermaster corps, are studying the problem of raising healthy houseflies in
order to insure the accuracy of experimental work being done in fly control.
The subjects of the experiments must
be as healthy as wild flies if the results are to be used as a measure of the
effectiveness of various control methods.
Colonel Gage explained that these
studies are a part of the basic research
being conducted into the life cycle and
behavior of houseflies under various
environmental conditions. The program
seeks to ascertain how houseflies react to temperature, light, humidity,
wind, carbon dioxide concentration,
odors, «and other factors.
In an effort to learn whether the
application of agents to destroy the
eggs or the larvae in selected localities
may be better used as a means of control, the Rutgers scientists are studying
the breeding habits of flies as well as
conditions that affect the egg, the pupae, and the adult. Consideration is also
given to the development of effective
attractants and their possible use for
the baiting of traps or poisons.
Although much study and research
have been devoted to the housefly heretofore, there are many unanswered
questions concerning their behavior. For
instance, there is the question of their
ability to see color, and if they can
see it, whether they have a preference
for one shade over another.
Three sets of tests have thus far been
used. One test uses colored glass fibers,
transmitting various colored components of daylight. Another test uses col- .
ored cards in which the total reflecting .
powers of the different colors are
carefully matched. In a third test, flies
are allowed their choice of foods containing different dyes. Some results of.
these studies appear to show, from
among seven os
preference for.
green.

Answers to many other questions are
being sought. Where does a fly prefer
| to rest, with respect to the shape, size
and angle of the surface, and its texture and temperature? What distance
can a fly travel in a single flight. How
|far can it migrate in its lifetime? Under what wind conditions will the fly
seek shelter, rather than attempting to
fly? All of these considerations will
help to determine where and how to
use insecticides for best control at least
cost,

A cage was devised for studying the
duration of life and the number of
eggs deposited by isolated pairs of flies.
The greatest egg production was during the first 10 days of egg laying,.
after which egg production gradually
decreased. Although eggs were often .
deposited on consecutive days there was
a tendency of the flies to rest for one
or more days between egg laying. The
greatest number of eggs deposited by
one fly in one day ,was 162, and the
greatest number for‘one fly during its
life was 1,500. The longest duration of

TS

life for males was 32 days and for

SEE YOUR CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

_GOLDEN ‘MOTORS, INC.

Ee 106§.
5.FIRST ST.

HIGHLAND PARK

females 41 days.
Digsere of worms for fish bait ilong
the Atlantic coast often average earnings of $1,600 a season.

�Page 21

Thursday, March 20, 1947

ier
z

Annual Reports and Election
For Emblem Club Wednesday

League of
Women Voters

The

Portions of a Statement of Miss
Anna Lord Strauss, President,
League of Women Votersof ‘the
Umited States, before the Executive
Committee on Economic Foreign
Policy, in favor of the Proposed
Charter for an International Trade
Organization, February 26, 1947.

Emblem

Club

of

Highland

Park will meet on Wednesday, March
26, at 8 p.m. at the community center.
Business of the evening will include
the committee’s annual reports and

ee

tT

the annual election of officers. Nom- _ Hospitality consists ina little fire, a
inating committee is composed of hitle food, and an immense quiet.
Mrs. Marion Larson, Mrs. Olive
—Emerson
Doric and Mrs. May Bess. EntertainMen of the noblest dispositions think
ment of the evening will include a
snack bar furnished by the Bowman themselves happiest when others share
Dairy company. Marie May is in their. happiness with them.
'
—Duncon
charge of arrangements.

The League of Women Voters has
worked for the reduction of trade
barriers for over twenty years. Pursuant of this goal, in 1945 when the
U.S. Proposals for the Expansion of
World Trade and Employment were

presented, the

League published a

pamphlet entitled “Trade, Jobs

and

Peace,” explaining the Proposals in
terms the layman could understand.

This pamphlet has been used as the.
basis for widespread community discussion.
It is therefore on the basis of long
considered judgment that we. give
our whole-hearted support for U.S.
leadership in a broad program of expanding world trade and employment.
We have previously supported the
International Bank and Monetary
Fund, the Food and Agriculture Organization, and the United Nations—
especially its economic functions. By
Convention action the League is supporting an International Trade Organization as a necessary part of
this total economic program.
Trade between nations, based on
division of labor and the principle
of producing the products in which
ra-.
each area has the greatest compa
s
mean
the
des
provi
tage,
advan
tive
can
ries
count
all
in
e
by which peopl
have the things they need with the
least expenditure of labor and capltal.

No responsible person is arguing in
the
the present chaotic state. of
free
ute
absol
that
omy
econ
world
trade is either possible or desirable.
rns
It is likely, however, that the patte
postiate
immed
this
in
set
we
which
future
war period will determine the
ecodevelopment of international
dingly
nomic relationships. It is excee
States
important that the United
nationleadership in establishing inter
al economic cooperation.
vast
The United States, with its
times
productive capacity—now many
well as
greater than prewar—, as
espeis
ials,
mater
its need for raw
to buy
cially interested in being able
in any
and sell without discrimination
nal
market in the world. An Internatio
and
Trade Charter providing for freer
over
less discriminatory trade the world
to
it
benef
le
surab
immea
would be of
kind of a
us. In order to ‘achieve this
as willing
world situation we must be

March’s lamb-and-lion weather often makes travel

uncertain—unless you go by train. Aboard the “400”

you can let March winds blow while you enjoy a
smooth, fast, pleasant trip, completely free of “weather
wotries.” Follow the example of experienced travelers
—plan your trip the way the weather is always fair—

via the “‘400s.”

The 400” Fleet provides service between Chicago and
points in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Upper Michigan,
including Milwaukee e¢ St.Paul-Minneapolis * Madi-

ers and discrim——
to reduce our own barri
ons
ions as we would like other nati

inat
to be.
oters
While the League of WomenV
ed
Unit
the
that
d
stan
the
n
has take
r
powe
ng
aini
barg
its
use
States should

areaof
to the utmost to achieve a wide
also

ld
trade barrier reductions, we shou
States
ed
Unit
the
that
out
like to point
test crediis a creditor nation, the grea
Unless
tor in the world at the moment.
accordact
and
fact
this
e
we recogniz
to suffer
ingly, the world.will continue
h will
from a shortage of dollars whic
st as
almo
e
trad
rt
expo
our
restrict
cure
The
ers.
barri
e
seriously as do trad
for this problem is reduction of US:

tariffs to the lowest point consistent
with national welfare.

|

son e Rochester e Mankato e Green Bay e Ishpeming.
For tickets and information apply to your local
C.&amp; N.W. Ticket Agent, or
CITY TICKET OFFICE

148 So. Clark Street, Telephone DEArborn 2121
H. G. Van Winkle, Assistant General Passenger Agent
Room 1011, 140 So. Clark Street, Chicago 3, Ill.

CHICAGO AND NORTH WESTERN SYSTEM
PIONEER

RAILROAD

OF

CHICAGO

AND

THE

WEST

�: Thursday, March 20, 1947

Orchestra to Give
Annual Concert at

Braeside April 2 *
District 108 orchestra will present

its annual concert at the Braeside auditorium on Wednesday, April 2, starting at 8 p.m.

Each school in the Highland Park
district has its own orchestra which
plays at assemblies and other school
affairs. The advanced players of the
different schools are combined to.
make up a district orchestra. The
group is large enough and each member is well enough prepared that the
orchestra can learn a.type of music

which is not possible in the individual
schools, and this music is presented
to the schools and to the public each

spring.
Members of the District 108 orchestra are: violins, Carolyn Schwartz,
Philip Watrous, Bob Saphir, Jimmy
Meyerhoff, Joan Graham, Carol Mooney and Robert Leaming; cellos, Sara
Hoyer and Barry Sturgis; bass, Jim

Gordon; flutes, Judy Cohen, Dan
Seitz and Karen Johnson; clarinets,
Gordon

Chalmers,

Charles

DeLeuw,

Gwen Olson, and Mickey Joseph;
saxophone, David Cox.
Other members include: trumpets,
Bruce Bulmer, Larry Brown, Douglas
Keare, and John Gould; French
horns, Jim Goldsmith, Howard EIlman,.and Judy MacCorquodale; trom-

bone, Douglas Smith and Tom Harter; percussion, David Baum and
Skippy Wright and piano, Jean Herbst, Carol Trangmar and Doris Sherbano.

Service Club Women

Plan Benefit Party
The Highland

Topper a $35.00

Park

Service club

met last Wednesday, March 12, at
2 p.m. in the community center when

2-pc. Suit $29.98

plans were made to sponsor a card
party to be held in early May. Time
and place for the party is to be de-

2-pc. Suit $35.00

cided at

a

later

meeting.

Refresh-

Four-Scason Suits

were

with apractical air

continue with their work at veteran’s
hospitals. They work in groups of four
and visit
a hospital once a month

ments served at last week’s meeting
in

charge

of

Mrs. Florence

Schmidt.
It was announced that emer

will

taking sandwiches, fruit and soft
drinks to patients. Proceeds of the

Styled for beauty . . . designed for service—that’s the©
keynote of these four-season suits from Wards Spring Catalog!
They’re smarily tailoredin all wool... jackets are fully lined, skirts
have Talon zipper plackets! Order yours today on
Wards Monthly Payment Plan!
:

card party will be

to

further

Name Winners in Bowling
Sweepstakes at Sunset Ridge
The mixed bowling league of Sunset
Ridge Country club recently held its
second Sweepstakes night. Winners
announced by Walter Lindley John-

4

Edpardine! Cardigan acer flypleated skirt. Gray-Beige, Powder
Blue, Med. Brown, Bright Green,
Black.’
10-20 2-pe. Suit FC 6017 $35.00
36-in. Topper FC6016 .... $35.00

used

this purpose.

Soft-mannered fitted flange suit.
Gored skirt has front kick pleat.
_ , Arrow detail! Sizes 12-20.
Black, Med. Brown, Dove Gray,
Navy.‘Blue.
-FC-5948 2-pc. Suit ........ $29.98

son, league president, include the fol-

lowing:
Ladies’ bracket 1: Mesdames Leslie
O. Gorder, Harold G. Wilson and H.

William Herbst. Ladies’ bracket 2:
Mesdames Robert Jewell, William
Tate and C. P. Binner.
Ee,

Men’s bracket 1: Harold B. Hitch-

TELEPHONE 4800

28 N. FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND PARK,|

cock, Robert Jewell and F. W. Bleck-

LL.
:

ley Jr. Men’s bracket 2: Francis W.
Hackett, Henry lL. Brainerd and
George F, Hartnett.

The league will roll its Bay pawl
of the season Wednesday, April’ 30.
Individual and team winners will. be |

presented withprizes at the anna,
bowlers’ dinner early an| Mays:
G

�THE

Squadron News —

vf,

Rays

Web Te | Young 7 eople_Away At Shoot

Mrs. Roy Clavey of West\ Deerfield
road is driving down to Urbana to pick
up her son, Roy Jr., Paul Fuller,
Don Cole and two Highland Park lads,
all students at the University of Illinois,
who will be home for the Easter
The Scouts were given lectures on |
Charles C. Kapschull Jr., a sixth term weekend vacation.
the hydraulic systems of airplanes —
student at Illinois Institute of Techand two types of engines. Later the
Robert Notz, son of Mr. and Mrs.
nology, Chicago, is on the second honor
Air Scouts will be permitted to take
J.
R.
Notz,;
will
be
home
for
the
Easter
roll having received grades of B and B
these engines apart and see what
vacation from Carleton college, Northplus.
makes them go. A very interesting
field, Minn.
talk was given on the tail hooks of
Margery Thormeyer of Northbrook
Eugene Finley came down from airplanes for landing on aircraft car-—
is on the first honor roll at Illinois
riers, and the demonstration of a wind
Institue of Technology. Miss Thor- Shattuck school, Faribault, Minn., to tunnel,
his
with
vacation
ThorMrs.
spring
late
his
the
spend
meyer’s mother
The instructors were very informameyer, was a former teacher in the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adin Finley of
tive. Other demonstrations and lecDeerfield Grammar school about 17 Hazel avenue. He_ reports back on
March 25. A senior, Eugene will be tures were on the distribution of oil
vears ago.
to the motor, radio control, and the
eraduated on June 8.
instruments of a plane. The Scouts
Private Charles Uchtman, enroute
were
shown an invention of the modHonolulu,
at
off
stopped
to Japan
ern age, for in the cockpit of a fighter —
Hawaii, where he posted a letter to
plane when a fuse blows out, instead
‘By Mrs. Lewis C. Stryker
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad
of screwing a new one in, all the pilot
February.
in
week
last
the
Uchtman,
Sorry we had no does is press a button and the fuse
Eg
lee ce ee ees
news for you last is automatically replaced. ~
week Scouts—
Milt Merrer, our Squadron leader, —
Deerfield School
everyone was too
gave us some signaling for the rank of
Closed Tomorrow
lusy with our Observer and the boys did very well.
» Birthday program.
Deerfield Grammar school will be
Maybe the reason the boys did so
And speaking of well was that the equipment used was
closed all day Friday (tomorrow), as”
the program girls— the best.
the teachers will attend an annual inZ

buzzing with whispers while your den

mothers are so proud of you _ that
they’re strutting ... Yessir!
I’m just wondering what this next
pack meeting is going to produce!

There'll be games, [I’m certain, and
fun galore, but this Indian theme has
me puzzled oo Pe And to sthink that
some people feel that a fellow under

twelve can’t keep a secret. Boy! those
folks had better adept ‘a few Cub
Scouts right now! ... What do you
say, gang, huh?
Now, boys, here’s a more serious
thought and I’d like to see you keep
this quiet, too. Mr. Harold Nelson,
our cubmaster, is a pretty swell per“son as you all know, but his wife who

has spent so much time working for
you fellows and helping your mothers run the dens deserves at least half
the credit for the success of our grand
organization in Deerfield. Since she’s
recuperating from an operation why
don’t you each show your appreciation by dropping hera little note?
She’d love to hear from every cub,
I know, and it wouldn’t surprise me

a bit if the letters didn’t help her get
well a lot faster. You can just address the letters to her home, and I'll
bet Mr. Nelson will bring them right
down to her . .. Say, won’t she be
surprised .. . And you'll do it today
won't you, cubs? ... Good! I knew
I could depend upon you.
Den News
Den 1—

Gee, my star reporter, Vikeothy Silence, had flu, but Johnny Wolter did
a swell job of filling in for him. This
group moved over to Billy Winter’s
home for the meeting last week and
whatta job they’re doing on their teepee. It was due-to be completed by
Saturday . . . How’d you make out,
fellows?
:
;
Den 2—

It seems Billy Vogg and Bobby Rudolph plus-a couple of other active

cubs were bedded with bad colds so
the meeting at Russell Zaritler’s house
was postponed last Wednesday. We
hope the boys are all in shape by now,

but if this bad weather continues who
can tell!
Did you know that the gangSe

Den 3 is putting on a swell play for
the pack meeting? ... No details—
it’s another special treat according to

Paul Dasso .. . Well, we'll all be on
hand, Paul!
Den 3—

Everyone in this tribe is up for
some award next Mondaywith the
exception of Ramon Frank who
walked off with such grand honors
last ‘time. ,Ramo is busy working on
_ his Bear badge which will probably be
sewn on his shirt with a gold arrow
in May ... Nice work, Ramo. Richard Loarie proved to his fellow cubs

_ that he’s quite an artist. When the
Set
SE Bek
Pe aaiaen tie

sae cS

,

Girl Scout News

stitute in Waukegan.

Prominent ed-

it

was

very

stc-

After the ccurse in signaling, com-

cesssful. You girls bat movies were shown on the Pearl
ucatots will address the group. The
a nice job, we had a good audience Harbor attack, and fighting for the
institute has been called by W. C. did a1
Petty, County superintendent of and everyone seemed to enjoy them- islands in the Pacific. The last movie,
selves. Thanks to the committee who
schools.
“Live and Learn’, was on the misworked so hard making preparations.
takes a pilot makes.
ar
Troop 4 whose leader is Mrs. HurlThe program committve is planning _
teepee
their
paint
to
burt and who holds their meetings at a trip to the Museum of Science and
boys started
Richard’s work really stood out! the Wilmot, School had an exciting Industry for today. The members goRonnie Kloepfer ran a very close sec- Saturday afternoon on the 8th of this ing will leave headquarters early in
end, though.
month. They had luncheon in Cooley’s the morning.
Den 4—
East Room and then attended the play
The planning of the Mississippi
When Ronald Spahn’s name was “Many Moons” at Nichols School. Mrs. river camping trip is well advanced.
Neill’s
Bill
list,
sick
the
to
Harris drove all the girls down in a All preparations are being made by
added
mother invited the den back to her Station Wagon. This fun filled day veterans of the trip last year. Just
home. Kenneth George tells me that -was in honor of their troop birthday. to make the homefolks jealous, on the
Bill will receive the silver arrow as
The Deerfield-Bannockburn Girl last night the Scouts are going to
well as the gold one that I told you Scout Council will hold a meeting have big juicy steaks, sweet potatoes, —
about last week. . Congratulations, Thursday, March 20 at 8 p.m. in the
parker house rolls, broccoli, and cake
Bill!
Wilmot school. Al! council members, with lots of frosting.
It wasn’t too easy to put up those leaders and troop committee members
An agreement was made by the ~
sticks for a teepee, but Den Chief are urged to be present.
squadron members, that everyone
Jack Frable came to the rescue and
If any Scouts have any Juliette Low wanting to go on the trip must pass
was he ever a help?—... Boy! The: fund money not yet turned in, will you
his apprenticeship. This will encour- —
Indian signs on this project really give it to your leader at the next Scout
age advancement and show the boys
—
’s
ng.
mean somethi
Kenneth
mom meeting? Our Juliette Low Chairman,
that there is as much fuu in advancing
found them in a camp bulletin so Mrs.: John Vieregg, reports that we
in the squadron as flying model
—
we’re sure they’re authentic.
have $19.00 so far. That’s good girls, planes.
Den 5—
but perhaps we can do even better.
Speaking of model planes, Karl 3
Here I’ve been warning you follows There are so many girls who have so Hout, Don Ubl,-and Bill Winters have |
to take care of ‘yotirselves and now I much less than we. They need our help. new models, and -the construction is
have flu. Since [I didn’t want to be
| well underway.
a
the only one Bilt Carroll has kept me Joey Hoffmann Broke His Hand
Rftention!!, to all interested in Air
company by entertaining the same
Scouts.
ms
Joey Hoffmann, young son of the
bug
Guess I’d_ better practice
We are faced with the 5 olen obs
Matthias
Hoffmanns
of
Waukegan
what I preach—or sumpin!
obtaining boats and motors for our
—
Bobby Cole’s mom is also on the road, broke a bone in his right hand trip. If anyone has a boat or an out-_
list of “invalids” so this den might Monday evening, coming home from board motor and is willing to lend it
—
move back to Spruce Street until our a Boy Scout meeting, and was taken to the Air Scouts from April 6 to Apto
the
Highland
Park
hospital
to
have
May Pack Meeting.
ril 12, will he or she please notify Bob _
Bad weather or not, Tommy Sal- it put in a cast. Joey engaged in an Newell, John Mennench or Bl Win- |
argument
with
another
lad,
and
his
yards was determined to win his
ters?
ne
camping elective so he and his brother ewn punch was too powerful.
Don’t forget the April Fools’ Frolic y
slept outsidein a scout tent one night’
on March 29 at the Deerfield. Gram- —
last week
... Br-r-r!
mar Schecl. Tickets will be on sale
Special Notice
on Friday by the Air Scouts, P.T.A. |
officials, and eighth grade students.
Don’t forget next Monday night,
March 24th, at the Deerfield Gram- _ Harry Williams has received a build- Get yours ahead of time for everyone —
mar School gym. Be there promptly ing permit for the erection of a con- is guaranteed to have a swell time. ©
Check before take-off—gas—conat 7:30 and bring your parents..
servatory at his home, 951 Cedar street.
After all, you want them to have some Mr. Williams is a florist WED a2 shop trols—engines and BE SURE. (Pilot +
Say Bale He: 2h
fun, too. Don’t you? ... Sure!
in Juetaed Park.
4

you let me in on your secrets about
March 24th? The whole village is

:

By Bill Winters
Thursday, March 13, was the first
meeting of the Deerfield Air Scouts
at Glenview Naval air base. The
Scouts left headquarters at seven oclock. Before classes began. they
were taken for a trip to the training —
building.

Jack Anderson, son of the Peter J.
Andersons, who attended Northern
Golly! ... just four more days be- Illinois State Teachers’ college at Defore the big night! Do you all have Kalb last semester, is now working in
your awards lined up? Are your tee- Chicago.

pees finished? Is your den presenting
a play? How about that uniform?
Is it $pician’ ‘span?
Gee, fellows, I can’t wait! Won’t

Air Squadron 5]

Permit Issued to

Erect Conservatory

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

Services Held For
Bortolo Villanova
Funeral services were held at 9 a. m.
Thursday, in the Kelley and Spalding

Ravinia Cub Pack to

Boy's Boxing Club
Wins Libertyville

Hold “Stunt Night”
“Stunt Night” wil be observed during

Match, 6 to 5_

the meeting Friday, March 28, of the

chapel for Bortolo Villanova, 68, who Ravinia Cub Pack No. 65 at the Radied Monday at Lake County General vinia school gym. The meeting is be-

hospital.

Capacity Crowd Sees Local Boys

ling held especially for cub parents but

Mr Villanova was the last of a family is open to. others interested in cub In Action at High School Friday
Immediate Service
of
12. His wife and 10 children pre- scouting. During the meeting, which is
Typewriters, Adding Machines,
The finest boxing show ever witceded him in death. Before he came to scheduled for 7:30 p. m., exhibits of
Calculators, Registers,
nessed
in Highland Park by a capacity
Pick up and delivery
Highwood in 1929, all of the children work done by the cubs during the year
511 Waukegan, Highwood
| except one son had died. The son was will be shown. Robert Brown is chair- -crowd was seen Friday night at the
Tel. H. P. 5505
killed during the war in an auto accihigh school gymnasium; where the
dent in Italy and Mrs. Villanova passed
away in 1910.
:
He made his home at 161 North
Green Bay road until the time of his
illness and death. He was employed as
a maintenance man at the Lighting
Products company.
Burial was in Mooney cemetery.

BUILDERS
TAKE NOTICE
The Natural Gas we will

distribute will have an odorant added to it as a safety |
warning in the event of any
leaky pipes.

We Have All New
Equipment
To Do Your Work Right
Back Hoe for Trenching
Dozer for Grading
Tractor Shovel for Basements
Trucks for Top Soil or Fill
Power Saw for Cutting Trees
Well Seasoned Fire Wood
We Build Lawns and

Incidentally, Natural Gas
will soon be here.

Driveways
TRY US OUT

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
137 N. Second,

All Phones 3785

man of the cub scout committee.

Highland Park Boy’s Boxing club defeated the Libertyville Boy’s club 6 to
5 in one of the closest bouts of the season.

Water Safety
Programs Lower

Drowning Toll.

Highland Park senior boxers, Passuello, Tapper. and Weber, who were
crowned Northern Ililnois and Southern
Wisconsin champions recently in the

When boys and girls of junior and

senior high school age in Tacoma,
Washington, recently had a chance Kenosha
to give

their

Golden

displayed their

ideas about the city’s

Gloves

tournament,

rights to the title by

recreation needs in a city-wide essay defeating their opponents in a series
of three wins. Tom Tapper K.Oed

contest, the majority of the students
put in pleas for a swimming pool.

his Chicago opponent in 30 seconds of
:

7

Good swimming facilities coupled | She

oiith: 4 Ghalce Meare toe 6 Soe

rank high among the recreation needs
of millions of Americans, according
to reports to the American. Red Cross

Water
every

Safety Service. Chapters
area report

plans

to

ries

ie

;

[

~

first round. Bob Weber out-boxed

Paul Newberry for three rounds to gain
his decision, and Angeo Passuello nod-

ded Bob Van Lue, Chicago Novice
Golden Gloves champ in the three fast

in rounds.

As an added feature of the evening,

expand

the training program in swimming and spectators witnessed an exhibition of
life saving to meet community re- bag’ punching by Labe Safro, World’s
champion bag puncher. Mr. Safro who
quests.

to
issued is 54 years old, made the bag sing
the tune of “Yankee Doodle’, and
completed in swimming and life sav- punched it in every possible position.
Holland Engle of WGN was guest
ing. The total number. issued since
1914, when the Service was inaugur- announncer for the program. The Friday bout provided a grand
ated, has reached the 4% million
mark.
finale for the local boxing club’s schedApproximately 27,000 Red Cross- ule this season. The club is now pre-

Last year the

Red Cross

nearly 400,000 certificates for courses

paring for the 10th District ‘American

. Baby Ear of Corn: ‘“Mommy, where did I come from?”
Mommy Ear of Corn: ‘‘The
stalk brought you, dear.”

CLUB LORRAINE JOKE CORNER

Legion boxing tournament, to be held
in Lake county April 7, 9 and 12.
SS
Se
trained water safety instructors have
been qualified this year to teach
courses at community pools, beaches,
schools, and camps throughout the

;

country. Approximately 3,000 persons
are trained each year at Red Cross
aquatic schools, conducted throughout the nation during the summer to

- The answer to a stenographer’s prayer—an “errorless” electric typewriter—has
_ been patented. Unlike stand-.
ard typewriters, it works on
the principle of the linotype,
setting up an entire line
which is visible above the

qualify instructors in first aid, water
safety, and accident prevention. This

year marks the 25th anniversary of
these intensive 10-day schools.

Effectiveness of the program is
evidenced by the fact that since 1914
the drowning rate in this country has

keyboard. If there is an er-

been cut in half despite the fact that
the number of persons who go swimming each year has multiplied many
times.

ror, the operator presses a

button and eliminates the
mistyped character.

Not all new devices are
satisfactory. For instance,
there have appeared since
the war a hundred new
makes of Gas Conversion
Burners. For your protection, please feel free to call
us about any burner you are
considering.

North Shore Ged Co.
_

“The Friendly People”
T. P. “Tom” CLARK
Div. Mer.

2

UNITED ADv. SERVICE

“Drop me off at Club Lorraine!’
DANCING THURS. AND SAT. NIGHTS

BOB LANGDON TRIO
ALSO
FOOD WILL BE SERVED EVENINGS
Tel. Highwood 5454
346 Waukegan Ave.

-@

EXPERT ROOFING
@ BRICK VENEER
Now is the time to have a
new roof made of the finest

materials laid by experienced
roofers.

FREE ESTIMATES GIVEN

PHONE

DEERFIELD 486

}

1

�Page 25

Thursday, March 20, 1947

Last of Series on
Trinity Church to
Remove Rubbish
Family Discussion
Have Guest Preacher And Refuse from
At YWCA Wednesday The Rev. Robert C. Clingham, rector Property—Hennig
“The Family Builds the Community” of St. Francis-in-the-Fields, Harrods
Creek, Kentucky, will be the guest
is the topic for the last of the disscus- preacher at the Lenten evening. service
sion series to be held at the YWCA to be held in Trinity Episcopal church,
Wednesday, March 26, at 8 p.m. This 355 Laurel avenue, on Tuesday evening,
meeting will be a round table at which March 25, at 8 o'clock.
The Rev. Robert Clingham, son of
Rex Andrews, chief of police, Mrs.

Declaring that rubbish and refuse
constitutes one

of the greatest fire

threats to Highland Park, Fire Chief
William J. Hennig this week called
upon all local residents to aid in the

see that no combustible materials are
exposed to heat.
3. Examine wood shingle roofs if
old, replace with fire retardant roofing.
4. Keep ashes in metal containers.
5. Replace frayed electric cords and
have defective electrical equipment
replaced or repaired by a competent
electrician.

drive to lessen fire losses by ridding

“Institute a regular system of rub-

their properties of old papers, rags
and useless articles.

bish removal from your property this

spring,’ advised Mr. Hennig. “ReMarian G. Fisher, executive secretary the Bishop cf Kentucky, served in the
member,
clean _ property seldom
of Family Service of Highland Park; army for five years as division chaplain
“According to the National Fire burns.”
George Scheuchenpflug, director of of the 160th infantry. He is a graduate
Protection association,” the fire chief
the community center, and Dr, Douglas of Harvard university and Virginia
Boyd, Association for Family Living,

who has been leading the series, will
be the moderator.

Mr. Andrews will discuse. “What
makes a good community member?”;
Mrs. Fisher, “How the community can
serve the’family through counseling”
;

Theological seminary, and before entrance into the service was rector of

St. Peter’s Church, Akron, Ohio.-

School Official to Speak on
Care of Chronically IIl Monday

Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, vice president
is served by a recreation and group of the Universjty of Illinois, will speak

agency”; Dr. Boyd, “How our com- on “The Care of Chronically Ill in
munity measures up from various points the State of Illinois” Monday evening,
of view”.
March 24, at 8 o’clock at the Winnetka
Community house.
Meeting Open to Discussion
The North Shore Committee for the
There will be opportunity for dis- Chronically Ill will sponsor the meetcussion from the floor. Mrs. Louis ing, to which the entire North Shore
Haller, chairman of the commiftee community is invited. Frank D. Loomis
which planned the meetings, says, “This of Glencoe is’ chairman of the commitconcluding meeting, on the importance tee,
to our young people of creating a favorable community, should be of interest
Mrs.

of

all home

out rubbish and unnecéssary combustible materials, and by correcting
other obvious fire hazards.”

Mr. Scheuchenpflug, “ How the family

to everyone. All are welcome and should

said, “ninety per cent

fires could be prevented. by cleaning

Chief Hennig has issued the following five point fire control plan for
Highland Park householders:
1. Remove all rubbish and oily rags,
which may ignite spontaneously. Burn
them or store them in closed metal
containers.

2. Examine

heating

systems

for |
cracks, soot clogging and defects and

FLOORS SANDED
AND

FINISHED WITH
DURA SEAL

SHELBY STEWART |
101 8S. PARKWAY
PROSPECT HEIGHTS, ILL.
Phone Arlington Heights 7120-M
CENTRAL 5218
Ask for Mrs. Stewart
I have sanded and finished over 1000
of the finest homes along the North
Shore.

Clavey Entertains Guest,

benefit by the discussion, even though

Mrs. Louis de Malziville of Los
Angeles, Cal., is a guest this week of
have been impossible.”
Mrs. Elmer L. Clavey, 2000 Clavey
On March 12, the topic was “Keeping road. Mrs. de Malziville arrived in
Up With the Joneses’. The question Highland Park last Tuesday and will
of rivalry within the family and within remain until next week.
the community was discussed. “Jealattendance at previous meetings may

ousy and rivalry between brothers and

sisters cannnot be eliminated”,

Mrs.

‘Neisser said, “but with wise handling
we may hope to limit its extent and intensity. Children’s quarrels do not mean

the same as they do to adults. Parents
do well to develop a certain ‘occupational deafness’ to quarreling which
goes on in any normal household. It is
also comforting to realize children’s
quarrels last two minutes by the clock.
“In our efforts to be fair we sometimes deny the child the extra affection he needs. Affection and attention
cannot be rationed but must be given
spontaneously, as children need them.”

PORTER FURNITURE CO.
Racine, Wisconsin

Fill Up With SCOTTS and
You're Off to New Lawn Beauty!

AliceThomas

Banish Dandelions, plantain and the like with Scotts Weed
Control. Restore grass color and health with a nourishing
meal of Scet‘s Turf Builder. Thicken the lawn with millions.
=
of new grass plants by sowing Scotts
Seed. It’s done in a breeze with one of
the new Scott Spreaders.

Also-

SCOTTS LAWN SEED—For full sun,
light shade. 1 Ib. - $1.25
5 Ibs. - $6.25
25 Ibs. $29.85.
Scotts for Dense Shade
at same prices.

_ Foremostdesigners

SCOTTS TURF BUILDER—Complete
food
for lawns. 25 Ibs. - $2.25 feeds 2,590 sq. ft:;_
100 Ibs. - $6.50 feeds 10,000 sq. ft.

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temeet
the acttyilies of

SCOTTS WEED CONTROL—Quick death
to weeds without harm to the grass. $1.25,
$3.85.

HUSENETTER HARDWARE
365 Roger Williams

)
Molyneux Model

127 EAST CHESTNUT ST.

|

Tel. H. P. 4387

*

a eh. ae se

Re oAateMis Bas ck oo ag
en og
:
ps xiiseint
sae Bagel PS ok te e2 Peis
ed reBee:

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

Pag 26

Pvt. Jim Marshall

water supply was low and was ra- plained was about $50.

Tells of His Voyage
Across the Pacific

Japs who came aboard to unload
Likes Army Life
:
Jimmy likes army life and thinks the mail were given candy bars by
he will re-enlist for E.T.O. His obser- Jim and his friends, who tried to get

A 27-page letter from Private Jimmy Marshall to his mother, Mrs. Lester Marshall, came last week from
Manila, which he captioned “The
Salty Brine.” It was a diary of the
events from Martinez, Calif., on December 30, 1946, across the Pacific to

a harbor in Japan on January 22, 1947,
and ending on January 28 at Manila

in the Philippines.

Army trucks took them toalittle
camp about five miles out of Manila.
That night he “pulled guard duty”
and was given a carbine and a full
clip of shells. He was told that the
Filipinos try to break in at night
and steal clothing.

The harbor

patrol sent the Japs away.

tioned.

vations across the Pacific were
teresting.

in-

them to talk. Jim quotes the Japs as

saying, “American M.P. good, he nice

On January 15 he wrote, “Lastnile guy, but Japanese police, he no good.”
I was out on deck watching the wa- “Chinese people good.” But when the
ter and everytime the surf would lads questioned the Japs about Rusbreak it looked like hundreds of fire- sia Jim stated, “They all shut up like
flies in the water. One of the fellows clams.”
The American soldiers were taken
said it was phosphorus. It sure was
something to see.
on an army truck~-tour of the city.
They crossed the international date- Jim reported that everyone was workline on the 17th day and received a ing and he saw no loafing.

He sailed on the S.S. Sedalia Vic- certificate to show that he is a member of the “Domain of the Golden
He told of a sister ship turning back Dragon,” ruler of the 180th meridian.
2077 Miles to Yokohama
to port because it was not seaworthy.
A breakfast consisted of two boiled
He told of the rainstorms on the
eggs, a roll, and a bowl of cereal. ocean, the rainbows, the high waves,
Tiring of soup for chow, he bought and of the miles covered day by day.
an officer’s beef dinner from a waiter
In the port of Yokohama on Janufor $1, one day, relating its delicious ary 22, the Japs came out. in motor
flavor.
boats to the side of the ship yelling
Movie shows.were good and plen- “Hiya foe, jlubba, tubba,*s&gt; The
tiful aboard ship. The PX provided. Americans lowered cartons of cigarsoft drinks, candy bars, cigarettes, ets to the Japs and in return received
etc. Getting close to Japan drinking from 400 to 600 yen, which he extory, manned by the merchant marine.

|

Next

day

he

was

transferred to

another camp and was now in the
signal corps. They slepx in tents with

dirt floors. He met three sisters who
did thefellows’ laundry. Jim and two
other soldiers went home with them
one night and the girls fed them ba- —
nanas. He closed his chronicle with
a description of Rosie, the Filipino
Bound for Manila
girl, with the “funny colored blonde
Back on ship and traveling to the hair.”
Philippines was another five days. He
helped by working in the ship’s bakery. The ship was making better Introduces “Mr. P.R.”
time, as an engine had been repaired
at Yokohama.
The Milwaukee Road is introducing
“Manila harbor on January 28 was to the public, through the advertising

Milwaukee Road Ad

still a mess,”’ Jim wrote, “with sunken

columns of the

newspapers

in

the

ships and just the rigging sticking out towns on its 11,000 mile system, its
of the water.” He said the city was Mieco
still a “mess” also with buildings
“Mr. P.R.”, well easen to all. Milall blasted and people sleeping in waukee Road employes, is a cartoon
tents.

character, a friendly fellow, who
stands for courtesy, co-operation and
good service. For the last three years,
while carrying on his work behind the
scenes, he has appeared in the rail-

road’s employe publications and on
inter-department correspondence. His
precepts are intended to promote the

welfare of employes and the railroad
Say. earning the good will of the pub-

Ae
Ae
@

lic.

iene

sie

“Mr. P.R.” to Milwaukee Road employes means public relations and every employee is considered a public
relations representative. The public
| appearance of “Mr. P.R.” is intended
to ee his acquaintanceship.

8

Bob-Mati Team Swamps

|Waukegan Recreation
Ina.
match
game,
Saturday
night,
against the Waukegan Recreation, the
Bob-Mari match game team won by 215
pins.

The

Waukegan

boys

really’

found

the alleys tough when all they could mus- _
ter, was a high game of 871.
Even the
Bob-Mari boys. had a tough time of it,
with

all

the

boys

shooting. at

plenty

of

railroads. In the second game, Gail Meintzer saw three 7-10 railroads staring him
in the face, while Bucky Walters just kept
knocking them down to the tune of 212,
which was, incidently, high game for the
night.
A. Junewitz was high for Waukegan ,
with a 211 game and 514 series.
The
scores were:
Waukegan Recreation
we
ADO WIETag ee
ao 143-160-211- 514
da Daeslors.
ea
LOGE Ae eh mn
EES
ee
ee eee
178-166-169- 513
On COR ae
ee
eee 106-177-187- 470 |
Miholic ea Eee he 167-162-138- 467
M
760-825-871-2456.

Meer OUR Mn. P.R.

Gail “Meintzer 26g 190-168-169- 527
Georsie

We of The Milwaukee Road realize that good
‘service wins good friends. We believe firmlyin providing the most modern equipment and facilities, but
we recognize as of equal importance the human side
of railroading.

In stations and roundhouses, in offices and on
Hence Mr. P. R., whospreads the spirit of friendtrains, Mr. P. R. is constantly active. He rubs
\liness and personal service throughout and beyond
elbows with ticket and freight agents, waiters and _ The Milwaukee Road organization. We think you
trainmen. And he also keeps in touch with the thou-

sands of other employes, unseen by the public, who
do their part to keep ’em rolling smoothly.

will savor the fruits of his work in your contacts
with Milwaukee Road Po
either as railroaders
or as neighbors.

“Moen.

ices 155-187-190- 532

Walt. Schmauss ....-.2.2:.- 168-156-155- 479
Marsh. Fredricks .......... 184-168-195- 547
Bucky Walters Peete Ia 192-212-182- 587
889-891-891-2671
Sunday, March 23, the Bob-Mari bowling
team is traveling to Kenosha, Wis., to
bowl a match. The return of this match
| will be announced later.

~

Health and Religion
The topic of Dr. Sara A. Janson’s
talk today will be “Health and Religion”. A Chicago physician, she is
to be the guest speaker at the Presbyterian Woman’s association lunch|} eon at the home of Mrs. D..L. Dew-

ey of County Line road.

, A home town industry— aiding your community by its
taxes, payrolls and services

iw MiLwAvKEE Roap

Turkey Dinner
Deerfield

Masons enjoyed a tur-

key dinner Saturday eveningat the

eaiieet with pleasure --. ship with confidence

‘| Masonic Temple. Northbrook’s. fire
147.

chief is

new member of the lodge.

ei

‘Mr. P. R.—cordial, smiling sie fall of zest for
his job—is the Milwaukee Road’s symbolof “public
relations”... an ambassador of good will: between
all of our employes and all of you.

Bob-Mari’s

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

Red Cross Workers
Solicit Donations
From Local Bowlers

Industrial Arts

DISTINCTIVE HATS

(Continued from page 5)

experienced in aviation mechanics as
In response to the request of John well as auto mechanics, was graduated
O. Meyers, proprietor of Highland from Stout Institute in Menomenee,

Ten Pin, local Red Cross personnel

Wis.,

where

he

received

Are Made to Order
-at

a_ bachelor

attended bowling matches Saturday of arts degree. He received a master’s
night, March 15, to solicit contribu- degree at Northwestern university. He
tions for the Red Cross drive from is co-founder of the Sixth Corps Area
Motor Transport school at Fort Sherithe players.
Among the solicitors were Miss dan. Mr. Bolle came to Highland Park
Barbara Bellows, who spent two years High school in January, 1921, and
in the European theatre of war, and

For Those Who |
DRESS SMARTLY

teaches auto’ mechanics and machine

ADA. KIRK’‘S

ELOISE HAT SHOP
"TENTH YEAR”

548 Central Ave. Highland Park
Tel. H. P. 998

Miss Elizabeth Low who served 12 shop. In addition, he is coach of the
months in the Pacific area. Both HPHS golf team, which has brought
several state titles to the local school.
HAVE ALL THE SOFT WATER YOU NEED
were attired in overseas uniforms.
Mr. Pertz, who has been instructor
A FAUCET WITH—
Contributions totaled $32.
"1
at Highland Park longer than any
ether teacher,
is in his 34th year at
the school. He teaches drawing in the
Industrial Arts. He is a graduate of
Vets Can Get Forms
Purdue university and took extension
For Overseas Service
work at Northwestern university, IllHighwood navy veterans who want inois Tech and Colorado State cola form letter to send to the Navy leges. In his spare time he is absorbed
department in Washington in order in his chronology of Highland Park
to secure their overseas records, may High school.
Mr. Carpenter, electrical instructor,
obtain one by contacting éeither Ray
Suzzi, service officer of the High- graduated from Northern Illinois State
wood American Legion, at H.P. 4279; Teachers college at De Kalb, Ill. He
or Brim ‘“Bertucci: at. BLP, .3651, it received his master’s degree at NorthSew
. Zeca OR REFUNDop
By ta ied
western university and taught at the
was announced this week.
‘&gt; Guaranteed by
1 NOT AS
Good Housekeeping
A limited number of these forms Francis W. Parker school in Chicago
THEREIN,
or4s apyennist WS
also will be available at the High- before coming to Highland Park five
wood postoffice through the courtesy years ago.
Mr. McLaughlin who teaches wood- 366 Central Avenue—Highland Park
of the Highwood American Legion.
Kenilworth
Suzzi and Berticci warn naval vet- work, was graduated from Iowa State
erans that their overseas record does Teachers college, Cedar Falls, Iowa,
not appear on their discharge, and to and Iowa State Agricultural college,
receive full credit for overseas duty Ames, Iowa. He taught at Clear Lake,
they must secure an official record Iowa, before coming to Highland
‘from the Navy department.
Vet- Park. He has been teaching here for
rans will receive $5 per month more the past four years, three of which

How Highwood Navy

Rey

Trademark Reg. U.S. Pat. OM.

for ovearseas duty from the Illinois

were spent at Elm Place school.

veterans’ bonus, which provides $10
monthly for each month served in
the United States and $15 per month
for overseas duties.

RADIO SERVICE

Highwood Red Cross
Quota Set at $600
The goal for the 1947 Red Cross
fund drive in Highwood has been
set at $600, it was announced this
week by Wade Fetzer, Chicago chairman of the campaign. Local chairman
for Highwood is Otto F. Fisher of
228 Oak terrace.
The Mini-Max batteries used teday
in personal camera-sized radios are
identical with the batteries which powered the Navy's famed Sonobuoy for
detecting submarines during the war.

Husehetter &amp; Cronkhite
365 Roger Williams Ave.
Ravinia, IIl.

H. P. 609.

You'll Never Forget It!
World’s Largest
Floral Exhibit

2Ath
NATIONAL
GARDEN—
SHOW

ee
Pick Up and Delivery Service
Phone Highland Park 455

DeLuxe Cleaners
454 Waukegan Ave.

Highwood

erval,
1

ADVERTISED

,

Pick Up and Delivery

RLOWER ana

“There’s a gal who sends all of her
clothes to DeLuxe Cleaners!”

Copr. 1947 Culligan Zeolite Co.

INTERNATIONAL
AMPHITHEATRE
Chicago
10 am to 10 pm
Closes Sunday

&gt;

3

Visitors Say:
“It’s Breathiaking!”’
: Free Parking

So

F fs fi

No matter what you haul, there’s a GMC model ideally
suited to your needs and every transport need . .-. large or
small. GMC builds light, medium andheavy duty vehicles
. . . from fast-moving, lightweight pick-ups to rugged, sixwheel types. There are nine engine sizes . . . seven gasoline
and two diesel. And there is an almost unlimited number
of equipment options and variatior: . .. to give you the
exact kind of truck you need for your job. Before you buy,
see GMC... “The Truck of Value’”’ . . . product of the world’s
largest exclusive manufacturer of commercial vehicles.
YMAC Time Poymeni Plan Assures You of the Lowest Available Rates

STANGER’S GARAGE
133 N. Second St., Highland Park

hs

�Page 28 :

Thursday, March 20, 1947
gle game — 806; Scarlett’s — High team
series—2216.

Deerfield
Bowling Academy

Team standings:

The

Victory Koiiers
series—570-°

The

Haven—High team sin-

|
Last

:

the

boys

bid

farewell

Duffy who are takinga

1” and 2’ — All Sizes
Murphy and Miller, Inc.

Phone Winnetka 4166
932 Linden Ave., Winnetka

The “New Tricorne” Derby
in TISH-U-TEX
the quality felt

to

little

AIR FILTERS

ELVIRA
HEALTH SALON
304 Railway Ave., Highwood
Telephone 1830 and 4061
Reducing A Specialty _
Graduate Masseuse —

...

:.

Monday

and

» However,

WEDNESDAY EVENING

they had enough bowling
to trip Paganelli Bros.

only H.

Engstrom’s

fine

American Legion

277

enabled the Paganeili boys to cop the first No. 38—F. Coleman
one.
Good Luck, boys, and we'll all see} No. 4—J. Klemp .
you in a few weeks.
By that time I hope| No. 6—R. Dunham
No. 5—F. Reilly
the ‘‘erying room” will be clean.
Ciub Lorrain dropped two games to- R. | No. 8—W. Johnston
Sel’s as the two hot-shots happened to No. 2—E.
be the respective anchor men.
Py Carani | No. 7—M.
and B. Walter both hit 580.
No. 1—O.
Braun Bros. took it on the chin twice
|

Major League
Duffy and

before departing
on their minds

twice,

Mac’s
John Gourley
Lorette’s
Reliable Garage
Eric’s D-X Station

MONDAY EVENING
Mary Spannraft—High individual game
—212; Mary Spannraft—High individual

Haven

Searlett’s

time off to bowl in the ABC.

from the

400

Club, and Gus

Klemp was ty

high man with 537. Oh! Excuse me, Gus|
Team
is somewhere in California and the boys mm.
Team
took his average.
Guess that does not
| Team
speak very well for the rest of them, but

HE was still high.
Somenzi had one of their better sea
and downed Frigid Freeze three game
Tt guess
that the deal mentioned “must
have snapped F. Spanraft out of it, for
the man had 598.
L. Medécci was high
for the Somenzi bunch—591.
I wish that people would stop drinking
water on the alleys as last week some
one walked in front
of me and spil led
some of the water.
I stepped in its acecidentally and then got up to bowl.
Can
you imagine my surprise when I stumbled
over the foul line?
The thing that hurt

| Team
|

THURSDAY EVENING

Bethlehem
Standings:

Church

Wrens
HeLS

least of all was the foul—BUT, the nickname that my ‘friends’ stuck on me, Big
Feet!
Now, was that nice?
What are)
you boys trying to do, get even with me? |
What you lads. seem to forget is that Ij}
always have the last word.
Get it?

Holy

Cross League

Chicago

Bowler.

newspaper

to

report
| to

all bowling inciidents out our way and have
been given a column cealled “Crovetti’s
Chatter Column.”
So, if any of you good
people along the North Shore are interested in bowling, just get a. copy.

S

I travel all along our suburbs so
know

when

YOUR

name

may

TUESDAY EVENING

win two from Killian.
Jimmy Kileoyne is
gettine the range
these
days,—seems
like
that
vacation
helped a bit.
)
Charlie Yous got 165-180-171 for a 516
series and led the Dunhams while they
were taking two: from’ Wachholder.
Joe

is giving away a lot of wood lately which
is kind of hard to overcome.
Marty Hart &amp; Co. shook Anderson down
for two games which gives Hart a tie
with Andy for 6th place.
Catherine and Betty Cunningham itied

-Rolling *40’s

with

417

series

apiece.

showing
quite
an
Marge Yous showed
405 series.
‘Team standings:

Lauterberg
High series

Marsicek

Anderson
Hart

FRIDAY EVENING
St. Paul’s League

Chamber of Commerce

High series for evening: Team 1—2280;

Results:

Park took 3 from Central; Clay took
2 from Walnut; Cherry took 2 from Pine;
forfeited

3

to

Elm

as

only.

2

of

their men showed up.
Leisk was High man: 245-175-150—570.
Elm St. rolled high game to date—930,
also high series—2551.

FOR
LOCAL

DELIVERIES
PROMPT SERVICE

‘Phone
Highland Park 570

National Delivery

or Small headsizes.

5.99

Service
212 Railway Ave.

Highwood

“WE HAVE WHAT YOU NEED”

had

high

3

games

Redskins
Steelers
Lions
Cardinals
Packers

RESULTS OF MIXED DOUBLES
Peersieha Bowling Academy
Actual HandiT
Ave. Pins cap score
' Ist Place
$200—D. Yelm
160 1221
9221313
» (Bowlarium: Recreation)
J. Zamis
174
:
(Lake View Rec.)
2nd Place
$165 A. Vanek
I2 ALB4-110 1244
B. Vanek
153
(Austin Bowl)
8rd

Place

$125 A. Krumrey
174 1108 182 1240
DE oma neyo
40
(North Chicago Bowlarium)
4th Flace
"$100 L. Garino
161 1094 140 1234
M
llen ...
149
Pin)

96 12381
16
Bowling Lanes)

(Continued on opposite page)

@ Professional

@ Amateur

Complete Stock:
@® Grumbacher
@ DeVoe
® Prang
® Milton Bradley
® Favor Ruhl
Picture Framing

PAINT CO.

WAUKEGAN, ILL.

2251. esHubert Juhrend

—565; John Swanson, had second high 3
games—541.
High single game for evening—Mary Spannraft—211.
Presbyterian Church League
Standings of teams:

(Highland “Ten
5

_ LARSEN &amp; PETERSEN»

127 N. GENESEE

second high series for evening: Team 5—

$ 90 J. Cohen
M. Frank
(Chicago

®@ Schools

It's A Leighton

been

Dunham

11,

Luella Willman
Betty Krase

Here’s the hat that wins
applause and encores for
it’s the most flattering of
all. Love, it for the contrast of grosgrain on kitten-soft Tish-U-Tex ...
the quality felt. Mate it
to your new cut-away for
an air of 18th century elegance. Chooseit in one of
~
hespretty new butterfly colors. In Large

has

Cunningham
for March

Marge Nelson
Betty Krase
Luella Willman
High games for March 11, 1947:

Cedar

Betty

improvement © lately.
up over 400 with a

‘| Coleman
Killian

Johnson’s ©

Reagan’s

\

3

Fred Coleman led the evening’s scoring
This might’ be a good time to let you
|
know that I have been appointed by with his 521 series, which helped his team

| all
| the

you never
pop up.

ee

League

120 N. Genesee
Majestic 2%
_Waukegan

DAHL’S AUTO.
RECONSTRUCTION
322.N. First St.

—«‘ Tel. H. P. 77

AUTO BODY
FENDERS
RADIATORS
REPAIRED
AUTO PAINTING
A_ SPECIALTY |

�fo

2 Thursday, ‘March 20, 1 947 :

Deerfield Bowling |
(Continued from page 28)
e

6th

Place

$ 80 Ro-Neeve ®....20.0: 157 1027 200 1227
Bis IPCOVE =. cos
IZ
(Zion Recreation)
ith Place

pO ae, Phalsiedd oo e072 0 An
iy, ATOM At
1385
(Park Alleys. Waukegan)
8th Place

é

:

nO. es Seder. &lt;ae 154 1060 156 1216

CATALOG OFFICE

Ms -Spanmnrats =. 7148
(Deerfield Bowling Academy)

:

9th Place
5
Se 161 1116 100 1216
169

pes) PrOOKS
“Remiae

(Remias Recreation)
10th Place

et OE A080. Teac a ois
22

AAG
Ten Pin)
Place

11th

Rod

apy. Cresseyoc

= 165 1074 130 1204

(T

igo Bowlarium)
ae See
s, Waukegan)

$

183 A119
:

be wd

ci

Place

982 1204

:

me naer A= 1G 2689) 170-89

aS SK
Be ae 139
:
(Deerfield Bowling Academy’)
14th Place

$12.50

Carl

Se

Pa ise iano Lio

hae
166
(Arlineton
Heights)
15th Place
:

$

$

;

PER dO Idepe LUGS

6 Kriesant.

....... 166 1035 156 1191

Seeit

e

136

17th Place
¢

6

“¢

L.:MeChesney .... 160 1039

1242

118]

A&gt; Mentzer ._......
' (Deerfield Bowling Academy)
Rea

18th Place
:
dye te SEL
cae 174 1048128
H. Mclaughlin .. 142

'
S.®

1176

(Deerfield Bowling Academy)
.
:
19th Place
die Ry Wuerffel -17151007-168Mrs. Wuerffel .. 125
(Marizold Arcade)

SPECIAL PRIZES
Out of Money
Men’s Hich Series (actual wood)
Picchetti: (Deerfield) 649—$10.

i
1176
ares.

John

Ladies’ Hich Series (actual wood)
D.
Miller (Columbia Ree.) 552—$10. ©
High Series before 8 p.m. each Saturday
(actual wood):
February 22

Dick Hamill (Deerfield) ............ 1048—$10
Helen

McLaughlin

(Deerfield)

——

March 1
;
John Picchietti (Deerfield)........ 1084—$10
Mary Spannraft (Deerfield)...
A
grand
turn
weather, resulted

out
despite inclement
in an entry of
(311)

three hundred and eleven which at $3.50
each prize fund made a grand total in
Tene MONCy Ol oe ee ae $1,088.50.

ON ALL CATALOG MERCHANDISE

— Delivery to your door

_
Now you can be an armchair shopper. Simply make your
tions from Wards big Catalog AT HOME and phone us your
Your purchases will be delivered direct to your door (for a
delivery charge) ... as our trucks are in your neighborhood

selecorder.
smalldaily.

CARD OF THANKS
Nello Ori and Mario Ori and

family wish to thank their relatives, friends and neighbors
who have expressed their
sympathy for the recent death

IF YOU LIVE IN
Deerfield
Techny
Libertyville
Northbrook

of their father.

We wish to express our uttermost gratitude and thanks to
our many friends and relatives.

Also to students and faculty of
Highland Park High school and
Oak Terrace grammar school

for -their sympathy and many ¥f

kindnesses shown to us during
our recent great sorrow.
:
. Mr. and: Mrs. Henry Pearce
and Children
ARPES a

ETT

ADJUDICATION AND CLAIM DAY
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all
persons that the first Monday of May,
1947, is the claim date in the estate of
JAMES

VITI

(also

known

as

Lake Forest
Tv.
,

Mundelein
Northfield
Lake Bluff

:
;
.

_

Rondout
Prairie View

CALL ENTERPRISE 4700
which is a direct no-toll line to our Highland Park Catalog Office.
If you live in Highwood, Ft. Sheridan, Ravinia,
or Hghland Park,

call Highland Park 4800 to place your order.

IF YOU HAVEN'T A CATALOG...
_ phone us for a library copy, and we'll be happy to mail one to you,
or stop in when you are in Highland Park. These Catalogs are set
aside for YOU. to enjoy for two weeks ANYTIME during the season.
Get your copy today so you, too, can shop this convenient telephone
ce
WY

Vincenzo

Viti), Deceased, pending in the Probate
Court of Lake County, Illinois, and that
claims

may

be

filed

against

the

said

estate on or before said date without issuance of summons.

All claims filed against

said estate on or before said date and not }
contested, will be adjudicated on the first
Tuesday after the first Monday of the
next succeeding month at 10 a.m.

:
GAETANO VITI, Executor.
Paul C. Behanna, Attorney.
First National Bank Building,
Highland Park, Illinois,
Highland Park 43804. (Mar. 20-27-Apr 3
/

Tel. No. H. Pk. 4800
\

28 N.First Street

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

Currant Scones” with cups of clear
sparkling tea.

background for lively conversation.

Free Estimates—All Work Guaranteed

SUBURBAN ROOFING CO. &amp;
SERVING ALL THE SUBURBS

SS

Almond Currant Scones

2
1
1
4
1
2
¥4

tablespoons currants
cup sifted all-purpose flour
teaspoon baking powder
teaspoon salt
tablespoon sugar
tabléspoons shortening
cup chopped blanched roasted almonds

y ages

Phone Highland Park 1767

Famous Food Treat

‘Mrs. Little Jack’s
‘CHEESE CAKE

A specialty at LITTLE JACK’S RESTAURANT for oyee'a
quarter of a century.

Now on sale at
,
George B. Winters, Inc.—in all three stores
526 Davis St., Evanston (University 3909)
1144 Central ” Ave., Wilmette (Wilmette 420) Park 3080)
387 Roger Williams Ave., Ravinia (Highland
(Winnetka 3185)
Feldman’s, 986 Linden Avenue, Winnetka

- §$PECIMEN BALLOT

New Style Apple Pie
Since one-crust pies are the fashthese

days, why

Lake

Polls Open 6:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

Shoreline

‘Independent
(By Petition)

Wood Shingles repaired and
preserved with HOT Asphalt or

Stain
Gutters cleaned
Insides painted —
Siding — Insulation
Tuck-Pointing

Highland Park 1203

- (Vote for One)

Gwe

[] JAMES B. MAILFALD

C] FRED J. LABAHN

L.
27

32
32

Modern

34

Decorators

gsc

.............-.---.--. 41

IN OG “IORGsyDMLECK eyes eisai
Al
Mahatten. Hat
“Shoe &lt;2. 2.26. 38
Seguins

Funeral

Home

.............. 38

NGM rook! -bavGMn —-s.&lt;.ts-tceeee
Giancorer Groce. “Mkt,2s Sa
Delia: Gril - seo
ae
oe
OMfestie Broset2o
sas eee ete
Meyer

&amp;

Brother

88
38
37%
387

34 .
37
37

27
37
38
38

2

Contri Bros.
Russell’s Huddle
Farmers

Beverage .:

a

DAV OiM y poe deak a leeretan detect cs

High Bowlers
Vigor ater Ste
arteae

Piacenzi
PAT ten sae Reap ecea eee eee
Minorini
Paganelli

American Legion Bowling League
Tower Casino
;
Press Pyimt SOROpe sthusce tees
Tommy’s Service Station
Sisiestrom ,Co0al i 2ai aa
ee
Wooued Cleaners (ioe
Anchor, Instrrance =...2. 224s
ee
Washington Gardens ......Serene
PG NEG
PD BORSON: «o.oo cree
Duffy

&amp;

Duffy

35
36
36
36
36
37

Cleaners

38

Highwood Bump Shop ....
Labor- Temples Tavern -....0-oa.
Manhattan Hat Shoe Service.... 36
Joe’s Tavern
John B. Nash .
Glader Tazioli
Onesti. Bros.

.

ST
eea
Carani ..
Rogan
Leuer

;

39
41
42

221

...

Iverson
Carlson
Clayton .
Santina
Kahila .
Konsler

...

3

Montéecehi&lt; ae eee 529
. Hessler ....
ae
SPS RC
On
a nc ines saan 522
Benson

a

Lundgren.

(repairs-renewals)

317 Grove St., Highwood
For Commissioner of
Highways

:

Asphalt Shingles—Roll Roofing

.
.

For Library
Library Director
D1
(Vote for Two)

an

~ Company

ELECTION TUESDAY, APRIL, 1, 1947

(By Petition)

make

utes.

County, Illinois

Peoples Party

not

apple pie in open-face style? For a
9-inch pie, place 4 cups sliced apples
in unbaked pie shell. Cover with a
mixture
of 34 cup brown sugar and
1 teaspoon cinnamon. Sprinkle 2
tablespoons evaporated milk or thin
cream over the top. Bake in hot oven
(425 degrees F.) for about 35 min-

Town of West Deerfield

|

WwW.
ieee 45

Garirio: A eCOrdion.: ate--ecoree
ase tae 43
HIS thersCRN wern, -vere
ea eta cee 43

Pao aerate SOs
fee eears

FereUis

t

3 tablespoons light cream
Rinse currants, drain and dry on
‘a towel. Sift together dry ingredients.
Cut in shortening; add currants and
almonds. Beat egg and combine with
cream and add to flour mixture. Stir
until flour is dampened. Turn out
on floured board and knead several
times. Roll %4-inch thick and cut into
small triangles. Place on greased baking sheet. Bake in a very hot over
(450 degrees F.) about 10 minutes,
Makes about 1 dozen.

ion

Moose 446 Bowling News

They'll be a perfect

BOA PHOmASar

allL, KIN

Bowling News

When friends gather round for a
teatime chat, serve delicious “Almond

Gutters Repaired, Cleaned, Coated

pobacky

Highland Ten Pin

Teatime Conversation

ROOn Sf
&gt;on OD dia

RE-ROOFING
ROOF REPAIRS
SIDING-CAULKING

Background for a

Worrell hrc — eee
oeees
fPasquesi Bros. Garage
Silver Dollar
Soimenuride SOaks le sAcutee
ote
AAWWOO RAC 10. sdeete sock otods cheeks
Club Lorraine
MS ee Us NEOUS = ad
ches eters
Highwood Grocery’ ....-2.:.---s:-----++

49

29

40
40

38
38

35
29

43
49

Savory Casserole
- Combine equal amounts of cubed,
boiled potatoes and diced luncheon
,meat; place in greased casserole.
Make medium white sauce, add grated
mild cheese and minced pimiento, and
pour over potatoes and meat. Sprinkle
with paprika and heat thoroughly in
a moderate oven.

For Library Director

(Vote for Two)

DAN’S

(] HUBERT N. KELLEY

Painting &amp;

[] ELEANOR H. TORBET

Decorating

Issued by order of

IRENE ROCKENBACH

, AT YOUR
(f DEALERS

Town Clerk

Fully Insured
Interior and Exterior
Residential and Commercial
Immediate Service

Phone Highland Park 6012 |
-

�Thursday, March 20, 1947.

2° Bigne SY

WELCOME TO CHURCH

avenue, Highwood. All young folks welcome.
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
. 7:45 p.m. Wednesday evening Lenten
service.
Topic: ‘The Church.”
Last in
God should have priority en your time.
end some hours in church.
the series on “Fundamentals of Faith.”
FRIDAY, March 28,
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal,
REDEEMER EVAN. LUTHERAN CHURCH MONDAY of each month, at the church
Rev. and Mrs. Herbe T. W. Linden were
587 West Central avenue
at 8 .p.m.
H. K. Platzer, Pastor
The Women’s Society of Christian Serv-. honored with a surprise birthday party by
;
Tel. H.P.
0
ice meets the THIRD TUESDAY of each the members of the Zion Lutheran conmonth, at the church, at 8 p.m.
SUNDAY, March 23,
Mrs. L. gregation of Highwood at the social hour
last Wednesday evening following the
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
D. Fuller, president.
Lenten service and Home Mission program.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
The serMiss Bernice Larson presented them with
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH
mon text is John: 15 :18-21; “Resentment
flowers and a purse on behalf of the conagainst the Righteous.”
Deerfield and Green Bay road
Mrs. Linden’s
birthday is
9:15 a.m. Morning worship at Lake For- Rt. Rev. Mser. Joseph P. Morrison, Pastor gregation.
March 18, and pastor’s on the March 14.
est in the American Legion hall, McKinRev. Edmund J. Skoner,. S.T.L.
ley and Wisconsin avenues.
Rev. John P. O’Connell, S.T.D.
Sr: JOHNS EVANGELICAL REFORMED
:
MASSES
TUESDAY, March 25,
Green Bay road and Homewood avenue
Simndeses on doy #200, .9,-10,-d0° and12
8 p.m. ‘Adult’s discussion | group at the
noon.
Alvin S. Kniker, Pastor
parsonage.
;
Week-days—6
:30,
8:15.
t
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
:
| SUNDAY, March 23,
8 p.m. Lenten Vesper with the Rev.
CONFESSIONS
9:30 a.m. Sunday: school.
Saturdays, eves of first Friday and
Paul Mundinger of Trinity, Glencoe de10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
livering the sermon on John 19:1-5; “O Holidays, 4 and 7:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, March 25,
BAPTISMS
:
Sacred Head and Wounded.”
8 p.m. Meeting of the Women’s AuxilSundays—1:30, or at other times upon jary
SUNDAY, March 30,
request.
10:45 a.m. Palm Sunday worship.
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
T45-p.tn ‘Lenten service.
BETHANY CHURCH
THURSDAY, March 27,
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Oakridge and High street
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
Laurel avenue and McGovern street
FRIDAY, March 28,
ighwood
;
Lester H. Laubenstein, Minister
Herbert W. Linden, Pastor
4 p.m. Junior choir.
24 McGovern street—Phone H.P. 3522
A cordial welcome awaits you at all
ee March 23,
:
our
services.
9.:30- acm. Church school.
SUNDAY, March 23,
Any child
9:30 a.m. Sunday school in all depart- welcome to enroll.
LOS 45 a.m. Morning worship.. Sermon
TRINTY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
ments.
East Laurel avenue
,
11 a.m. Biviie suerahan
sermon by the topic, ““Caiaphas, Priest and Politician.”
1345
spum.
Evening service. oa topic,
The Rev. Charles U. Harris, Rector
Rev. Lester H. Laubenstein, minister The
Mission Band will meet during this hour “In FPilate’s Court.”
SUNDAY, March 23,
TUESDAY, March 25, |
under the leadership of Mary Behrens.
(80-aime Holy Communion.
7:30 p.m. Luther League meeting at
12:10 p.m. Special choral rehearsal.
9:30 a.m. The Church school.
3 p.m. Pastor’s class for prospective home of Margaret Carlson, 125 Central
11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon.
church members.
Subject: ‘‘The History
of ._ the
Evangelical
United
Brethren
church.”
.
7 p.m. Evangelical Youth Fellowship.
TUESDAY, March 25,
8 p.m. Monthly meeting of the Brotherhood in the Dubs’ Memorial room in the
church with Messrs. Beik and Hart as
hosts.
;
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
8 p.m. Lenten mid-week preaching service; it will be missionary night and the
monthly offering will be received.
ree ee March 27,
p.m, Senior choir rehearsal.
SATURDAY, March

EN

TUESDAY, March 25,
MS
(Feast of the Annunciation.)
. 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
8 p.m. Lenten evening service.
Guest
preacher, the Rev. Robert C. Clingman,
rector of St. Francis-in-the-Fields, Harrods Creek, Kentucky.
:
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
FRIDAY, March 28,
7:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
Parish Activities
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
7:30 p.m. Boys choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY, March 27,
7:45 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal.
FRIDAY, March 28,
4 p.m. Girls choir rehearsal.
JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES &gt;
YWCA
ce
274 Laurel avenue
Highland Park, eiisgs
SUNDAY, March 23,
6 215 p.m. Book study in “Let God Be
True.” Subject, ““‘Who are Jehovah’s Witnesses?”
7:30 p.m. Watchtower study.
Subject,
“A Memorial of Integrity for God’s Kingdom.” Text: “And this day shall be unto
you for a memorial.” (Ex. 12:14).
“This
do in remembrance of me.” (I Cor. 11 224).

WELCOME TO CHURCH
HIGHLAND PARK PRESBYTERIAN
{
CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect avenues
;
Church Phone H.P. 263
Rev. Louis W. Sherwin, D.D.,Minister
Miss Sallie hee
~
Director of Religious Education

B xe

22-24 NORTH FIRST ie

cy

&gt; PHONE H.P L-Vhcws

WEEK END PRICES—THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

At

the

morning

service

little

children

will be baptized; parents should make arrangements

with

the

minister.

At

night

there will be the first of a series of sermons and services for Holy Week.
.
EACH NIGHT of Holy Week (except
Monday)

from

HAMBURGER

ALL BEEF |
FRESH GROUND

March 30, to Good Friday,

April 4 there will be services and the
general question to be considered.is to be:
“Where is
Our Religious Authority:?”
Everyone will be welcome. —
_FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL CHURCH
“A Community Gospel Church”
South Green Bay road and Laurel avenue
R. S. Wilson, Pastor
Tel. H.P. 1731
FRIDAY, March 21,
7:30 p.m. Public "rally Se eaacen by the
Mission Band of the church.
All adults.
as well as children are welcome to hear
A. Leslie Blomerley, of England who is
at present in Chicago taking special studies
in preparation for missionary work in the

South Sea Islands. He will speak on “The
Crimson Chopsticks.”
The choir will rehearse after the service.
SUNDAY, March 23,
9:30 a.m. Sunday: school for all ages.
10:45 a.m. Hour of worship. The subject of the pastor’s message will be:
“Herod, the Fox.”
:
7 p.m. Christian Endeavor for youth,
T:45 p.m.
Evening Gospel service.
“Pride” is the theme of the sermon to
be given by the pastor.
-.
March 24,
p.m. Official board meeting.
TUESDAY, March
8 p.m. Meeting of the Philathea class, at

the home of Mrs. Fred Gieser, 421 MecDanjiels avenue.
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
8 p.m. Mid-week service of prayer at
the church.
;
Holy Week will: be observed in the
church with special services each evening
at 7:45.
The pastor will preach a series
of messages on characters connected with
the last week of Christ’s life, and the
music will be in charge of Ed Sherry.
Holy Communion will be given on Good
Friday evening. A special children’s service for all the children of the community
will be held on Good Friday afternoon at
2 o’clock with Miss Frances Bennett of
Chicago telling the story of Good Friday.
THE WESLEY METHODIST CHURCH
North avenue and Lauretta place
William G. Overend, Minister
SUNDAY, March 28,
9:45 am. Sunday ‘school for all departments, Mrs. Ira Breakwell, superintendent;
Ruben Olson, assistant superintendent.
11 a.m. Morning worship. Sermon topic,
“Jesus, the Ferfect Steward.”
7:30 p.m. The Methodist Youth fellowship.
WEDNESDAY, March 26,
8 p.m. Lenten mid-week service and
study group. Topic: “The Stewardship of
a Life Work.’
THURSDAY, March 27,
7:30 p.m. Choir practice.
The official board meets the SECOND

Fresh Dressed

| The pound

STEWING

CHICKENS

2.896

CHICKEN LEGS AND
THIGHS a

CHICKENS
LB. 41 Wye

Lb. 39”

LAMB ---- tO. BEEF

LEG OF

CHICKEN BREASTS

Fresh Dressed

FRYING

:

Ib. 5Qc|BEEF (Whole) Ib. 5Q¢

RIB ROAST

TENDERLOIN OF

LAMB CHOPS !»- 29c DUCKLINGS |. 59¢ | Frankfurters

SHOULDER

-EVISCERATED

~WRIGLEY’‘S

GUM ‘Spearmint or Juicy Fruit

MILK Grade A, Spinney Run Farms

wmeseaeswanenne

3 No. 2 tins for 65c

MALT-O-MEAL 24-02. pkg. ................

ee

Savoy Baking

I 9c

Festive
No. 2
LIMA BEANS ......------------:------- z Tins 35¢

Educator,
CRAM 12-02. pie’

HELLMANN’S REAL

Large Pkg. 2... sts 31c

16-oz.

SALAD and

COOKING OIL

_A9e

anSOR be.=e

MAYONNAISE
jor

A9Qc

49c

Fancy Dried
APRICOTS lb.

=
ie

ewww te meet e eww ene meen nae tere

STORE HOURS
9 A.M. to 5:45 P.M.

Closed Every Wednesday at 12:00

.
17¢

ee

|

BIRDSEYE FROSTED W. K.

CORN Pks.

%-lb.

CHOCOLATE ..........------------------ 2 pkgs. 29c

MARVELOUS. NEW SUDS

DREFT

3 pkgs. for 10¢

Gallon plus deposit 6 2c

eee eee

APPLE SAUCE —
Delicious Wheat Cereal

ibe Qe

ee

| WHITE SOAP FLAKES |

;

CHIFFON |
3 Ise. pkgs. $400
Country Style or Plain
DILL PICKLES
Qt. Jar

29c

VEGETABLE JUICE

-V-8 COCKTAIL.
46-oz. tin

|
}
|

�ee
&gt;
wae

Pe
ey

oe

‘Thursday, March 20, 1947
Conclude Study
Of Master Plan
For Deerfield

HERE’S WHY
Y JEWEL(9

The sixth, and last, in this series of

PRICES ARE SOLOW!
,

Because more and more people are picking Jewel as the
place to buy their meats and other food, our sales have
soared. This means ourpurchasing power is greater and
our Buyers can “talk turkey™ on prices they pay. Merchandise doesn't stay on our shelves or in our cases very
long, which cuts down on waste and spoilage. All of

study of an overall Master Plan for
the zoning of Deerfield, present and
| future, is presented. E. F. Nelson has
suggested that these articles be clip-&gt;

q

Ka’ SK

oak

ped and preserved for further study.
The Master Plan

The various studies involved in the
foregoing will need thorough consideration individually and. separately
before they are grouped to develop

u/ eats

these savings are shared with you through lower prices.

a oF Oh

As our sales volume goes up we are able to offer a
better deal to you.

tinSake

aha ola

co.

Inc.

the final blueprint or pattern for a

STRONG, FRAGRANT CUSTOM GROUND

master plan. It is anticipated that
each will be made the subject of a

SWIFT'S STRAINED

Bluebrook Coffee. .»&lt; 65° | Meats : Babies

“ot Oe |

COLLEGE INN JUICE

Tomato Cocktail.

3!/,-OZ.

Cc

agencies mentioned in the discussion

LE VALLEY

Apricot Neciar. . .

NO. 2!/,

CAN

15°

Apricot Halves
M &amp; M CHOCOLATE

Pastels

Ke. 39°

LOZ,

Icebox Cookies
ieee 33°

ey 7 ks

JEWEL

aka wl

is the opinion of the Commission that

professional help should be employed.
City Planning Engineers of high
standing are available and one should
be retained. The cost of such talent

| IS

JEWEL EXTRA-VALUE TRIM—TENDERLOINS NOT REMOVED
ALL FROM FRESH CUT TENDER YOUNG PORK
WHOLE LOIN OR FULL RIB HALF

VAN CAMP'S
IN TOMATO

—

SAUCE|
21OZ. 9°
CANS
PRINCESS SIL VIC

PORK LOINS

©;

48°

"TB:

LEAN, MEATY, FULL OF FLAVOR

LEG O° LAMB.

Sardines
oi
3V/4-OZ. i 5c

READY TO SEASON AND
ROAST

CAN

JEWEL

FRESH CORN OFF THE COB

MEAT LOAF
2LBS.
3LBS.
Ge | sts

Nibiets Brand

2 cons 29°

of the Plan Commission expansion
can be definitely tied into the program and aid with their comments
and suggestions.
In view of the comprehensive nature of the plan as contemplated it

SKOKIE FARMS

SIGNET OR MISSION PEAK

SY

cn AD

BEEF, LIVER
AND LAMB
ONLY

separate report for reference to the

Village Board and possible public
forums. In this way the village as a
whole will have an opportunity to
keep abreast of the project as it proceeds. It is hoped that the public

3

ong, SE AY
» SN et ce
SPECIALS!

nO.

6:

ARMOUR OR OSCAR MAYER

Cod

c

FILLETS

: 1 29°

God or Haddock
.

‘

12-OZ. 29°

Fruit Gockiail. ....

CTNS.

HNL
HAPPY HARVEST
12-OZ. 3 f c

SALERNO

Chocolate Dainties . . °.77 Q5¢
'

Vanilla Extract... 20" 33¢
SUNSHINE
Hi-Ho Crackers. . ree, AAS

Wheat Germ...

@

JAR

!

LIBBY'S

Tomato Juice... 2 oii; 25¢

Dewkist

Topaat
FRESH FOODS.

WHOLE MILKY KERNELS

WALDORF—THREE SCENTS

GOLDEN CUT CORN 12-OZ.
oe 19¢

Bubble Bath.

Ro

95°

DISINFECTS

GARDEN FRESH

PEAS &amp; CARROTS.. '2:°7 [9¢

Fleecy White Bleach’; 23° LIMA BEANS ...... (207 29¢
Wallpaper Cleaner2 can eae BLACK CHERRIES ay
SPRAYKIST FORDHOOK

&lt;

;

CINCY

LARGE SWEETENED

LE

:

Saas

FOR FINER FABRICS

~PAAS

a

PKG.

I

© DIPPER AND

asic

It takes time to replan even a small
town. The assembling of facts is perhaps the biggest job. Then the town
has to decide what kind of place it.
wants to be in the future. Wide participation in public forums and general publicity will be necessary. After.
this the steps to achieve the goal
must be decided.

Then the plan can

be put on paper. Competent authorities have stated that the completion
of the program envisaged here will

take at least nine months. However,
slow planning is better than fast
planning when considered in light of
results which will not become immediately apparent but gradually emerge
as time goes on. In the final analysis
this will be a guide not an end in itself.
P
This concludes the series of articles.
The editor would appreciate letters,
voicing your opinions on the Master
Plan.
7s

4

Ill with Pneusdionia

Mrs. Lazarus Cozocar is ill with

_ Chiffon Flakes | Easter Ege Dyes

Ke SDS

it will be used. It is .«ecommended
that they be given complete direction
of the preparation by and with consultation with the Plan Commission.
It is proposed to enlist the services
of such people as soon as possible.
Estimates submitted during the post
year resulted in the decision of the
village board to employ the St. Louis
firm of Harland, Bartholomew, and
Associates, contingent upon raising
the necessary funds. These people
are currently planning the City of
Highland Park and the Village of
Oak Park.
Time

Salmon Steaks ees a Oe
0 39°

e

Raspberry-Banana. . . 2 cws 29°

55°

Round or Swiss Steak ».5/°
Skinless Wieners. . i 45

DR. PRICE'S

RED RASPBERRIES &amp; SLICED BANANAS IN RASPBERRY GELATIN

DICED MIXED FRUITS IN RASPBERRY GELATIN

SLB.

QUALITY GUARANTEED

will depend on the extent to which

518 Central Ave 2
445

pneumonia at

her hows on

County

Line road.

aaa Williams Ave.

RNA Sewing Club

k

Yesterday, the Royal Neighbor sew-

ing club met at the home of Mrs. Edwin Beckman of Rosemary terrace.

�BORNE

Ig BENE I

ed

:

fix

ee

*

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=

ARRON a
OED I PRE SR Se
EAs

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Page go

Thursday March 20, 1945

County Division of Red Cross
Drive Continues at Fast Pace —
The County Communities division
of the 1947 American Red Cross Fund
campaign continued its fast pace of

solicitation in the 150 suburbs outside
the city of Chicago in Cook, DuPage
and the south half of Lake county under the leadership of Lowell D. Rutherford of Itasca, chairman of that di-

Vassar Alumnae

THIS BEAUTIFUL:GARDEN CEMETERY
Very Reasonable Prices

New President

MALE and FEMALE
HELP WANTED

tional services to the American public
on a large scale. The job will continue
to be done in the way which has won
the respect and gratitude of the American people and the peoples of the
world.”

A Surprise Awaits You If You Have Not Visited

Dedicate Book to

A permanent Vassar record book
containing local Who’s Who will be
vision.
dedicated to Miss Sarah Gibson BlandTotal collections reported in the di- ing when she visits Chicago on Tuesvision as of March 15 were $280,344.26 day, April 1. The gift will be presented
or 74.75% of the $375,000 goal set for Miss Blanding by the committee in
them. The goal for the entire Chicago charge of the party to be given by the
Chapter area is $2,550,000.
Vassar. Alumnae Association at the
Mrs. John Vieberg, 654 Orchard, Casino club on that day. Mrs. Ronald
fund campaign chairman of Deerfield, Chinnock has been appointed editor of
reported contributions totaling $1,600 the book.
to date in that town This is 106% of
Miss Blanding is the new president
the’ $1,500 quota set for Deerfield.
of Vassar and the first woman presiMrs. Edison Dick, 612 East Wood- dent in the school’s eighty-one-year
land road, fund campaign chairman history. She will speak on “Why a
of Lake Forest, reported contributions Liberal Arts College”, in the mirrored
totaling $23,530 to date.in that town. ballroom of the Casino at 3:30 p. m.
This is 94.12% of the $25,000 quota Her talk will be followed by a tea in
for Lake Forest. Mrs. Francis Merckx, her honor. Mrs. Louis J. Stirling of
303 East Greenwood is, the co-chairman. Higland Park is a member of the
“The true story of the Red Cross is party committee.
not told in records or reports,’ Mr.
“The Red Cross is “organized huRutherford stated, “but in the lives
of those who have known its help. The manitarianism,’ without regard to
story is still centered in the role of race, creed or color,” Mr. Rutherford
binding up the wounds of the injured
; concluded.
in helping veterans and servicemen and
their families; in sheltering, feeding
and clothing the homeless, in helping
rebuild broken lives; in restoring the
victims of hard blows of nature and of
No Experience Necessary
war.”
To fabricate essential electrical
“The job is far greater in scope and
equipment required in home
far more difficult than before World
construction.
War II,” he added, “and will continue
e Drilling
e Tapping
to be so on a diminishing basis, serve Assembly Operations
ing over 1,250,000 active servicemen at
home and abroad and a large proportion
Phone Northbrook 102
of our 12,000,000 veterans and their
families, as well as furnishing educa-

Northshore Garden of Memories}

THE M. B. AUSTIN CO.
Shermer Rd.

~

Phone Maj. 1067 |

Greenbay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

SPECIMEN BALLOT.
Town of West Deerfield
Lake County, Illinois

ELECTION TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1947
Polls Open 6:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.

Shall the Town of West Deerfield be
included within the provisions of an
Act, creating the “Illinois Municipal
Retirement Fund,” filed July 29, 1939,
as amended, now in force and effect?

a

YES
NO

Issued by order of

IRENE ROCKENBACH
3

Town Clerk

Northbrook

“You'll love this milk of

Raspberry
Royale
ICE CREAM
Tasty swirls of ripe raspberries in
smooth, creamy Sealtest. Look for
the red emblem of quality.

Vowite. Seattasttime!

a:

ICE CREAM.
THE MEASURE OF QUALITY

|
Tait...
Deller
Richer Quality’ |

�SORA
eo

Page 344 ...

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Le

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WHOLE OR

ays

RIB HALF

LB.

10 55 a.m. Morning worship.
topic: “The: Purpose if Jesuss’

‘

:

Ist thru

NO. 2\/,,

cut

CAN

C

7th rib,

Best blade and

sfen ats

Value Way.

home of
by

Mrs.

7:45 p.m. Last in Lenten services.

Ser-

Ethel

‘

6:45 p.m. Bowling league.
Rey
re
ee

:

99°

anon teenne
775 HaEA

7:30 p.m. Lenten school at the High-

rs

land Park Presbyterian church.
SUNDAY, March 23—
9:45 a.m. Church school.
Robert Jordan, superintendent.

‘

7

_

:

a.m.

FRESH

GREEN PEAS. (2us 25

ras

j

YOUNG,

2

TENDER, GREEN | Carrots

BCHS.

|

Gabba

'

|'

PASCAL

MAINE POTATOES

“SOLID GREEN New

;

Cc

TEXAS SEEDLESS

ORANGES

GRAPEFRUIT

ee
A

|

;

SUPPLIES LIMITED

:
z

|

9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.
. 7:30 p.m. Senior Youth fellowship.

:

TUESDAY, March 25—

4 p.m. Confirmation class.

CHURCH OF THE COVENANTS

Non-Denominational
ef
Hall
Rev.
Sey
eashii: Pastor
i
Residence, 401 McDaniels Ave., Highland
Park... Tel. H.P. 2391

SUNDAY, March 23——

masa a.m. Bible school tae children.
10:45 a.m. Divine worship and preaching service.

LAVA SOAP

MSpm.Weekly
Biblestudy group.

me 35°

jes 9° :

SUPPLIES LIMITED

SUPPLIES LIMITED

Dish to Serve for

D U L

,
FOR THE HANDS

A Hurry-up Meal

wnOXYDOL
wie

Goer

Inspired Simple

’

SOAP POWDER

~

PKG

:

This frankfurter and spaghetti dish

DOES EVERYTHING

LARGE

3

LAVA SOAP

LARGE

33°

PKG

SUPPLIES LIMITED

LARGE
33°

f

c

BAR

SUPPLIES LIMITED

|

is just the thing for a hurry-up meal,
and is definitely a budget combina-

i3

tion. The use of spices contributes a

mysteriously “different” flavor that
lifts it into the inspired class.
Frankfurter Spaghetti

SUPPLIES LIMITED

fe

en ey

:

SOAP FLAKES
LARGE

L U X

V E L

SOAP FLAKES

¢c

LARGE

PKG.

1% pounds frankfurters

SOAP FLAKES

c

LARGE

PKG.

SUPPLIES LIMITED

26—

Protestant

:
:
REMOVES. GRIME

SOAP FLAKES

March

7:30 p.m. Lenten service.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

IRT
HURTS ONLY'D . ;
3 14-OZ. 90°

A

SUPPLIES LIMITED

SUNDAY, March 23—

CANS

“IVORY

|

L. Paul Brown, .

638 Waukegan Road

KITCHEN

:

9 ea 15°

ss.

Phone Deerfield 858
Rev. Hugo Leinberger, Pastor

KLENZER

-

IVORY SOAP |

m

WEDNESDAY,

DUST
SUPER SUDS | GOLD
SOAP POWDER

PERSONAL

mM.

8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

director.

:

LARGE
c
PKG
93

:

ST. PAUL’S EVAN. &amp; REFORM. CHURCH

10 LBS 39¢

.

LARGE

Y

wae

FLORIDA JUICE

id ras 6Sc

SOAP POWDER

chil-

DAWN FRESH

,

;

Se

| Celery. . sax 23° Mushrooms -, 29°

uP

for

Girls and Boy Scout troops as scheduled.

Ge

Ze Z iss,

Kinderearten

MONDAY. March 24—
-

e 2

Sunday:

dren 3 to 5 years of age.
a a.m. Morning worship.

c

LBS.

os

CHURCH

Phone Deerfield
THURSDAY, March 20—

268

:

PRESBYTERIAN

Rev. B. E. Vanderbeek, Minister

:

k

Devotions

THURSDAY, March 27—

Way.

FAMBURG ER ‘+

10 MESH
«
49
BAG

Merner.

brose Cox, directir.

¢

Value

NATIONAL'S EGG ADDED LEAN BEEF

é

s

Sermon

Miss

FIRST

CALIFORNIA FRESH

-

mon topic: “The Eternal Fellowship.”
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
Mrs. Am-

ink cee a ie

sane s

RE ee EES

ee

TUESDAY, March 25—
8 p.m. Woman’s auxiliary at

James Hall.
WEDNESDAY, March 26—

California Bartlett Pears in
rich syrup.

:

ER IIS

oe eke
rea

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH

/

‘

PA

(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Francis Boelter,- Minister
815 Rosemary terrace
SUNDAY, March 23—
9:45 a.m. Church school.

;

ES

Se

e

f

RIPE DICED

+

=,

Sunday Masses: 7, 8:30, 10, 11:80.
Daily Massés: 7:80 a.m.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Confessions.

:

RICH

eh

Church News

LOIN

@) A S

53c

%

Deerfield

I~

ENS an

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Sa

Thursday, March 20, 1947

RK

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oe

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LOAF

:

;

Save without skimping—Switch to NATIONAL!

2-LB.

eRe

eo

a

_ 1 tablespoon lard or drippings

pe

PKG.

SUPPLIES LIMITED

—___|[|1/3. cup diced onion

a

1 teaspoon salt

*”

;

1 teaspoon allspice

SUPPLIFS

¥% teaspoon ground cloves
lg teaspoon pepper

%

1% cups tomato juice

eee

3 cups cooked spaghetti

TOILET SOAP
2 BES:
jum

Cc

:

7

BARS

etter3 PaxaitE
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Slice half the frankfurters in 4inch pieces. Brown sliced frankfurters and onion in lard or drippings.

Hh

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7 '@

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Add

ORES

seasonings,

i
t
;
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:
a

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&lt;

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:

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juice

and

cooked spaghetti. Simmer until
thickened. Brown the remaining whole
frankfurters. Serve around peee
mixture, Serves 6 to 8.

.

-

tomato

,

4

/
*

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i

�© Find It! © Highland |Park News
@ Deerfield Review

@ Lake Co. News

@ Highwood News

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(Highland Park)

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)

SYLVAN LAKE

WHITE BRICK CAPE COD

(Highland Park)

To Place Your Ads" ae
Phone: Highland Park 4500-01-02.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
(Highland Park—Improved)

May 1 occupancy. Fine brick home.

2 Bedrooms and bath on first floor, boy’s
Large sunny
In Braeside Section —- This charming
| Hot water oil heat.
room upstairs.
Large living room with home located on very nicely landscaped
stone fireplace; large combination dining property has a 82 ft. combination Living rooms. TI‘wo bedrooms on first floor.
area and front porch facing the lake, mod- Rm. and Dining Rm.
2 bedrooms, bath, $20,000.
ern kitchen, walnut floors, full basement, sereened Forch and kitchen on 1st floor.
~
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
oil forced air heat, 2 car garage, wooded There are 2 bedrooms and tiled bath on
lakeside lot 70 by 220 ft.
30 day occu- 2nd floor.
Heat is automatic. Priced to 541 Central Ave. Highland Park 2360
pancy $14,000
SOUL seat ya
et See
er tae- $23,500.
Other lake ‘properties also available.
UNABLE TO FINISH
ON THE LAKE
Building of 5 room expandable house
This magnificent stone home has a
designed by leading Chicago architect
$13,500—30 day occupancy. 2 Kitchen- gorgeous living room, sun room, terrace,
on wooded 132x158 corner lot in beauette apartments on second floor; stove, library, dining room, kitchen, butler’s Ptry.
tiful H. P. neighborhood. Construction
refrigerator, and furnishings included.
2 Breakfast nook and Powder Rm. on first
can be resumed immediately. Will sacribedrooms, combination dining room and floor.
The master suite (with view of
fiee,*
“Vel, LE. tous
kitchen, and living room, with wood burn- lake) has its own bath and dressing
ing fireplace, on first floor.
Hot air room; and there are three additional famstoker heat.
Convenient location. $80.00 ily bedrooms, 8 baths on 2nd floor. Serper month income.
vant’s quarters consist of 2 bedrms; and
This well constructed home, located in
$26,500—Excellent east side location. 4 bath.
The house insulated perfectly, is one of the finest sections, has charming
room apartment on first floor, kitchenette one of the finest construction and is ofStudio Living Room, attractive dining room
apartment on second floor, large family fered at below replacement cost. For furwith bay window overlooking lovely garliving quarters for owner or possibility ther details call—Mrs. Rink.
den, Den, Powder Rm. kitchen and large
of further dividing.
Hot water stoker
screened porch on ist floor; two bedheat. _ $155.00 per month income.
rooms, one of which is a master, and tiled
1551'S. St. Johns
bath with shower on 2nd floor. House is
Tel. II.P. 1484, 2855 or 1491.
well insulated with resultant low heating
541 Central Ave. Highland Park 2360
cost.
Priced to sell
$27,500.
Three bedroom home, fireplace, hot
MORE substantial than most new homes,
older type, 2 family. - Pressed brick dwell- water heat, large hobby room, couning, with slate roof &amp; furnace heat.
2
Situated in one of the best neighborcar brick garage.
Corner location, near try location, % acre. May 1 occu- hoods, this home consists of a generous
business district.
Priced $16,500.
pancy. $12,500.
hall, off one side of which is a spacious.
1% story frame dwelling, 3 bedrooms, hot
living room with fireplace, also pleasant
water heat, in excellent condition.
Just
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
sun room. A large dining room, workable
west of tracks in Ravinia. ~ Immediate
kitchen
and powder room comprise first
541 Central Ave. Highland Park 2360
“possession.
Price $11,000.
floor.
;
There are 4 bedrooms, 2 baths on the
2nd fl. master bedroom having its own
MODERATELY
PRICED
HOMES
51 Highwood Ave. Tel. H.P. 2468 or 596
After painting &amp; decorating you can have tile bath. The 8rd floor is floored and can
nice 6 rm home good loc. ............ $11, 000. be developed into 2 additional*rooms with
Good substantial _—
built house eS loc bath,
Steel construction throughout; heat H.
6 room modern bungalow, 2 car gar. near stores West side H. P.
2,500.
Accessible to all conveniences.
5 room bungalow. 2 Partly finished rooms 7 Rm Brk country home West H.P. re 000 W. Oil.
Immediate
possession. Offered at $35,000.
upstairs. Extra lot.
- APARTMENT BLDGS.
2—5 room houses.
Also other good
2story
Apt
Bldg,
2—5
rm
Apts
$20,000
listings, investments.
1551 S. St. Johns
I do not have what you want, will 2story Apt Bldg, 2—6 rm Apts.... 18,000
Tel. H.P. 1484, 2355 or 1491
try &amp; find it for you.
Come in and talk it over with—
15 Acres lov country) home on ieee
Ravine site 5 Bldgs, 20 mi. N.....$42,500.
Modern 5 year old house on nicely landReal Estate Broker
:
scaped property.
Large living room with
1003 Osterman Ave.
Deerfield, Ill.
‘lovely picture window and natural fire8382
N.
St.
Johns
Ave.
Tel.
H.P.
577
Tel. Deerfield 462-W
place, dining room, streamlined kitchen,
screened porch and powder room make up
HIGHLAND PARK, EB. BRAESIDE SECT. the first floor. On the second floor there
Most conven. to school and transp.; of- are three bedrooms, sun deck and tile bath.
In full view of the lake this perered for 1st time because owner leaving Recreation room in the basement.
Autotown; unusually well constructed Colon- matic gas heat.
fect colonial,Cape Cod house is comOne car garage.
Early
ial home in excel. cond.; 6 rooms and occupancy.
$28,000.
plete in every detail. 1st floor consun porch; 1% baths; auto. ht.; 2 car
Distinctive English brick home offered
SANS PORse May Thee $23,500 for July Ist occupancy.
tains central hall flanked by a large
Studio living
LOVELY HOME IN RAVINIA’S
room, dining room, good kitchen, two bedliving room and dining room with
EAST SIDE
rooms and tiled bath on first floor. UpClose to schools and tr.; lot 150x200; stairs are two bedrooms, bath. Fine wood
modern kitchen and powder room at
4 family bdrms., 2 tile baths on 2d. panelled recreation room with fireplace.
rear. Four large sunny bedrooms and
as quarters on 38d; oil ht.
Offered $33,000.
three baths on the second floor make
$35,000. . Brand new Lannon stone residence on
THE
HOME
YOU
ARE
LOOKING
FOR. lot 100 by 200 feet, in fine neighborhood.
this an extremely livable home. ModEAST HIGHLAND PARK.
Owner transferred and must sell. All deerately priced at ........... $27,500.
In excellent location on beautifully land- tails ey eee:
For particulars phone
seaped lot 95x190 with enclosed play us. $55,0
yard and barbecue, this flexible house
On a beautiful landscaped ravine
offers
gracious
living
compl.
from
378 Central Ave.
Tel. H.P. 880
paneled library, sunroom, powder room,
lot one-half block from Lake, this
sereened porch on Ist in addition to
unusually well built and attractive
2-——four
liv., din. and kitch. to 4 family bed- NEW Colonial 3 apt. building.
rm &amp; one studio apt; fireplace &amp; picrooms, sleeping porch, 2 baths, maid’s
white brick and timbered English
ture window in estate area, east of Barrm. and bath and 2 car garage. House
home is offered for the first time.
-rington near Skycrest Country | club.
compl, insul.; auti. oil ht.; lge. attic
Heated 2 car garage.
Price $23,000.
fan and including ven.- blinds, hall and|
A spacious entrance hall gives acTel. Lake Zurich 3126, or write M. E.
stair carpeting.
For immed. poss. at
cess to a large living room, with fireShroyer, Prairie View, Ill.
the attrac. price of $37,500.
IN NEWEST WOODRIDGE SECTION.
place and screened porch overlooking
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
For charm, livability, superlative con-.
ravine. Library, powder room, dinstruction you MUST see this English
SEVERAL
LOTS IN RAVINIA, BRAEing room, butlery &amp; kitchen complete
brick and timber house on perfectly
side and Sunset Subdivisions in Highlandscaped grounds 105x155.
Complete
the first floor. On the second floor
land
Park
at reasonable. prices.
in every detail; full basemt. ‘includes
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE AGENCY
there are 3 unusually large bedrooms
recreation room with built-in bar, util16 N. Sheridan Rd.—H. Pk.
ity room containing finest. hot water oil
with tile baths, dressing room with
Tel.
H.P. 98—Res. 87
burning system, Ist floor reception hall,
:
95-R-30-tf
master bedroom,. 2 servant’s rooms _ powder room, large living room, dining
rm., breakfast nook and kitchen; 2d
and bath.
floor 3 bedrooms including master suite LOT on. vorner of Waukegan &amp; Bloom.
Also farm in Prairie View, Ill, 45 acres.
Basement contains unusually large
of bedrm., dressing rm. and tile bath,
Tel. WLP. 225.
2 other good size rooms and tile bath;
and well designed recreation room
3d floor lge. timbered studio rm. Entire
with fireplace, bar, screened porch,
house newly and mest tastefully deco- LOT on Berkeley Rd. subject to taxes.
Reasonable.
Tel. Harrison 8430
rated; 2 car brick garage; 4 blocks to
laundry and fire room. General Elecschool, 3. to transp. Worth waiting for
VACANT FOR SALE
tric heating plant. The garage is atSept. 1 possession. Price $39,500.
Except.
Buy 100x277 lot So. Linden
tached. Property is in excellent conAve. near Sheridan Rd. Fine wooded $6,500.
dition. Possession May Ist.
%
to
1
acre
tracts in West
H. Pk. All
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS.
Assmts., Roads-sewer-water paid for. Just
870 Central-Av. Highland Park 1212
Price sete eee eeceece Eo ee ese
ideal for the County
Ss call us. for
PAUL. PHELPS,
further information&gt;

INCOME PROPERTY

ENGLISH BRICK

REAL ESTATE SERVICE

R. “S. HAMBLY &amp;. COMPANY

RED BRICK COLONIAL

JOHN F. LEONARDI.
-

FOR SALE

R. S. HAMBLEY &amp; COMPANY

COUNTRY ESTATE

|

NEW LISTINGS

JOHN A. HOFF

E. T. SKIDMORE &amp; SON

LAKE VIEW

.»

Highland Park - Deere Park

EARHART,

LLOYD &amp; RINGER

H. AND R. ANSPACH, Inc.

387 Central Ave.

Hiehland Park 4580

HIGHLAND PARK
7rm fr. Hot air ht., gar. N. End $8, 500
4bdrms fr. H.W. ht stoker, 1 car gar.
This ppty. has provided a home &amp; more
than $200 per mo. income. Can be had
with $3,500 down payment.
6rm stone and fr., 5-yr. old, gar. attd.
So. Ravinia section. Price ........ $25,000.
'
HIGHWOOD
‘
modern apts., 2 car gar.
QU
xe sacs capatanliabacivoouecsar $15,500.
“Call HP. 474, Myr. Benson.
SIX room brick house with. completely
equipped greenhouse.
Close to schools
and transportation.
Immediate. occu-}.
pancy.
$22,500. Tel. H.P. 709.

IMMEDIATE. OCCUPANCY

3 BEDROOMS — 2 BATHS
BRICK &amp; LANNON STONE
RAMBLING RANCH TYPE HOME
Tucked away on 4 beautifully wooded
Highland Park Acres, 3 blocks to the
famous West Ridge Rd. School; 6 blocks
to Electric Express Station, this almost new
and owner built home has many unusual
and expensive features such as Random
Width, Pegged, Oak Plank flooring; hot
water ‘Oil heat, copper plumbing, etc. 2 car
attached garage.
Here you can enjoy
real country living coupled with every:
modern city convenience.
For appointment call

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; COMPANY
Clavey &amp; Ridge Road

Highland Park 1491, 4866 or 1484

ie: SKIDMORE &amp; SON

Sa N. St. Johns Ave. Tel. H.P. 577
FOR SALE
Eighteen-room furnished apartment
building in Lake Forest.
Rental over
$400 per month. Apartment vacant for
buyer, near transportation and shopping
center, $19,500. Shown by appointment
only. Address Box J-47, c/o Lake Forester.

FOR SALE
|
Five-room&gt; frame residence in Lake Forest.
Completely furnished, automatic
oil heat, near schools and transportation.
Ideal. for child—immediate possession.
Price $7,500. Address Box J-27, c/o
Lake Forester.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
FOR SALE
Attractive 5-room well insulated house in —
Waukegan. Tile bath and kitchen, 2-car
garage and storm windows for entire
house.
Easy to heat, close to schools
and transportation.
Excellent condition
—price $10,000. Shown by appointment —
only.
Address Box J-7, c/o Lake Forester.

‘

LEAVING state—must sacrifice A-1 home
in beautiful restricted North Shore Park.
Five rooms on first floor, 2 unfinished
rooms on second, full basement, forced
hot air and oil furnace, 5 years old.—
$10,500.
Immediate’ possession.
WwW.
Fisher, Mundelein 1583-W, owner,
LSE ROTRES

TEER LSSOR TREE RODBRETREESOLET TEEEE EMIT

TENE,

OFFICES, STORES &amp; STUDIOS TO RENT
ATTRACTIVE second floor offices at Park
Ave. and Green Bay Rd., Glencoe, with
excellent transportation &amp; parking. East
exposure.
Ideal for Physicians, Architects, Commercial Artists.
Photographers, Insurance Agencies, Chiropodists,
ete. Shown by appointment for May Ist.
occupancy. Tel. Randolph 4845 or see
‘Janitor on premises.
\

MONEY LOANED

BORROW FROM KING
Auto Loans
Personal Loans
Furniture Loans

KING LOAN COMPANY
128 Madison St.
Tel. Ont. 5500
Just East of Genesee (Ist Floor)
Open Friday Evening Until 8 p.m.
——————————
ees

APT.

TO

RENT

(furnished)

’
oe

GARAGE
APARTMENT:
Consists
room and bath—furnished.
Near Ft.
Sheridan and transportation. Lake Forest 649.
——&gt;————————
es

HOUSES &amp; APARTMENTS WANTED
(Furnished &amp; Unfurnished)
RESPONSIBLE Montgomery’ Ward executive.
Resident of H. P. for 7 years
wants to rent a 3 or 4 bedroom house.
Will take excellent personal care of
property &amp; will furnish the best of ref.
Willing to make improvements &amp; long
lease. Please Tel. H.P. 1061.

—

WANTED TO RENT: unfurnished house,
5 or more rooms.
Family of five.Good references.
Lake Forest 2280.

COLONEL, regulary arms and wife desixe
2 or 8 bedroom furnished house or _
apartment by April 30.
No children.
References. furnished.
Write Box 74, Sone
Ravinia, Illinois or Tel. H.P. 8957.
WANTED: To rent furnished home for
summer months by responsible family.
Will furnish finest references.
Tel.
Central 5309.
F
MODERN 6 or 7 room house May 1st or
as late as July 1. At least 2 years lease,
Wanted to rent by long resident adult
family. . Tel. H:P. 1794.
RESPECTABLE young couple, soldier stationed at Fort Sheridan, desire any type —
of housing for selves: and 2 children.
—
Address Box I-57, c/o Lake Forester.
—
THOUGH married over 3 years we've
never had a home of our own. We have
a baby 2 months old and she wants
to be on the North Shore this summer.
We want a furnished house with possession May ist or before. Will someone please favor us by answering this
ad. Tel. Whitehall 6300, Ext. 18-F.
VET and

wife desires

nished apt. in BL Pk.

2

or 3

rm. fur-

Tel. TLRS 61st

after 6 p.m.

(SNR

NAVAL officer with wife and 2 children,
ages 2% and 5 desires furnished apt.
or house.
Rent open.
Will guarantee
condition.
Tel. University 6400, Roce
421 or leave message.

=

@ Buy It!
@ Sell It!

WANTED: To rent for summer months, 2
or 3 bedroom house.
Responsible family.
References.
Tel. H.P. 2271.

CHICAGO broker, wife &amp; baby desire to
rent
June
able
H.R.

furnished house on North Shore
to Sept. or longer. Top rent. Payin advance.
Best. references. Tel.
390.

COUFLE would like to rent house for 2 or

8 months this summer.

Can furnish ex-

cellent ref.
No children or pets.
If
interested please Tel. Greenleaf 0909.

YOUNG architect-@ wife interested in attie
or garage apt.

Tel. Amstabter, Dela-

ware 0065 or Fairfax 0256.

A

;

©

�i

aE

x

Thursday, March 20, 1947

-y

Page 36
HOUSES &amp; APARTMENTS WANTED
0179.

ARMY M.D., wife, 2% yr. old son, infant
daughter desperate for small furnished
Tel. H.P.
house, apt. or garage apt.
Lt. Barone.
56000, Ext. 4241.
7

: Four years of Navy
FOR EXCHANGEhouse,
apt. or garage apt.
service for a
to rent.
Tel. H.P. 959.

ately
TEACHER and 10 yr. old son desper
hed or
in need of living quarters, furnis
Place
Elm
in.
ably
Prefer
- unfurnished.
Please Tel. H.P. 4481 before
District.
Sunday.
P. &amp; wife]
eh YOUNG doctor practicing in_H.
desire apt. or like in H. P. or vicinity.
Tel. H.F. 3038.

‘HOUSE?

or room

APT.?

with

kitchen

desperprivileges for responsible couple,
nce on
ately in need of quarters. Reside
us.
help
Please
years.
North Shore 20
Tel. H.P. 6574.
;

for adults
' SIX-ROOM unfurnished 9home
and 12. Vicin- and two children, ages

ity. of Ft. Sheridan.
Highland Park 5000,

Mr. Walter Olson,

Ext. 871.

Room for Transient Available
HIGHLAND HOTEL
8025
W. O. Cromwell, Mgr. Tel. H.P.

refined woman in exchange for

ON
g ‘in with school girl.
stayin5CF
Tel. H.P. 3161.

References.

couple. 1020 N.
DOUBLE room for. Tel.
H.P. 3512

Green

Bay Rd., H. P.

- DPOUBLE room for couple.

Tel. H.F.

transportation.

1959.

(Clerical) -

TELEPHONE

OPERATORS

oe

EXPERIENCED Press girls, 44
hours week, $45 per week. Apply in person. Murrie Cleaners, 109 Scranton Ave., Lake
Bluff, Hl.

HOME FURNISHINGS
Appraised to sell—also conduct sales in
your home.
Small fee—low costs. Mrs.
Josephine Petite Hungness Home Furnishings Appraiser.
The Dealers of Highland Park
Auctioneers and Appraisers
32-34 North First St., H. P.

445.

WANTED: reliable woman to clean mornings, care for children afternoons, two
Tel,
days a week; references required.
HP. 3648.
DAY help, full or part time.
General
housework. Two in family, small house.
Fel. H.P.'5920:

CLEANING woman, one or two days
week. Mrs. Lloyd. ‘Tel. H.P. 880.

a

EMERGENCY, have broken ‘arm.
Need
general maid. Full or part time. Near
Central Ave. station, H. P.
Tel. H.P.
1087.

EXP. girl for general housework &amp; cooking. Must like children. Two room, bath
apt. Husband may stay. Tel. H.P. 3963
MAID, general housework.
Own room, bath &amp; radio.
Tel. H.P. 2856 (collect).

No. laundry.
Top wages.

WHITE maid for general housework. Plain
cooking, 8 in family, no children, Other
a assist with cleaning.
Tel. H.
WHITE GIRL: cooking &amp; 1st floor work.
No heavy cleaning, no laundry.
Tel.
H.P. 1594.
,
:

\

WANTED: Children’s nurse for 2 weeks
beginning April 10th.
Other help employed.
Tel. H.P. 4554. ©

WOMAN to cook for parties or part time.

~ Tel. H.P. 3867.

Chief Operator —
21 S. St. Johns Ave.

Illinois Bell

Telephone Company
BOOKKEEPER, exp., $40 per week te
Tel. H.P. 1777.

BOOKKEEPER,
OR
STENOGRAPHER
permanent position with a future proporGrowing nationate to your ability.
State age, exD., salary
tional concern.
desired. Write Duraclean Co., Deerfield.

and

FILTER-TYPE vacuum

sell.

cleaner like new.

Extra powerful, silent; variety of acces-

WANTED: Lathe operators &amp; other machine shop employees.
Modern Engineering Co., Skokie &amp; Clavey Rd., H. P.
Tel. H.P.. 1057,
EXP. drapery &amp; slip cover sewers, $1 per
: hour., 40 hr. per week. Hospitalization.
Paid vacation. New building to work
in. Write, c/o H. P. News Box Y-5.
YOUNG man or woman for special messenger work, 5 afternoons per week.
Salary &amp; references.
Tel. H.P. 4800.
NORTH ‘shore territory open. .Exclusive
line of men’s &amp; women’s apparel.
Opportunity to make $100 per week. Tel.
Mr. Coates, Independence 7288 from 7
p.m. to 9 p.m.
WANTED: Dental receptionist. No exp.
necessary, but must be willing to learn.
State age. qualifications &amp; salary exse Write, c/o H. P. News, Box
MALE factory workers.
Married; good
- starting wage. Bonus for night work.
Working 48 hour week. Tel. H.P. 3231
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
INSPECTORS for dry cleaning establishment. Good hours, good work, good pay.
Also store girl, switch board, etc. Tel.
H.P. 3900 or 827 N. Green Bay Rd.
WANTED: Dental assistant.
Girl with
personality, office exp. Typing essential.
With or without dental office exp. Tel.
Winnetka 78 from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.

sories.
Mr. Stevenson, 8389 Waukegan
Rd., Deerfield.
Tel. Deerfield 445.
SMALL baby: chest of drawers, small Hollywood bed, baby crib six yr. old size;
davenport bed
combination;
steamer
trunk.
Vel, FP. 2035.
:
NEARLY

new

roaster,

with

tire meal.

Kenmore
racks

&amp;

deluxe electric
Cooks ene

pans.

Tel. H.P. 6110.

ANTIQUE rosewood double bed, spring &amp;
jnnerspring

mattress.

Tel.

H.P.

5392.

IVORY colored leather davenport with
rose damask cushions.
In good conditen sae. Lele Pak 500.
PRIVATE SALE:
Sunday, March 28rd,
‘from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 274 Laurel Ave.,
H. P.
10 piece fumed oak dining set;
101%4x11 Khiva rug; 9x12 patterned dubonet rug; 8x10 mulberry rug; stair
carpeting; electric
train,
2
engines
complete with tracks; bunk beds; upholstered chairs, and misc. Everything
priced to sell fast.
NEW merchandise, floor lamps, Philco &amp;
Zenith consoles, used as demonstrators,
20% discount.
Haak’s Auto Supply,
29 S. Second St., H. P.
RADIO phonograph; beautiful General Electric combination automatic record changer, takes 6 to 8 records; General Elec‘trie super Beam-a-scope radio, no: aerial,
no ground.
Also Arvin table model
radio, good for boy’s room. Tel. H.P.
3026.

.

RELIABLE girl will care for children
evenings.

Tel. H.P. 4491.

Z

FIRST class cook desires household position. Top salary. Best ref. furnished.
Tel. Whitehall 7975.

;

SISTER andbrother desire cook and gardener work —— living accommodations.
COUPLE: Experienced, $250 per month..
References furnished.
Address Box JLake Forest 2262.
87, c/o Lake Forester.
GENERAL: No vacuuming or scrubbing—
family of four.
Own room, bath and
SITUATIONS WANTED (Miscel.)
radio. Good character references. Lake
Forest 649.
.
:
;
CATERING .;
Weddings, teas, dinner parties, large or
GENERAL MAID: Experienced, white—
poe Tel. Glencoe 1594. P. C. McCulcooking and first floor work.
Living
ough.
accommodations for employ husband.
References required. Lake Forest 753.
TWO men will do gardening and odd jobs
MAN to
power

take

care of

mower

on

lawn

private

Gower, 315 Moffitt Rd.,
Stanley Field estate.

and

handle

estate.

H.

Lake Bluff—

us ee

Experienced.

Tel. H.P.

WILL do sewing and alterations in my

own home.
Tel. H.P. 4268 after 4:30
p.m. or all Sat. &amp; Sunday.
white, |
SECOND
MAID:
Experienced,
waitress and some upstairs work—about MAN desires work on Saturdays. Can do
DEERFIELD woman wanted as houseApril 1st. References required. Lake
housework, yard work, or‘general office
keeper; 6 hrs per day, 6 days per week.
Forest
146.
work. Tel. H.P. 1055.
Good
|
.
No heavy laundry, no children.
‘Wiemea eta ET ORPREMePRSA
NE
ECE SAS |
A RiP
RET ETE
wages, permanent job. Tel. Deerfield 465 TE
EXPERIENCED
gardener desires work by
HELP WANTED (Miscellaneous)
day or monthly contract. Tel. H.P. 3165
3 MAID, white, general housework. No cookaiter 5. p.m. —
Own ADV. MANAGER AND SALES CORREing responsibility.
No children.
Ref.
-spondent for growing national firm. Unroom, bath, radio.
Wages $35.
CLOTHING FOR SALE
usual future for right man. State age,
req. Tel. Glencoe 1993 (collect).
education, experience, references, salary
expected. Duraclean Co., Deerfield, Ml. MISSES. clothes, size 10 and 12; Sophie
GENERAL girl for care of small house.,
short dinner dress; pure. silk print; yelNo heavy cleaning. Own room &amp; bath.
low wool suit, etc. Tel. H.P. 1527.
:
WANTED &gt;
_ Tel. H.P. 4782.
Men, part or full time at
BLACKprincess style linen dress, size 11,
ExHighland Ten Pins
- COOK—GENERAL HOUSEWORK:
worn once; black crepe dress, size 11;
189 N. Second St., H. P.
perienced, white, first floor only. Good
light green suit, size 11.
All in A-1
wages.
top
tion,
home, near transporta
condition. Tel. H.P. 5956.
:
re- MAN with car for service or production
References
Seashore in summer.
work. Must have good personality and
quired.
Lake Forest 646 (ocllect).
be capable of selling or making esti- LIKE NEW: size 10-12-14 dresses, ete.
Also large size maid’s uniforms.
Tel.
mates. Good future. State age, experiMAID: Experienced, white. Light cookHP 2749;
.
'
\
ence, references, salary desired. Address:
ing and first floor work. Woman with
Mr. Kehle, Duraclean Co., Deerfield.
school-age child acceptable. References
SPRING
&amp;
Summer
clothes
for
high
school
_ required. Lake Forest 3091.
girl’s size 9.
All in good condition.
HIGHLAND PARK Hospital needs general
Tel. 1042.
|
kitchen help. Good hours. Salary with
' S§ECOND MAID: Experienced, white. For
or without maintenance. Tel. H.P. 2550.1:
:
6 weeks or permanent, starting April 1st.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE
Miss Duncan for appointment. |
References required.
Mrs. W. P. Mc-

Brida, Lake Forest 36.

COOKING &amp; care of first floor. Adult
‘family. Near transportation. White.
References. Tel. H.P. 1862 (collect). —
he Oe
i

3

sta

%

GIRL

FOR MARKING MERCHANDISE.
-

Also Waitress wanted.

F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.

$12 Central Ave, H. Po

OAK dinette set including china cabinet &amp;

buffet, mag. finish rocker, porcelain
drop leaf kitchen table. Tel. H.P. 2957.

&gt;

VACUUM cleaner, excellent condition, $25;
dining table, buffet &amp; 6 chairs,
small desk, $4; two frame doors.
H.P. 353 evenings or Sunday.

$50;
Tel.

UPHOLSTERED davenport and chair, excellent condition with attractive Slip
covers, chair $30, davenport $55; eight

tube RCA Victor radio cabinet, $35.

Tel.

H.P. 4023.
ORIENTAL rugs &amp; runners, crib mattress, draperies, closet accessories, flowered boxes, pottery, window shades, Georgian mantle, mirror topped
dressing
table with skirt and matching twin
spreads,
studio
couch
cover.
ALL
VERY REASONABLE. Tel. H.P. 2749.

FOUR-PIECE walnut bedroom set; dress-

ing table; chest bed, complete &amp; chair.
Tel. Hee Zee

MAHOGANY twin beds complete, breakfast
set, box springs, mattress, roll-a-way
bed, folding. studio, pillows, spreads,
mattress pads &amp; covers, dress form, vanity, baby carriage, clothing, rugs, full
dress suit &amp; shirts.. Mise. articles. Tel.

Wilmette 2627.

_

SIX tube Philco cabinet style radio, excelTel. H.P. 3202..
lent playing condition.

CAPEHART piano muse radio &amp; phono-

graph combination, bleached
modern
cabinet. Has F.M., excellent condition,
$350. Tel. Michigan 2161.

ONE hair &amp; felt mattress for twin size
bed, excellent condition.
TAI

AEN

Tel. H.P.. 1042.

REPO SSTLL ONE

TEE

MICELLANEOUS FOR. SALE
BABY buggy, good condition; G.E, vacuum cleaner.
Tel. H.F. 3111.

TWENTY-FOUR inch exhaust fan, elec-.
tric heater, steam table, screen: &amp; storm.
windows; five booths, pie case, French
fryer, washing machine, furnace andi
VISIT YOUR OWN HIGHLAND PARK
-stoker,
ice skates size 8, man’s &amp; womTrading Post. We sell furniture, bric-a-|—
an; bowling shoes size 8. Tel. H.P. 894.
—
brac &amp; clothing. 47 8. St. Johns. Tel.
or 5828 Sheridan Lunch,
|
84-B120-In-tf
H.P. 2744.
é
I
es
i

~

matched luggage set &amp; storage trunk,
odd dishes and
nick-nacks,
Reliable
gas stove, odd mirrors, 2 burner electric hot plate. 29 S. 2nd St., H. P.

GIRL to care for children. Tues., Thurs.
&amp; Fri. afternoons.
Tel. EP. 2948.

HELP WANTED (Domestic)

ge

buy

| SERVICE man, no experience necessary.
woman, top pay to good
| THREE painted book shelves, $7.50 each
Good wages. Tel. Winnetka 2389.
worker, 1 or more days per week. Tel.
or $20 for 3. This size sells for $12 to
H.P. SEG.
$15 in stores. One pair of Simmons iron
EXPERIENCED male grocery clerk wantbeds with springs &amp; mattresses, $17.50
Cleey
2A ON. ASL Sots be oben
hele Phekts
CLEANING woman for Tuesday; also
per bed complete; mag. drum table 28”
1676.
laundress once a week. Must have ref.
in. high, 24” in diameter, $15; also mag.
NURSE: Experienced, white. Care of
Wels these Sits;
rocker with cane back.
&amp;
seat; table
three little girls. Lake Forest 464.
lamps; child’s set, table, rocker &amp; 2
COOK, general housework. Exp. for famchild blackboard; typechairs,
straight
SITUATION WANTED (Domestic)
ily of 2 adults &amp; 2 children. No launwriter stand, painted night stand; shoe
dry. Attractive quarters. Ref. req. $35.
shelve, ete. Tel. H.P. 3026.
ReasonWould consider woman with employed WILL do laundry in my home.
‘able.
Tel.
H.P.
2633.
husband. Tel. H.P. 12838.
USED Merchandise:
Maple high chair,
spinet desk, davenport, wicker couch,
EXP. laundress.
All laundry for family EXPERIENCED gardener wants 1 day, and
Frigidaire,
various
tables
&amp; chairs, two
or 2 eves. a week on small estate.
of 4, one day. Prevailing wages &amp; carbaby buggies, roll-away bed, double and
Tel. H.P.. 5364,
fare.
Pel HP. (1283.

MAID for general housework in adult fam_ ily. .$30 per week. Tel. H.P, 5759.

'. Apply .To

Cab
Se etePO

Tel. H.P. 4609 —

We

single beds with coil springs, 4 piece

to start.
-_. Frequent increases.

start. 51% days.

GIRL, experienced, white; second work and
assist with 2 school children. Excellent
Pier: References required.
Tel. H.P.

COOK,
experienced, white, top wages.
Light work.
ice
permanent
home.
“House 2% blocks from trains.
References required. Tel. Glencoe 785.

HIGH: SALARIES

$29 per 5-day week

_

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

1020 N. Green CLEANING

yed woman.
IRST class room_ to emplo
Call be. East side, near R.R. station.
to 9:30
tween 7:30 &amp; 9:30 a.m., 6:30
199.
Tel. H.P.
pm.
near transportaNICE comfortable room,
380 Bloom
- tion. Gentleman preferred.
3948.
-St., H. P. Tel. H.P.
; “HELP | aes

GENERAL housework. Small new house.
Young couple.
No children.
Current
wages. Exp. Best ref. req., white. Stay:
or go.
Tel. H.P. 53816.

Tel. H.P. 2535.

yed couple.
ARGE double room for emplo
3690.
areas transportation. Tel. H.P.
Near
busiPrat.
Mee
home.
private
rent,
“ROOM for
ness district. No smoking.

Mrs.

COOKING &amp; LIGHT HOUSEWORK
Good position in modern home for reliable &amp; experienced person. Excellent
living quarters. Plain cooking. No laundry, no heavy cleaning.
Top. wages.
Tel. H.P. 8454 (collect).

GIRL, white for light housework. Plain
cooking, experienced, references, $35.

ROOMS TO RENT

_

HELP WANTED Miscel.)
(

HELP WANTED (Domestic)

_ SEVEN or eight room house for July and}
- August. Good weferences. Tel. Fairfax

:

‘

}

;

Rit

a

&amp;

�Thursday, March 20, 1947
MISCELLANEOUS—(For Sale)

BUSINESS SERVICE

USED AUTOMOBILES

H.P.

BARTLETT MOTOR SALES
966° Northwestern Ave.
:
Lake Forest, Ill.
Tel. LF. 606.
See Ken Marquis or Jim O’Flaherty for
like new used cars.
:

FOR SALE OR TRADE (for good trap

HUDSON 1938, four door sedan; radio &amp;
heater; good condition. Tel. H.P. 2986.

CRAFTSMAN rotary electric tool set,
$28.95; 11” jig saw-with 1/4 hp. motor,
-. $24.90; 16”’Craftsman lawn mower,

_ $19.95; Craftsman garden hose %4”’, 20ae

Sears

Roebuck.

Tel.

gun) Ithica skeet gun, double bbl. single selective trigger.: .For trade only
a 1917 model Luger (4-in.). just. rebored. Perfect condition for .380 auto. in
same condition.
Tel. H.P. 8759 after
6:30 p.m.
NEW AMPROSOUND “PREMIER 10”
16 mm. movie projector; reasonably
priced.
Tel. Deerfield 234-W.
For sale — Live

©

EASTER RABBITS
Tel. H.P. 3829
NEW BATTERY FOR FORD
CURY.:
“TEL. H.P.' 5716;

MER-

-2.

NESCO electric roaster, $14; six year crib
‘without mattress, $2.
Tel. H.P. 3959.
birch

USED 1984 Chevrolet tudor, good running
- eondition, heater. Tel. TP. 2735.
PONTIAC Eight 1935 two-door sedan, fair
tires &amp; spare, heater, $225. Good transportation, for long trip, with little repair. . Tel. H.Ps. 1636

$100 takes ’29, Model A, four-door
OR

ELECTRIC 500 chick brooder; chicken
house, 8x10-ft.; &amp;. odds &amp; ends for
gs business.
Tel. Deerfield 279-

CHILDREN’S

TERRAPLANE 1934, good running condi_tion; best offer.
1987 Plymouth, excel-lJent condition; good tires; $450. Tel, H.
By e2be7 after 5:30

chifforobes,

8,

brand

new, with 5 drawers &amp; hanging compart-

to

9:30

a.m.

FORD 1928

or

hand

6

to

10

dump

p.m. .

truck

equipped

“with good tires. Can be seen at bus
garage at the Highland Park High
School. °
= as
BLACK ’36 Ford coupe, good running
condition, 5 very good tires. Tel. H.P.
676

after

5

p.m.

ment, at half-price, $22; also portable CHEVROLET 1941 four door sedan, new
Skill sander, like new, with 42 sanding
tires, radio, heater. Perfect condition’
belts, $45. Paddack Woodworker. Tel.
Best offer. Tel. H.P. 4148 (see SaturDeerfield 736.
:
day or Sunday).
STEVENS single barrel, 12 gauge shotgun.
Glass show case on stand includes 2
stuffed owls, etc., 4’x5’. Tel. H.P. 4618.
FOR SALE: What am I offered for antique log cabin quilt over 100 years
old?
Colors are very beautiful.
Can
be seen by appointment only.
Tel. re
P. 8798 mornings.
COMPLETE sterling silver set for eight,
see serving pieces, $275. Tel. H.
P. 475
ONE maple baby bed &amp; mattress, in good
condition. Tel. H.P. 5283.
;

FORD 1937

oa

with

automatic

FOR SALE: 1940 Ford V-8 station wagon.
- Heater, new tires, good condition, $750.
_M. E. Shroyer. Tel. Lake Zurich 3126.

BUICK 1940 Super 4-door sedan.

running condition, radio, heater &amp; defrosters. Best offer. Te. H.P. 2992.

AUTOS WANTED
Good ’°37 to °47 Used Cars.
. A. G. MePHERSON, Ine.
887 E. Park Ave., H.. kee

Tel.

QUEEN Ann ebony secretary walnut liv“ing room table, large original framed
floral water color ieee
els FP,
4148,

LARGE stock of boy’s and girl’s Schwin
bicycles.
Cervi Sales &amp; Service, 552
Se ls cs Ave., Highwood.
Tel. H.P.
19755

FILMO-Master 400, Bell and Howell 8 mm.
projector, complete with case, reel &amp; 2 BOY’S.
extra 500 watt bulbs. Used very little.
‘Ferfect condition, $150. Tel. H.P. 332. |
BUILDING TILE: 8”’x12”x36” and 8 double window frames, glass size 26’’x26.”
Highland Park 4491.

Tel. HF. 3026.

$17.50.

BIRDS, CATS, DOGS

WANTED: Good home for small female
dog, five years old. Well trained, sweet
disposition.
Tel. oe 2569

REDUCE the easy way—at home. _ Exer- COCKER
PUPPIES:
Black—male
cycle health machine for sale.
Perfect
female, 6 weeks old. May be seen at
condition, $200 cash. May be seen eve513 Moffett Rd., Lake Bluff on Sunday,
nings by appointment. 612 Fourth St.,
‘between 2 and 5 p.m.
Waukegan. Telephone Waukegan Onta-)
rio 2809.
DASCHUND PUPPIES: Pedigree; 4 brown.
Waukegan, Ontario 8054.

TRUNK:

Wardrobe — never

been

aiged.

- Lake Forest 108.

-BUSINESS SERVICE

TWIN beds, dresser, drapes, rugs, loveEverything priced to
seat and chairs.
sell. Sale from 2 to 5 p.m., Saturday,
March 22 at 214 Noble ‘Avenue, Lake
Forest.
f
SA
(asc

ae

a ep
PN
a TDI
ca
et
CESSESFOREN

aeRE,
RELL RT ORSETS

WANTED TO BUY
WHY NOT SELL THAT IDLE PIANO?
A man for many years in the piano business will buy or appraise without obligation on your part
Tel. University
1561 (collect} after 7 p.m. 180-G-31-In-tf

PERCY H. PRIOR, Jr.
Photographer
Specializing in Posed and Candid
pictures of your wedding.
Tel. T.P. 3199
Seca
re Til.
oe
9-S-3-In-tf

MODERNE DECORATING

' PAINTING
&amp; - PAPER HANGING
_ Be Particular — It Costs No More
seas Vine Ave., Highland Park
WANTED: Green carpet, 9x12, or larger.
M. Pre
E. O. Inman
Tel. H.P. 4419.
Tel. i"P. 5676
Tel. H. P. 89
186-J-19-tf
WANTED: Electric washing machine, in
good condition. Tel. Deerfield 207-W-2.
FLAGSTONE, TOP SOIL, HUMUS, CINWANTED:
Regulation ping pong table
ders, screenings, firewood.
Trees cut
wee
ait top for boy’s birthday. Tel.
down, power saw for hire; general] houling and welding. Tel. H.P. 3931 or
PES
8785. John Tazioli.

LOST AND FOUND
BIFOCAL glasses &amp; case lost Sunday evening around 6:80 in Yellow Cab.
Reward. Tel. H.P. 3681.

,

SEWING MACHINE SERVICE
Singer &amp; other makes repaired, bought &amp;
sold; also vacuum cleaners. Will eall. for
and deliver. Phone Robt... W. Arends,
Northbrook 624-W.

DOG LOST: Male Irish setter, named Red.
Deerfield license 36. Return to Susie
Heupel, 232 Deerfield Rd. Tel. Ve
725. Reward.

~ PAINTING
Kitchens —- Bathrooms
Woodwork
‘Washed and Painted
Best Frices
Tel. H.P. 2884

"LOST: Pair of black and white hand knit
Norwegian
mittens.
Vicinity
Ave, H.Psx Tels AP. 5387.

Central

LOST: edetnd alligator purse with zipper,
containing glasses, ‘‘Eversharp” pencil
and small sum of money. Finder kindly
return purse and. glasses to Mrs. F.
Preston, 1200 W Green Bay Rd., Lake]
Forest or ‘Telephone LakeForest 1516.

bridle trails, _ excellent schools, ‘fast, fre-_—
quent suburban transportation.
Be sure
to see Dunham Woods before you select
—

HANS BAHR
583 Laurel Ave.
Pele PEP. Tigo
MANURE

for

MENONI
Pie brs,

hot beds

AND

and

the

Tel,

EXPERT DRESSMAKING, suits &amp; skirts
a

specialty.

Also

alterations.

For

quarters

ap-

ou

pee one Ont. 1580.

ne

rx

Se

oe

x

eo

‘on

ground

floor;

full

basement,

automatic heat, completely insulated. Large —

pointment. Tel. H.P. 4576. Miss Carr,
Go: 10 a.2i..0r G 10.5- pans

2

car

garage.

The

year’s

best

buy!

76 ACRE FARM, adjacent to Wayne
village.
Well built 6 room house, tenant
house, large dairy or feeding barn, silo,
milk house, 2 chicken houses.
A good |
farm and an excellent investment at $32,0
:

PARKWAY CURTAIN
‘LAUNDRY
Ruffled curtains, panels, drapes,
tablecloths, bedspreads, throw rugs.
Free Pick--up and Delivery.
Prompt Service.
800 N.Green Bay Rd., H. P. Tel. H.P. 2061

site for your new home.

COUNTRY COLONIAL HOME on aoe
acre wooded tract.
Natural landscaping,
minimum lawn to tend—view across valley, white board fencing.
L-shaped combination living and dining room, cabinet —
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths; servant
-

hee dit.

MOCOGONI.

JESSE F. BURT, REALTOR
Wayne, Illinois
Bartlett 2134
St. Charles 36.

nie and Speedy

For down-to-earth flavor and satis-_
fying substance, try Thuringer Style ©
Sausage with Noodles. The smoky
.| flavor of the sausage-blends perfectly 7
Telephone Grayslake 5414
with the noodles and prunes. This
PAINTING &amp; DECORATING
is a dish for a bisy day, when you
want to serve something quick and
HENNING O. BERGQUIST
Painting &amp; Decorating
easy.
Hishest grade workmanship &amp; material

~ MARTIN VEHLOW

TREE SURGERY _. EXPERT TREE SURGERY
Now is the time to have your

Tree

We remove dangerous. trees.

Trees pruned, cabled, cavity work expertly done. All men:-&amp; property fully
insured, We are now taking orders for
spraying. Tel. Winnetka 3624 or Northbrook 495-W. Benson &amp; Levernier.

-Thuringer Style Sumndigs
with Noodles
ae Thuringer sausages»
-% cup water
4 cups cooked wide noodles
1 cup browned bread crumbs ~1 cup cooked prunes
Place sausages in-pan with water.
Whenwater cooks out, brown nicely: :

on all sides. Season hot noodles and
—
place in center of platter. Sprinkle
with- fine bread crumbs browned in

butter. Arrange sausages on noodles

SKOKIE VALLEY TREE SERVICE
and place prunes around the edge of
Treating, Fruning, Spraying
:
Dangerous Trees Removed
;
platter. Garnish as desired. vAs a
Also cabling and surgery.. All property
variation, the noodles may be ‘Preand men fully insured. |
Earl Reynolds.
Tel. H.P. 2653.
_|pared with cheesesauce,

Adjustments, or corrections of error,
on Advertiser’s written copy, not the
fault of the advertiser will be made by
correct publication without charge, only
if we are notified immediately following
publication.
Cancellations must be made before
8 p.m. Tuesday for Highland Park
News to be effective the same week.
On Telephone ads adjustment
is
made only’ on errors in address or
phone number reported immediately.
Copy is accepted only with the understanding that this paper assumes no
for

omission

through

clerical or mechanical error.
Reply to Real Estate and Situations Wanted may be made by phone as well
as by letter. To reply to such advertisements phone H.P. 4500, 4501 or
4502 Ad Dept. Your name, address.
and phone number will be placed at
once in the box of the advertiser. The
Wanted Ads with BOX NUMBERS
identity of any Box Number advertiser
or any

information

not

contained

request.

Right is reserved to revise or accept
copy subject to publication rules.
To place SNe ad, phone H. P. 4500,
The office
open Tuesday until 5:30
p.m. Ads forwarded by mail should be
addressed to 59 S. St. Johns Ave.,
Highland Park.
Tuesday, 5:00 p.m.
Deadline on all Classified Ads
RATES: Minimum Charge $1.10 for
20 words or less. Additional words up
to 55 words will be 5 cents each. All
words in Caps 5 cent extra per word.
All classified display ads 1 inch or
more are charged at the agate line rate.

Aa
eg As ete eeees
eRe gS

Molasses Coke oe

Be Foundation fore
| Delightful Dessert —
Molasses and spices give this cak
a delicious flavor, and the use of lard
| givess desirable
de
richness. Both lard

and sour milk help to make the cake
©
tender to the last, spicy crumb.
For an exciting variation, try serving Molasses Cake with sliced betalee
and whipped cream or soft custard.
There you. have. a company dessert
_
'that’s sure to please your guests!
Molasses Cake

in

want ads will not be disclosed.
For the protection of our advertisers
replies to blind ads will not be delivered unless the release card is presented.
Replies will be mailed upon

4501, or 450

TREE TRIMMING &amp; LANDSCAPING ~
Removing Dead Trees, Hauling Away
Cement Work
‘
Light Hauling — Wood
_
ROBERT L. WHITE
—
1002 N.
.Elmwood, be
ta

ae

tective restrictions, private lanes, miles of

Landscaping

responsibility

SERVICE

SCHOOL

T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY

TREE SPRAYING &amp; SURGERY

work done.

bicycle,

DAY

CRAFTSMAN FURNITURE REPAIR
“For Work of Quality”
Upholstering,
Slipcovering,
Refinishing.’
| EMPLOYEDwidow with children 5 and 7
38rd St. &amp; Gilboa Ave.
Zion,
needs full time housekeeper. Must like
Tel. Zion 3496
;
children. Pleasant family life for woman
“needing a home.
References.
Write
BARTLETT MOTOR SALES |
Box Y-25, c/o H. P. News.
X
966 Northwestern Ave., L. F. Tel. L.F.
606.
Our service department, has the
DUNHAM
WOODS
most modern equipment to serve your
CHOICE 4 to 6 acre timbered building
cars. Stop in today. Now open for busisites in Dunham Woods—the finest coun&lt;aess&lt; &lt;O, 38, Bartlett:
try community in the Chicago area. Pro- ©

PAINTING and DECORATING
- Inside and Outside.
Tel. H.P. 3452 or 3053
.
E. R. Conger

BICYCLES

INSTRUCTION

LAKEWOOD

Boarding school’ &amp; Day school, chikiven
A tO tee Tel. _ Deerfield 810.

- Exterior and Interior.
Hubert Johnson
Tel, H.P. 1770

Moderate prices, 20 yrs. on North Shore
1511 Bryn Mawr Ave., Chicago 26, Tl.
Tel. Longbeach 2404
Fully insured

WANTED FOR CASH.

record

original cast $175 for $60.

.

tudor sedan, good condition,
excellent tires, new seat covers.
Tel.
PREPARE FOR SPRING!
P. 1683 after 6:30 p.m.. any: Hes after Storms removed, Screen cleaned, painted
Tuesday.
&amp; hung.
Gutters cleaned &amp; painted.
Vet’s Maintenance. Tel. Skokie 5071.
NASH 1946 four door sedan. Fully equipped
with radio. Guaranteed perfect condition.
WINDOW WASHING
bel H.Pe 892
;
s
\
Storms and Screens

USED, but serviceable gas stove American
Stove Co., 6 burner, 2 ovens, ‘broiler &amp;
warming oven, $15; also full size boy’s
Elgin balloon tire bicycle, $15; Silvertone console 5 band radio-phonograph
-combination,

:

PAINTING G DECORATING

Ford]

sedan now driving.
Looks bad, runs
good, 2 like new tires. See at 625 Laurel
Ave., H. F. Tel. -H.P. 1636, from 7:30

f

5

1% teasooons soda
1 cup sour milk

1
1
4
%4
2
2%
14

cup molasses
teaspoon cinnamon
teaspoon cloves
teaspoon salt
teaspoons ginger
cups sifted flour
cup lard, melted

Mix soda and sour milk; add to Ss
molasses. Sift dry apelin
com- |
bine gradually with liquid. Add melted
shortening slowly
;- beat vigorously.
Makein two 8-inch pans, or in muffin

oe ae one poresFB, for 30. minutes.

�Thursday, March 20, 1947

ALCYON
Highland Park
Doors Open 6 p.m.

TELEPHONE H. P. 2400

SUN., MON., TUES., WED.
March 23-24-25-26

Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire,
Joan Caulfield

“BLUE SKIES”
A Super-Musical in
Technicolor

i THURS., FRI., SAT.

March 27-28-29

1 Errol Flynn, Eleanor Parker

“NEVER SAY GOODBYE”

BARTLETT
THEATRE
HIGHWOOD, ILLINOIS
FRI. &amp; SAT.

March 21-22

Dan Duryea, June Vincent,
Peter Lorre

“BLACK ANGEL”

PLUS
Don Porter, Lois Collier
“WILD BEAUTY”
Added—Latest News

Events

Emergencies attended
‘Babies delivered
Operations performed
X-Ray examinations
Laboratory examinations

Ridge Farm Girl Scouts

Celebrate Scout Anniversary

GLENCOE

183
103
190
190
2,891

7
Lapin 17
gahalsnksnnias oe 106
SaBa ste Vaca 280

Park Board Election

information.

to Infant Welfare
Intermediate Meeting Monday

;

A referendum on proposed sale of
The Intermediate group of Infant
a piece of land on Deerfield avenue
just west of Immaculate Conception Welfare will meet on Monday at the
church and school, will be held in home of Mrs. Burton M. Smalley, 485
THURS., FRI., SAT.
Mar. 20-21-22
connection with this election. It has Fairview avenue. Mrs. John Martineau,
been decided by the park board that president, urges that all members at“Return of Monte Cristo”
this parcel of land, 5% acres in ex- tend this important meeting and bring
‘| Louis Hayward, Barbara Britton
tent, should be sold. A referendum of hats to help the junior group in their
SAT. MATINEE—KIDDIES’ SHOW
| the voters of the district on sale of collection of hats to be sold at the
Mickie Rooney
property is required by law.
Thrift shop.
Special Children’s Matinee
Mrs. Ralph C. Archer will be lunchOn Okinawan Newspaper Staff
eon chairman, and hostesses will be
Party. One Showing Only
Word was received here that Pvt. Mrs. Charles Bates and Mrs. WoodAt 2 p.m.
|
Dwight
Reynolds Jr., son of Mr. and ward Burgert.
“YOUNG TOM EDISON”
Mrs. Reynolds of 425 Eastwood avenue, Highland Park, is now attached. dispatches of all US wire services.
SUN. thru WED.,
Mar. 23-26
to the “Daily Okinawan” on Okina- Friends of Reynolds may write him in
Two Years Before the Mast” wa. The
island’s newspaper is pub- care of“Daily Okinawan,” APO 331,
Alan Ladd, Brian Donlevy,
lished seven days a week a features San Francisco, Cal.
William Bendix
Z
Highland Park 605
Open Mon.-Fri. 6:00
Sat.-Sun., 1:30

“THE BIG SLEEP”

Gary Cooper

TUES., WED., THURS.

This Year

(Continued from page 3)
Precinct.
1: Braun Bros. Oil comits founder, laws, accomplishments
pany, 360 Central avenue.
and plans were told members of both
Precinct 2: _ Ravinia
school, 1655
senior and junior schools at a gatherDean avenue.
ing recently of Ridge Farm Girl
Precinct 3: Highland Park ComScouts in celebration of the 35th anmunity center, 549 Central avenue.
niversary of the Girl Scouts of AmerPrecinct 4: Highland Park Fuel
ica.
Company, 1205 Deerfield avenue.
A birthday cake crowned with 35
Description of the boundaries of
candles climaxed the occasion
these four precincts is prohibited by cemetery.
space, but those uncertain as to where
to vote are asked to call the park
district .office, H. P. 2763, for this Bring Hats

Added: Cartoon, News Events, “This Is
Coming: “Blue Skies”

America”

Grivelolensasartn

a Week

The beginnings of Girl Scouting,

‘Humphrey Bogart, L. Bacall

March 23-24

KIWANIS CLUB OF HIGHLAND PARK INC.

Mar. 25-26-27

Mogan Conway, Anne Jeffreys

“Dick ree = Cueball”
William Gsccin. Pat O’Moore

“Rendezvous 24”

Funeral services were held yesterday at 9:30 a.m. in St. James church
Highwood, for Clara Rossi Lodford,
26, who died Sunday morning at the
Lake County Tuberculosis sanatorium. She had been ill one year.
Mrs. Lodford was born in Highwood on May 12, 1921, at the late
home, 12 Walker avenue.
She leaves two children, a son,
James Gerald, 8, and Geraldine, 7;
her father, Saulle Rossi of 314 Jefferson avenue, and two. brothers,
Frank and Enrico Rossi.
Arrangements were in charge of
the Kelley and Spalding Funeral
home. Burial was in Des Plaines

Report for the week March 8 to March 14, inclusive

THU., FRI, SAT. Mar. 27-28-29
“THE WESTERNER”

Sun. &amp; Mon.

Lodford Services
Held Yesterday

Our Weekly Story of
HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL

— PRESENTS —

Your Best Entertainment

GENESEE

The Great Tarbell

THEATRE—WAUKEGAN

| Deerpath
LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS

Continuous from 1:30

Master Magician and Mentalist

NOW thru SATURDAY

WaltDisney’s

“SONG OF THE SOUTH”

in Technicolor with

Mar. 23-26

Sun. Cont. from 2 to 11:30
Merle Oberon, George Brent

“TEMPTATION”

Highland Park High School Auditorium
Friday Evening, April 11, 1947

Ruth Warrick, Eric Wolf

AT 8:15 O’CLOCK

plus animated tales
of Uncle Remus
_ It’s Fun for Everyone!

SUN., MON., TUE., Mar.23-24-25
_ | SUN. thru WED.,

the

Film

“SONG OF THE
SOUTH” |
| Thu., Fri., Sat.,
Mar. 20-21-22
Sat. Matinee 2 to 4

at

Walt Disney’s First Live-Action

Humphrey Bogart
Lizabeth Scott

in action drama

“Dead Reckoning” |

Coupons, Exchangeable for Reserved Seats on sale at:

Gsell’s (Ravinia &amp; Highland Park) and Garnett’s,
or by mail. _ Address Highland Park Kiwanis Club,

P.O. Box “A”, Highland Park, II,
s

ALL SEATS RESERVED
Thu., Fri. Sat. Mar. 27-28-29

Red Skelton in
“THE SHOW OFF”

Starts WED., Mar. 26th

ADMISSION $1.00 — Tax 20c, Total $1.20

Joan eee John Garfield

“HUMORESQUE”
-

�SPECIALS AT LOWEST PRICES ON EASIEST KREDIT
At Buschs you will find a large selection
of finest quality
diamonds, nationally advertised watches, and _ other
jewelry, offered at lowest prices. Our confidential easy

L
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ae ine t

kredit plan is at your convenience.

ye

BULOVA

ad WATCH

LADIES’ 17 JEWELS

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$

+5
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75¢ Weekly
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10-k natural rolled gold plate

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$300

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$6.00 Weekly

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Beautiful large perfect fiery center diamond with four sparkling
side diamonds in this latest style
mounting of 18-k white or 14-k
a ee gold. Ask for Perfect

75¢ Weekly
Gents’ accurate and dependable
shockproof 15-jewel Benrus
watch. Small size 10-k natural
rolled gold plate case. No. 92.

MATCHED RINGS

“

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PERFECT —-_

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Gents’ Massive Ring
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Large sparkling perfect diamond

in this heavy massive gents’ 14k natural gold ring. A ring every
man will be proud to wear. Ask
for gents’ Perfect ‘250.”

.with.

the:

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ding rings—you find this eight

XK

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gagement and the wedding ring

can be had in 18-k white or 14-k
natural

gold.

Richly

engraved

No. 74.

FREE Scientific
ege

°

&amp;

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diamond bridal pair modern in
all’ respects. 18-k white or 14-k
natural gold. No. 911.

A beautiful combination—a very
low price—both the diamond en-

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matching engagement and wed-

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Diamond Illustrations Enlarged
to Show Detail

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$2.25 Weekly

$1.00 Weekly

and well-matched.

PERFECT

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Weekly |
$5.00
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$2.50

$475For0Both

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in line

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BUSCHS PRICES ALWAYS INCLUDE FEDERAL TAX
:

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Ask for No. 33.

Matched Rings

PERFECT
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15-

Small size

SEE SPECIALS IN OUR WINDOWS

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17-jewel

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Complete

with Lenses

Examination
by Registered

Optometrists

Down
$

75
50c Weekly
Ladies’ shockproof Sanford
watch. Small size 10-k natural
rolled gold plate case. No. 42.

$1.50 Weekly
Beautiful perfect diamond in this
neatly engraved 18-k white or
14-k natural gold ring. Ask for
perfect ‘‘75.”

RUSCH
Open Monday and Thursday Evenings

KREDIT JEWELERS — OPTICIANS

1624 Sherman Avenue,(Madison
Evanston
St

50e

Far or

Weekly

Near Vision

In Charge of Dr. M. E. Bush

Glasses, correctly styled, are an asset to personal appearance. These beautiful new, clear vision, rimless glasses give
you a clear and unobstructed side view.

7 DIAMOND
WEDDING RING

$] 6:75
50c Weekly

Seven genuine diamonds §

are in this neatly en-

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Chicago Loop Stora, 37-©

graved18-k white or 14-k “
natural gold wedding rings.

Also 4 Other Conveniently Located Stores

Immediate Delivery-No Carrying Charges

Ask for No. 61.

�This Month
in Your ;

Sewcce BULLETIN
2 = OUR LANDMARKS =

4 G@

Brief Glimpses into the Past

Ss
Le RSS

ee

BORO a

Barrington Center Bible Church |
Barrington

Sulphur Springs Hotel
near Ottawa

is

aungyecaseas’-Y op

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Poa

St. James of the Sag
Lemont

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Hill Cottag
Elmhurst

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we're going exploring again in another of

“Our Landmarks.” There will be stories of thirteen more historic spots. One unique inn was not
only a tavern but a village! One mill had a most
unusual magnet devised by its ingenious miller
to extricate any metal bits from the grist—and

Se
ih

Ay
:

ol

the top ranking item extraneous was really something to see! Then there’s the tale of that aston-

bene

ishing sight through the sheriff’s kitchen “‘peep-

vee

See

hole’’ in one county courthouse. The black and
white sketches of all thirteen are by John McKee.
As Entertaining As Your Favorite Magazine

THE Sezecce BULLETIN

German Loan and Savings Bank
Joliet

Prairie View Mill
Prairie View

|.

Kendall County Court House
Yorkville

River Forest School
River Forest

EASTER GREETINGS from the ABOUT YOU AND YOUR HOUSE page
How about decking your Easter breakfast table with gay Eggheads designed by Eleanor Hedrick? General instructions for making are included.

\ PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS
A

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